Author Topic: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates  (Read 182242 times)

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1275 on: March 01, 2016, 08:30:37 PM »
He must have been asked to be there by Trump.  What's the purpose of him standing in that spot, if he isn't going to be the VP pick?

Both these guys have a "bully" attitude, though, which might play right into the hands of Hillary.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1276 on: March 01, 2016, 08:42:23 PM »
He must have been asked to be there by Trump.  What's the purpose of him standing in that spot, if he isn't going to be the VP pick?

Both these guys have a "bully" attitude, though, which might play right into the hands of Hillary.

christie sucking up, hoping trump pays his debts and picks him to be attorney general or veep.

He's pretty popular in the party, so it makes it look like the party is coming together behind trump, so it's good for trump too.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1277 on: March 02, 2016, 12:16:43 PM »
Delegate count after Super Tuesday:

Trump  319
Cruz  226
Rubio  110
Kasich  25
Carson  8
Bush  4
Fiorina  1
Huckabee  1
Paul  1

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/elections/2016/primaries

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1278 on: March 02, 2016, 12:22:20 PM »
Yep.

Tom DeLay: 'Trump Will Destroy Republican Party'

By Todd Beamon   
Tuesday, 01 Mar 2016

Donald Trump will 'destroy the Republican Party' if he becomes president of the United States, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay told Newsmax TV on Tuesday.

"If Trump becomes our nominee and ultimately becomes president, he could actually destroy the Republican Party," the five-term Texan, who served as majority leader from 2003 to 2005, told "The Steve Malzberg Show" in an interview. "I truly believe that.

"He's no conservative," DeLay added. "He wants to be king — and when he says, 'Make America Great Again,' it sounds a lot like 'Hope and Change' to me."

He was referring to the campaign theme of President Barack Obama.

DeLay told Malzberg that Trump's waffling on David Duke's endorsement "just sounds like it's just a mess.

"I just can't believe that he welcomes David Duke's endorsement. "When you're exhausted, you make stupid mistakes — and it sounds like a stupid mistake.

"Now having said that, I am definitely no Trump supporter," DeLay said.

 Regarding Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, he told Malzberg that the FBI will recommend indictment for the former secretary of state in the email scandal.

"I doubt that the Obama administration will indict her," DeLay said, "but if they don't indict her, we will try her in the public sphere."

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsmax-Tv/tom-delay-cruz-win-texas/2016/03/01/id/716930/#ixzz41mLuUAA9

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1279 on: March 02, 2016, 12:27:30 PM »
Republicans Harden Resolve Against Trump

Image: Republicans Harden Resolve Against Trump 
Wednesday, 02 Mar 2016

Donald Trump's Republican presidential campaign has now collected victories in the vast majority of the first 15 states of the nomination contest. He's on pace to win more votes than any other GOP primary candidate before him, and his candidacy is helping fuel record turnout across the country.

And yet on Tuesday, as Trump continued to gather sweeping victories from New England to the Deep South, the urgent calls from establishment Republicans to stop him only grew louder and more apocalyptic.

“If we nominated Donald Trump,” Senator Marco Rubio, a presidential candidate from Florida, said Tuesday on CNN, “it will be the end of the modern Republican Party.”

In any other year, a candidate who amassed as many victories as Trump would be busy accepting stacks of endorsements and consolidating support of the party's power brokers. But Trump continues to be spurned not only as an outsider seeking political office for the first time but as a candidate who is stacking up wins without voting blocs crucial to winning the White House.

Four years after the party identified loosening immigration laws as a way to broaden its appeal and break its consecutive defeats in the presidential race, GOP leaders remain confounded by Trump. While his anti-immigration message is inspiring record numbers of white, conservative voters to the polls, it's also alienating Hispanics who could deliver either party the presidency.

“If this was Rick Perry or Scott Walker or Bobby Jindal or any other governor, the race would be over,” said Katon Dawson, a former South Carolina Republican Party chairman. “But people understand that we can't win a presidential race with just white people.”

Nearly three of every four Republican voters who didn't back Trump on Tuesday said they wouldn't be satisfied if he became the nominee, exit polls showed.

As voting was under way in 11 states on Tuesday, one of the most aggressive anti-Trump efforts from the party establishment—a group known as Our Principles PAC—received a boost from billionaires Todd Ricketts and Paul Singer and from Meg Whitman, the current chairwoman of Hewlett Packard.

They urged Republican donors to pump cash into a fresh effort to stop Trump, the New York Times reported. Hours later, Our Principles PAC released a new attack ad calling Trump a racist and announced it hired Tim Miller, who was most recently communications director for former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, whose pro-immigration campaign burned out after spending more than $130 million in the primary.

“The fight to stop Donald Trump from getting the nomination is intensifying regardless of tonight's outcome,” Miller said. “I'm pleased to be a part of it.”

It's an open question what success a continued assault from the Republican establishment would have on Trump. In recent days, the New York businessman easily fended off a frantic, last-minute push from party stalwarts like 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney to thwart his success.

“It looks like he'll have more than enough delegates to stop any kind of challenge at the convention if these trends continue,” said Ron Kaufman, a Republican national commiteeman from Massachusetts. “This certainly isn't over yet, but you have to give the devil his due. It's a pretty impressive start.”

For his part, Trump—who has compared undocumented immigrants to rapists, called for a temporary halt on Muslim immigration, and has mocked a disabled reporter—portrayed himself as a uniting figure on Tuesday. At his beachfront resort in Palm Beach, Florida, Trump held a news conference with many presidential touches in the background, including several American flags and a sitting U.S. governor flanking him.

Trump pointed to victories in some of the most populated states to hold primary contests so far, and the record turnout that has come in many of them, as evidence that he is “expanding the party” enough to easily beat Hillary Clinton.

“Our party is expanding and all you have to do is take a look at the primary states where I’ve won,” Trump said. “We’ve gone from one number to a much larger number. That hasn’t happened to the Republican Party in many, many decades. So I think we’re going to be more inclusive, more unified and a much bigger party and I think we’re going to win in November.”

Trump described himself as a unifying candidate.

“I know people are going to find that a little bit hard to believe, but believe me, I am a unifier,” Trump said. “Once we get all of this finished. I am going to go after one person, that’s Hillary Clinton.”

Trump claimed responsibility for record turnout in the first four primary contests last month, and another explosion of Republican voting on Tuesday. There were reports of long lines outside polling places in Alaska, Republicans crammed into entranceways of Minnesota caucus locations, and record turnout in Massachusetts, the state where Romney served as a popular governor for four years.

Turnout in the Texas primary was expected to be record breaking with 2.5 million voters, a feat where turnout in a state Republican primary has never been above 1.5 million, according to Derek Ryan, founder of Ryan Data & Research, an Austin-based political consulting firm that specializes in voter data.

In Georgia, early voting broke the record by the time it ended Friday. A total of 417,491 ballots were cast early, either by mail or in person, breaking the 2008 record of 271,418 early votes.

“There's an underground thing going on with Trump,” said Lauren “Bubba” McDonald, a state utility worker in Georgia who arrived at the polling place in a 45-foot RV covered in Trump signs. “More people are supporting him than say so.”

Still, the favored candidate of the Republican establishment, Rubio, took the stage back home in Miami on Tuesday delivering what, had the results not been known, would have sounded like a victory speech. Rubio did collect a win in Minnesota, his only victory in the first 15 nominating contests.

“We are so excited about what lies ahead for our campaign,” Rubio said. “You see, just five days ago, we began to unmask the true nature of the front-runner so far in this race. Five days ago, we began to explain to the American people that Donald Trump is a con artist.”

Buoyed by establishment donors that have no other real choice left in the race (Ohio Governor John Kasich has yet to win a state, and hasn't bothered to compete in most), Rubio suggested that he wouldn't drop out any time soon. In his speech, he pointed to his home state's contest on March 15, when 99 delegates are up for grabs.

“Two weeks from tonight right here in Florida we are going to send a message loud and clear,” Rubio said. “We are going to send the message that the party of Lincoln and Reagan and the presidency of the United States will never be held by a con artist.”

Bill Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard, said Wednesday on MSNBC that the Trump threat could necessitate a gentleman's agreement between Rubio and Kasich to defer to one another in the upcoming winner-take-all elections in their home states. “The candidates have to do a better job,” Kristol said.

But it's Texas Senator Ted Cruz, so far, who can make the easier argument as the anti-Trump candidate.

The Texas senator has four victories to Rubio's one, but he's the only candidate in either party who has shown overwhelming success in raising money in all three available methods: small online donations of $25 or $50 from activists, the maximum $2,700 donations bundled by veteran fundraisers, and the six-figure checks that fuel his multiple super-PACs.

“We are the only campaign that has beaten Donald Trump once, twice, three times,” Cruz said at a rally outside Houston.

Cruz called himself a “lifelong conservative” while painting Trump as “profane and vulgar” with a “lifelong pattern of using government power for personal gain.”

“Donald Trump has been part of the Washington corruption for 40 years,” Cruz said.


http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/gop-against-trump/2016/03/02/id/717023/#ixzz41mNRtC00

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1280 on: March 02, 2016, 12:41:14 PM »
Trump builds delegate lead – but it's no lock
Published March 02, 2016
FoxNews.com

Donald Trump’s seven Super Tuesday wins helped pad his substantial delegate lead – but not enough to dispirit his top rivals, who still see a path to toppling the Republican front-runner and taking the fight to the convention if necessary. 

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, at the very least, seem determined to compete for every vote through the March 15 contests, which could make for the most consequential night of the GOP campaign.

That’s when the home states of Rubio and Ohio Gov. John Kasich vote. And both states award every delegate on the table to the winner.

“If I win Florida, what does that math look like?” Rubio told Fox News on Wednesday, brushing aside pressure to drop out.

Here’s where the delegate math stands now:

It takes 1,237 delegates to clinch the nomination. Trump has 319; Cruz has 226; and Rubio has 110.

According to Associated Press estimates, Trump needs to lock down 52 percent of the remaining delegates to clinch the party nod.

March 15 may provide the best clue as to whether that’s likely.

On one hand, if Rubio were to win Florida and Kasich were to win Ohio, they would continue to hold down Trump’s numbers even if he wins elsewhere.

On the other, a Trump victory in those states and beyond would truly give him an aura of inevitability – not to mention put immense pressure on Rubio and Kasich to drop out.

Rubio already is facing that pressure from Trump and Cruz, who wants non-Trump voters to unite behind his campaign, which he claims is the only one that can confront and defeat the billionaire businessman.
 
“So long as the field remains divided, Donald Trump's path to the nomination remains more likely and that would be a disaster for Republicans, for conservatives, and for the nation," he said Tuesday night. "And, after tonight, we have seen that our campaign is the only campaign that has beaten, that can beat, and that will beat Donald Trump."

Cruz and the rest of the candidates will have their next chance to make their case to the American public on Thursday, when they face off for a Fox News debate in Detroit, their first post-Super Tuesday showdown.

One candidate has already bowed out of the event, Ben Carson -- who, after a disappointing Super Tuesday, announced he sees no "political path forward," while stopping just short of suspending his campaign. The debate Thursday could see Rubio and Cruz ratchet up their fight for the not-Trump mantle, with Rubio clearly lagging right now in the race for second. 

Cruz won in his delegate-rich home state of Texas, Oklahoma and Alaska on Tuesday. Together with his leadoff win in the Iowa caucuses, Cruz has claimed wins in four states.

Rubio, who has seen GOP establishment figures line up behind his campaign especially since Jeb Bush dropped out, has struggled to account for his performance to date.

The senator did claim his first win Tuesday night in Minnesota. And – while touting the fact he’s picked up delegates even in states he didn’t win – he implicitly questioned Cruz’s ability to win in some of the upcoming contests, claiming several states coming up “look more like Virginia” where Rubio beat Cruz in the race for second Tuesday.

He’s referring to states like Illinois and even Michigan, with a more moderate primary electorate.

But Deep South states like Mississippi and Louisiana also are fast-approaching on the calendar.

“There are some states that are going to be favorable to [Cruz],” Cruz supporter and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott told Fox News. While a voting bloc thought to be Cruz’s strong suit – evangelicals – are still breaking for Trump in some Southern states, Abbott suggested those voters will start shifting soon to Cruz.

One scenario is for Rubio and Cruz to stay in the race if only to prevent Trump from achieving the number of delegates needed to clinch the nomination.

Asked about that possibility, Rubio told Fox News “we’re going to do whatever it takes” to prevent the nomination from falling into Trump’s hands – but said the plan is to clinch the nomination, not simply prevent Trump from doing so.

Rubio is putting it all on the line in Florida, meanwhile, vowing Wednesday that he’ll win.

Trump is threatening to crush those hopes, and cites polls that show him well ahead of Rubio.

“We're going to go to Florida. We're going to spend so much time in Florida. We've got about a 20-point lead,” Trump said Tuesday night, at a post-primary press conference in the Sunshine State.

Trump already is positioning himself as a general election candidate, increasingly taking swings at Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, who also had a good night on Tuesday with seven wins to Bernie Sanders’ four.

But he allowed, with the GOP race still open, that another candidate might also be able to take her on – taking another swipe at Rubio in the process.

“I don't think Marco is going to be able to beat her. …  I think Ted's going to have a very hard time. But Ted at least has a shot because at least he's won a little bit,” Trump said.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/03/02/trump-builds-delegate-lead-but-its-no-lock.html?intcmp=hpbt1

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1281 on: March 02, 2016, 12:41:55 PM »
Delegate count after Super Tuesday:
Trump  319
Cruz  226
Rubio  110

Do you still think Trump has no chance at the nomination?

Or, more likely, are you finally accepting 240 was right all along about Trump?  

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1282 on: March 02, 2016, 07:11:51 PM »
Uh oh.  He should be saying this about Trump.

Report: Fox News 'finished with Rubio'
By Harper Neidig
March 02, 2016


Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio’s rough week got worse on Wednesday with a New York Magazine report that the head of Fox News has decided to stop giving the Florida senator prominent, favorable coverage.

"We're finished with Rubio," Roger Ailes told one of the network’s hosts recently, according to three unnamed sources. "We can't do the Rubio thing anymore."

The report says Ailes was angry about a New York Times article reporting on a dinner he and the Florida senator had in 2013. Rubio was asking the Fox chief for his support of the Gang of Eight immigration bill.

On top of that, Rubio’s poor performance on Super Tuesday convinced Ailes that he is losing traction in the race. The Florida senator won a single state Tuesday, Minnesota, the first and only primary he has secured.

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/271569-report-fox-news-finished-with-rubio

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1283 on: March 02, 2016, 07:23:13 PM »
Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio’s rough week got worse on Wednesday with a New York Magazine report that the head of Fox News has decided to stop giving the Florida senator prominent, favorable coverage.

"We're finished with Rubio," Roger Ailes told one of the network’s hosts recently, according to three unnamed sources. "We can't do the Rubio thing anymore."

Kinda weird that a 'fair and balanced' network would have to pull the plug on their support for ANY of the candidates... wouldn't supporting any candidate over another instantly prove they are NOT fair and balanced?


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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1284 on: March 02, 2016, 07:35:49 PM »
Another smear from Brit Hume on Ted Cruz:

"Fair and Balanced" according to Beach Bum ::)

James, it looks like you were proven to be correct.

FOX now ADMITS they were supporting Rubio, because they're saying they plan to stop doing it now.


Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio’s rough week got worse on Wednesday with a New York Magazine report that the head of Fox News has decided to stop giving the Florida senator prominent, favorable coverage.

"We're finished with Rubio," Roger Ailes told one of the network’s hosts recently, according to three unnamed sources. "We can't do the Rubio thing anymore."

"People" that still say FOX is fair & balanced deserve to be bukkake'd. 

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1285 on: March 02, 2016, 07:47:48 PM »
Nevada
34,531 = Votes for Trump
40,347 = Votes for other candidates

Total (Iowa, NH, SC, NV)
320,215 = Votes for Trump
858,598 = Votes for other candidates

Super Tuesday totals:
2,945,652 = Votes for Trump
5,409,738 = Votes for other candidates

Total:
3,265,867 = Votes for Trump
6,268,336 = Votes for other candidates

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1286 on: March 02, 2016, 07:52:01 PM »
Republican Foreign Policy Veterans to Rebuke Trump World View
Wednesday, 02 Mar 2016

More than 50 Republican foreign policy veterans have signed a letter pledging to oppose Donald Trump and rejecting his proposals, according to one of the coordinators of the effort, in the latest sign of fissures between the Republican presidential front-runner and the party establishment.

The letter will be posted early Thursday morning on the "War on the Rocks" foreign policy blog, according to one of the organizers, Bryan McGrath, a retired U.S. Navy officer who also advised Mitt Romney's unsuccessful 2012 presidential campaign.

"We've got the right set of people," said McGrath, founding managing director of The FerryBridge Group LLC consultancy. "It's Republican foreign policy, defense, international types who, in signing the letter, are pledging not to support Donald Trump."


McGrath, who said 55 people had signed the letter so far, did not identify the signatories and declined to release the contents of the letter. Trump's campaign did not immediately respond to request for comment.

The War on the Rocks blog calls itself a platform for former diplomats, intelligence officers and scholars to comment on global affairs "through a realist lens". It was not clear who hosts or funds it.

Two people with knowledge of the letter said it pledged signatories to do all they could to prevent a Trump presidency, citing several of his proposals, including building a wall along the Mexican border, threatening to impose tariffs on China and supporting waterboarding, a harsh interrogation technique that critics say amounts to torture.

Dov Zakheim, who served as undersecretary of defense under President George W. Bush, and Peter Feaver, who worked on Bush's National Security Council staff, confirmed by email that they signed the letter.

The Financial Times reported on Wednesday that Robert Zoellick, the deputy secretary of state under Bush and former president of the World Bank, had signed. Zoellick could not immediately be reached for comment.

Trump has alarmed mainstream Republican foreign policy thinkers with comments denigrating Muslims and Mexican immigrants, and vowing to tear up international trade deals. Many of them fear a Trump presidency would severely strain ties with allies, and are concerned about his stated willingness to work more closely with authoritarian Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Trump also has criticized the Republican party for its backing of Bush's 2003 Iraq invasion.

"I would sooner work for (North Korean dictator) Kim Jong Un than for Donald Trump. I think Donald Trump is objectively more dangerous than Kim Jong Un and not as stable," said Max Boot, who was a foreign policy adviser to Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign and supported the 2003 invasion. He said he had signed the letter.

AMMUNITION FOR TRUMP?

Boot and two other people said the anti-Trump effort was also being organized by Eliot Cohen, a Johns Hopkins University professor who served as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's counselor in the George W. Bush administration.

Cohen declined immediate comment.

McGrath said two people, who he didn't identify, declined to sign the letter because of their "fear that Donald Trump would use this as some sort of ammunition."

Kurt Volker, who was a permanent representative to NATO under the administration of George W. Bush, said he declined to sign the letter on concerns it could end up backfiring. It was not clear if he was one of the two experts mentioned by McGrath.

"My concern is that it's not smart for the intelligentsia - the national security intelligentsia - to come out and bash Trump, the candidate, partly, he would use that as a tool, saying: 'Here's the establishment. More of the same. They're afraid of me. I can do better.' He would actually use it as a bragging right."

Volker said he had no intention of working for Trump. But he also cautioned he wanted to be free to offer his advice to any future president, and that such a letter could prompt Trump to hold a grudge against signatories.

Several others who declined to sign, and asked not to be identified, said they did so because they feared such an effort could help Democrat Hillary Clinton win the presidency.

Trump's campaign has yet to release a full list of his foreign policy and national security advisers.

Those Trump has spoken with on foreign policy include a retired U.S. general and intelligence official, Michael Flynn, who favors closer ties with Russia. Flynn has declined to comment on whether he is advising Trump.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who won popularity for his handling of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, has said he has been having regular talks with Trump, but not in a formal role.

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/republican-foreign-policy-trump/2016/03/02/id/717163/#ixzz41oBUw8mk

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1288 on: March 02, 2016, 09:41:22 PM »
Quote
Boot and two other people said the anti-Trump effort was also being organized by Eliot Cohen, a Johns Hopkins University professor who served as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's counselor in the George W. Bush administration.

You don't say.

 ::)

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1289 on: March 03, 2016, 08:47:03 AM »
FOX going bananas with broadcasting a Mitt Romney hit-speech against Trump.  They want to put it out there, everywhere and in its entirety, as though we wouldn't have known Romney doesn't like Trump.

How it is you clowns love FOX, I can't imagine.  Pure trash just like the rest.  Quit tampering with our politics!!

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1290 on: March 03, 2016, 08:52:54 AM »
Romney speech.  Bravo!  Link to follow.  :)

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1291 on: March 03, 2016, 08:56:57 AM »
Miami Herald endorses Marco Rubio
By HANNA TRUDO
03/02/16


The Miami Herald has endorsed Marco Rubio for president, giving the Florida senator a modest boost in his home state after 24 hours of tough headlines.
“As the pivotal Florida primary on March 15 draws near, Floridians should not be stampeded into thinking that it’s all over,” the newspaper’s editorial board wrote in an editorial on Wednesday night.
Story Continued Below

“In the Republican race, in particular, they have an opportunity to change the course of a deeply discouraging — even embarrassing — campaign narrative by boosting the chances of native son Marco Rubio, the best remaining candidate with a mostly positive message and a practical chance to win the nomination.”
The endorsement follows Rubio’s poor performance on Super Tuesday, where he won only the Minnesota caucuses and failed to make the 20 percent threshold for winning delegates in several other states.

“We disagree with the Cuban-American senator on many issues — abortion, gun control, Obamacare, climate change, diplomacy with Cuba, and have frowned upon his frequent absences in the Senate," the board writes. "Still, he does not occupy the same extremist terrain proudly claimed by Sen. Ted Cruz.”
The Herald also sees Rubio as "the best choice to unite a fractured GOP."

"His Senate colleagues, especially Republicans, respect him — not so with Mr. Cruz," the editorial continues. "Among Republican voters who have made up their minds at the last minute, Sen. Rubio is by far the favorite, suggesting that he is the candidate of choice for the most thoughtful.”

The board agrees with the conventional wisdom that Florida is do-or-die for Rubio, but argues that winning the state could turn his fortunes around.

“Without a victory, he’s out,” the endorsement reads. “His sole triumph in the Minnesota caucuses is a thin reed upon which to hang the rest of the campaign, but a first-place finish in Florida could put the wind to his back.”

Donald Trump leads Rubio by nearly 20 percentage points in the latest RealClearPolitics average of state polls.


http://www.politico.com/story/2016/03/marco-rubio-miami-herald-endorsement-220164#ixzz41rNDcyR2

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1292 on: March 03, 2016, 08:58:31 AM »
22 Republicans Declare Their Non-Support for Trump

Image: 22 Republicans Declare Their Non-Support for Trump (Getty Images)
By Cathy Burke   |   Thursday, 03 Mar 2016

The tally has reportedly grown to 22 Republicans who are declaring their non-support of front-running presidential candidate Donald Trump if he wins the nomination.

Freshman Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska became the highest-profile elected lawmaker to give a thumbs-down to supporting Trump, saying he prefers a third-party candidate. He was closely followed by GOP Reps. Reid Ribble of Wisconsin, Mark Sanford of South Carolina, Carlos Curbelo of Florida and Scott Rigell of Virginia, The Hill reports.

Outside the Beltway, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker, conservative commentators Erick Erickson, Glenn Beck and radio host Steve Deace, and Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol also won't back Trump, The Hill reports.

The others who make up the roster of 22 non-backers, The Hill reports, are: Jay Caruso of the conservative website RedState; Eliot Cohen, a former George W. Bush official; Doug Heye, a former RNC communications director; Kevin Madden, a former Mitt Romney aide; former RNC chairman Mel Martínez; GOP strategist Liz Mair; former New York Gov. George Pataki; former Texas Rep. Ron Paul; former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge; former Oklahoma Rep. J.C. Watts; conservative New York Times contributor Peter Wehner; and former Gov. Christine Todd.

But other Republicans worry a Trump-vote boycott could backfire.

"My impression is the voters are voting with their own minds and they're not looking for direction or guidance from me or anybody else," Texas GOP Sen. John Cornyn tells The Hill.

Despite the high-profile efforts by the Club for Growth and other deep-pocketed conservative groups to stop the Trump momentum with ad campaigns in battleground states like Florida and Ohio, the no-Trump vote crusade has had little impact so far, The Hill reports.

And the two most powerful Republicans in Washington — House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell – remain pledged to back the party's nominee.

Still, according to The Hill, McConnell is advising colleagues also on the ticket this fall to be ready to "run against the nominee."

"He said, 'Be prepared to run against the nominee,'" one unnamed Republican senator tells The Hill, adding McConnell assured colleagues the party would direct the bulk of its resources to saving the Senate if it became clear Trump or any other nominee had no chance of winning.

"He said in 1996 it was clear that [Republican presidential nominee Bob Dole] was going to lose, and the party put resources into Senate and House races instead."

http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/Republicans-Non-Support-Trump/2016/03/03/id/717219/#ixzz41rNXyc9o

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1293 on: March 03, 2016, 08:59:25 AM »
Gov. Susana Martinez to endorse Marco Rubio
By Dan Boyd / Capitol Bureau Chief
Published: Thursday, March 3rd, 2016

Gov. Susana Martinez has taken sides in this year’s rough-and-rumble GOP presidential nomination battle — and Marco Rubio is her pick.

Martinez, the chairwoman of the Republican Governors Association, announced this morning she will endorse Rubio, opting to side with the Florida senator over Republican frontrunner Donald Trump.

She also plans to hit the campaign trail with Rubio in the coming days — in Kansas tomorrow and in Florida on Saturday.

“Marco Rubio is a compelling leader who can unite the country around conservative principles that will improve the lives of all Americans,” Martinez said in a statement obtained by the Journal.

“The stakes for our great country are too high — and the differences between the candidates too great — for me to remain neutral in this race,” Martinez added. “I wholeheartedly trust Marco to keep us safe and ensure a better tomorrow, and I look forward to campaigning with him later this week.”

Martinez, who is also the nation’s first elected Hispanic female governor, had sidestepped questions in recent days about whether she would vote for Trump, but she has criticized some of his immigration-related comments in the past.

It’s unclear how big of a boost Rubio might get from the governor’s endorsement, as Rubio is third among GOP presidential in delegates won so far– behind Trump and Ted Cruz– and has won just one of the 15 states that have caucuses or primaries to date.

But the endorsement from Martinez could bolster Rubio’s viability. While New Mexico’s primary election does not take place until June 7, contests are on tap this month in Kansas, Florida, Arizona and Utah, among others.

Both Martinez and Rubio have Hispanic roots; Martinez grew up in El Paso and is the granddaughter of Mexican immigrants, while Rubio is a Cuban American from Miami.

Meanwhile, Martinez’s decision to endorse Rubio is also likely to ignite questions about the RGA’s relationship with Trump, should the New York billionaire businessman win the party’s nomination.

Martinez’s endorsement decision was first reported by Politico.

http://www.abqjournal.com/734004/politics/gov-susana-martinez-to-endorse-marco-rubio.html

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1294 on: March 03, 2016, 09:54:39 AM »
Romney speech.  Bravo!  Link to follow.  :)

It's up if you want to post it. 

Here's where Trump's response will be posted:


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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1295 on: March 03, 2016, 09:56:43 AM »
Sickening, disgraceful behavior by the media.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1296 on: March 03, 2016, 10:03:42 AM »
the media LOVES a feud.  They LOVE Trump vs. Romney.  That's the headline on fox AND menbc right now. 

Trump is the king of doing these big public battles.   Whoopie, Rosie, whoever. 


Christie 1pm news conference, what's that all about?

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1297 on: March 03, 2016, 10:20:10 AM »
Well done Mitt.   :)


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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1298 on: March 03, 2016, 10:31:48 AM »
Mitt would race us right to the bottom.  Straight to Hell.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #1299 on: March 03, 2016, 10:32:35 AM »
romney jockeying for a spot in the convention line.   he wants to be appointed the nominee ;)