Author Topic: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates  (Read 180978 times)

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #425 on: February 12, 2015, 02:56:23 PM »
Interesting.  Walker is making quite a splash, but it's early.  Look for the liberal hit pieces to start soon.  They are probably combing his Kindergarten records looking for dirt. 

I think from high school on... what a person does, certainly tells us what kind of adult he will be.

if John Doe is accused of date rape a dozen times in high school...
if John Doe beats up gay students in high school...
If john doe uses illegal drugs for a decade...

Then YES, these are relevant.  Even if the person is only 14 years old.  I get so tired of the old, tired liberal talking points of "oh, he just did coke for a few years in college" or "oh, everyone was illegally smoking pot for a decade back then".

here's an idea... Stop breaking the law, a**hole.  If you break the law as an adult, if you used illegal drugs, you have shitty judgment and you're selfish and abusive, and you have poor judgment.  Sorry, you do.  If youo shoot a man in a bar fight at 18, it follows you.  If you use, deal coke at 18, it should follow you too.


WAY too much sympathy for drug users, those committing violent assaults, etc.  Sorry, they shouldn't be prez.  Not obama, not bush.  Maybe it'll cut down drug use if people actually held these standards.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #426 on: February 17, 2015, 11:26:22 AM »

if John Doe is accused of date rape a dozen times in high school...


I know right?  What are we going to do about all those teenaged rapists who are raping so many high school students?  I mean, I've heard of numerous instances of a kid raping more than ten girls in high school.  They should suffer the same fate as all those kidnapped and murdered passengers on Flights 77 and 93.   >:(

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #427 on: February 17, 2015, 11:27:30 AM »
Marco Rubio Is Quietly Moving Up the 2016 Republican Ladder

Image: Marco Rubio Is Quietly Moving Up the 2016 Republican Ladder (Kevin Dietsch/UPI/Landov)
Tuesday, 17 Feb 2015
By Melanie Batley

Among many in the Republican Party, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio has moved up the list of viable candidates in a crowded field otherwise being dominated by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, The Wall Street Journal reported.

At a recent gathering of donors organized by the Koch brothers, he was well-received and gave a solid performance. It was noted with admiration that he has engaged Jim Merrill, a former top aide to 2012 GOP nominee Mitt Romney, to join his team and also has the support of George Seay, a high-end Texas donor.

And Rubio appears to be serious about a run with a recent visit to Iowa for a book signing and planned visits to other early primary states, such as New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada, evidently undeterred that he would be competing against his political mentor, Bush.

The Journal outlined the "case for Marco Rubio," saying it starts with the fact that he's a bright and articulate politician with broadly conservative credentials, while his Spanish-speaking skills lend him an advantage in attracting Hispanic voters.

At the same time, his success will depend on political timing, the Journal said, and some conditions that are out of his control.

For one, Republicans will need to be disillusioned enough with the political establishment that they are will to take a chance on someone new and younger who hasn't "waited his turn."

The Journal noted that the Democrats did as much when picking Barack Obama in 2008 as their nominee. Usually, the Republican Party chooses candidates who have paid their dues to the party by biding their time and having previous runs, such as Romney, Bob Dole, George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon, all of whom had been serious prior candidates before getting the ultimate nod.

There are signs, however, that the GOP may be ready to take on a less-tested candidate, as evidence by the lack of enthusiasm when Romney considered a third bid, the Journal said.

Rubio also has an asset of having a strong track record on foreign policy, an advantage over both New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and Walker, for example.

But at just 43 years old and with just four years' experience in the Senate, some will see him as too close a parallel to Obama in 2008 and would argue against repeating the experience, the Journal said.

Rubio also might have detractors for his role in negotiating the comprehensive immigration reform package in the Senate that would have given a pathway to citizenship for many illegal immigrants.

"These aren't small obstacles. The question for Mr. Rubio is whether they are trumped by the advantage of good timing," the Journal concluded.

http://www.Newsmax.com/Newsfront/Marco-Rubio-Republicans-2016-candidate/2015/02/17/id/625165/#ixzz3S22SZ4ER

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #428 on: February 18, 2015, 10:09:14 AM »
Rising.

Scott Walker Surges to Double-Digit Lead in Iowa Poll

Image: Scott Walker Surges to Double-Digit Lead in Iowa Poll (Jim Young/Reuters/Landov)
Wednesday, 18 Feb 2015
By Jennifer G. Hickey

With less than one year before the critical Iowa caucuses, Scott Walker is gaining strength among Hawkeye State voters, according to recent polls.

The Wisconsin governor holds a commanding double-digit lead among a packed Republican field with 24 percent, according to a Feb. 12-13 Townhall/Gravis poll of 969 registered Iowa voters.

Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul are tied for second at 10 percent. A Gravis poll conducted January 5-7 found former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney ahead of the field with 21 percent and Bush with 14 percent.

"We see Scott Walker leading; he clearly took the Mitt Romney vote. The debates the Republicans will have that start later in the year will be much more important than previous years," said Doug Kaplan, the managing partner of the Florida-based firm.

"It is hard in a large field to get a real number, when out of a dozen or more possible candidates, only six or eight will be viable Jan. 5, 2016, the day of the Iowa caucuses," he added.

Walker also leads in a recent Des Moines Register/Bloomberg Politics poll, which was taken before Romney announced he would not run for the nomination, with 15 percent and is the second-choice among caucus voters who favor an "establishment" candidate. Paul was one point behind Walker.

Outside of Iowa, Walker's prospects also are brightening. The National Journal has bumped him up to second on its GOP Presidential Power Rankings survey, which rates potential candidates' chances of winning based "on their individual strengths and weaknesses, political organizations, poll numbers — and on the odds that they even decide to run."

Bush was rated first in the first Power Rankings survey, a position he continues to hold, but Walker has moved from fourth place into second, in part due to his strong showing at last month's Iowa Freedom Summit.

"The question now is how Walker handles the scrutiny of being a perceived front-runner. Already this past week, the Boston Globe and Washington Post published lengthy stories digging into Walker's college years. (He didn't graduate from Marquette University.)

"And during a trip last week to the United Kingdom, Walker was unprepared to answer questions about foreign policy and evolution.

"There's nothing wrong with sitting atop the polls this early; it lends Walker legitimacy in the eyes of donors and activists alike. But the Wisconsin governor now has a target on his back — and his opponents have an entire year to take their shots," The National Journal said.

Walker's reluctance to answer the question about evolution is one reason why some believe he would not make a good candidate, while his past run-ins with labor unions is another.

"Unions might otherwise feel ambivalent about a Hillary Clinton candidacy, especially with the prospect of an insurgent campaign by Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who would likely embrace more firmly the divisive rhetoric about income equality that union members love to hear.

"If Walker is the GOP nominee, ambivalence will be trumped by anger. An activated and animated base of union supporters throwing money at the Democrats is a headache that Republicans don't need," writes CNN contributor Ruben Navarrette.

Navarrette also argues that Walker lacks the foreign policy experience needed to lead the nation in a "dangerous world."

http://www.Newsmax.com/Politics/Scott-Walker-Iowa-polls-Jeb-Bush-Rand-Paul/2015/02/18/id/625426/#ixzz3S7a8caq

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #429 on: February 18, 2015, 10:12:40 AM »
Rand Paul Is Looking to April to Announce Plan to Run for President, Associates Say
By JEREMY W. PETERS
FEB. 17, 2015

WASHINGTON — Senator Rand Paul is eyeing April 7 as the day he will announce his plans to run for president, people close to him said, a step that would position him ahead of his potential Republican rivals as a declared candidate and allow him to begin raising money directly for his campaign 10 months before the Iowa caucuses.

Mr. Paul, the junior senator from Kentucky and the heir to the robust Ron Paul grass-roots network, will take the next month to continue talking with members of his family about whether they are comfortable moving forward with the exhausting and, at times, agonizing rigors of a modern presidential campaign.

Only his family’s doubts could change his mind at this point, said associates of the senator, who insisted on anonymity because Mr. Paul’s plans had not yet taken final shape.

An announcement in early April would afford Mr. Paul certain advantages with the Federal Election Commission calendar. April 1 is the beginning of a quarterly reporting period, and he would have almost that entire time to raise money toward what his advisers hope would be a strong initial total to demonstrate that he is a serious competitor. Once he announced, Mr. Paul would also be able to transfer into his presidential campaign any of the $2.9 million he had in his Senate campaign account at the end of 2014.

“It just makes it neat and clean at the beginning of the quarter,” said one of Mr. Paul’s associates. Aides to Mr. Paul said Tuesday that they had no comment.

The senator’s associates said he would most likely declare his candidacy in Kentucky, the state that elected him in 2010 when he was still an ophthalmologist with no experience in government. He would then depart on a campaign swing through states with the earliest nominating contests, like Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina.

One issue Mr. Paul has yet to resolve is how he can run for both president and senator at the same time. State law in Kentucky bars candidates from seeking two offices at once.

His Senate term is up in 2016, and Mr. Paul is planning to make his case to the Kentucky Republican Party on March 7 that it should hold a presidential caucus instead of selecting its candidate in the primary scheduled for May 2016. The Senate primary would still be held in May, but a presidential caucus would be held earlier, so Mr. Paul technically would not appear twice on the same ballot.

Mr. Paul laid out this argument in a letter to state Republicans recently, asking that they allow him the same option Representative Paul D. Ryan had in 2012, when he ran simultaneously for his congressional seat in Wisconsin and as Mitt Romney’s running mate. “My request to you is simply to be treated equally compared to other potential candidates for the presidency,” Mr. Paul wrote.

If he fails to persuade Kentucky Republicans to switch to a caucus, his advisers say, one possible recourse could be to challenge the law in court.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/18/us/politics/rand-paul-is-looking-to-april-to-announce-plan-to-run-for-president-associates-say.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=second-column-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=1

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #430 on: February 19, 2015, 12:05:51 PM »
Scott Walker to attend private dinner with supply-siders in New York
By Robert Costa
February 18, 2015


Walker has been courting this particular bloc of conservatives for over a year. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker is scheduled to attend a private dinner Wednesday with longtime advocates of supply-side economics.

The gathering, set for the upscale “21” Club in Manhattan, is the latest effort by the potential Republican presidential contender to bolster his relationships with the GOP’s anti-tax wing. It also reflects the interest business-friendly conservatives have in his possible candidacy, in spite of the recent ascent of former Florida governor Jeb Bush.

Economists Larry Kudlow, Arthur Laffer, and Stephen Moore will host Walker, according to several people with knowledge of the event.

For decades, that trio of friends — all associated with President Ronald Reagan’s economic policies — have been high-profile proponents of using tax cuts to boost economic growth.

Laffer is best known for authoring the “Laffer curve,” an argument for increasing federal revenue by lowering taxes. Moore, a former Wall Street Journal editorial writer and founder of the Club for Growth, now works at the Heritage Foundation. Kudlow, a fixture on cable television, was one of Reagan’s advisers on fiscal and economic matters.

John Catsimatidis, the billionaire supermarket owner and former Republican mayoral candidate in New York, is sponsoring the occasion, which will feature a roundtable discussion among Walker, the hosts, and a mix of wealthy financiers and political personalities.

Among those planning to appear: investment banker Lewis Lehrman, anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, and philanthropist Jimmy Kemp, the son of Jack Kemp, the late New York congressman who ushered Reagan’s tax reforms through Congress.

For Walker, who had a breakout speech at a conservative summit in Iowa last month, the dinner is not a fundraiser but a reintroduction and opportunity for him to impress influential conservatives and potential mega-donors.

Walker has been courting this particular bloc of the conservative movement for more than a year as he has moved closer to running, casting himself as a devotee of Reagan’s economic philosophy in phone calls and meetings.

Last May, Walker appeared at the Four Seasons restaurant in New York for another Catsimatidis-sponsored dinner celebrating Kudlow’s tenure at CNBC, according to the New York Post.

Walker, however, has competition. In January, former Texas governor Rick Perry was a guest of the same group of conservative economists at the same restaurant.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2015/02/18/scott-walker-to-attend-private-dinner-with-supply-siders-in-new-york/

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #431 on: February 20, 2015, 03:17:22 PM »
NH PRIMARY POLL: 85% BELIEVE SCOTT WALKER QUALIFIED TO BE POTUS WITHOUT COLLEGE DEGREE

Scott_Walker_primary_vic tory_2010
by TONY LEE19 Feb 2015

An overwhelming majority of potential New Hampshire GOP primary voters believe Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) is plenty qualified to be president even without a college degree.

According to an NH1 New Hampshire poll, “85 percent of Republicans and independents likely to vote in next year’s GOP presidential primary say it doesn’t matter that Walker didn’t graduate college, and that he’s qualified to be the next president.” The poll found that “fifteen percent of those questioned say the lack of a college degree should disqualify Walker from serving in the White House.”

As NH1 noted, Walker, who has been leading in some early polls in Iowa and New Hampshire, “left Marquette University in the spring of his senior year to start a job with the American Red Cross,” and “if elected to the White House, he’d be the first president without a bachelor’s degree in more than 60 years.”

Insecure observers, pundits, and journalists in the permanent political class who, in a shallow manner, obsess about where people went to school, though, keep bringing up the issue. So have some Democrats. After former Vermont Governor Howard Dean (D) questioned “how well educated” Walker was last week on MSNBC, Walker blasted the “elitist” attitudes of his critics.

In an interview with Fox News’ Bret Baier, Walker said he went to “college not only to get an education” but to ultimately get a job and jumped at the Red Cross job opportunity. He said he meant to go back to school but got married, had children and before he knew it all of his time and money were going to his family.

Walker said that though he does not have a Ph.D. or a law degree from Ivy League schools, he hoped that voters would see his results reforming government against unions and left-wing interests.

“I hope they’ve seen that my results… show I got a graduate degree in taking on the big-government special interests,” he told Baier.

In 2014, Walker touted his “UW Flexible Degree” proposal and indicated that he would like to one day complete his degree through the program, which “will allow adults to start classes anytime, work at their own pace, and earn credit for what they already have learned in school or on the job once they prove college-level competencies.”

The NH1 poll was conducted Wednesday and has a margin of error is +/- 3.85 percentage points.

http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/02/19/nh-primary-poll-85-believe-scott-walker-qualified-to-be-potus-without-college-degree/

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #432 on: February 24, 2015, 10:41:19 AM »
Kasich heads to South Carolina
By Terence Burlij, CNN
February 11, 2015

Ohio Gov. John Kasich heads to South Carolina, stoking talk of a potential presidential campaign.

Washington (CNN)Ohio Gov. John Kasich will travel to the first in the South primary state of South Carolina next week to promote his brand of fiscal conservatism, a move likely to stoke speculation the Republican might be considering a possible presidential bid in 2016.

The news of Kasich's travel to South Carolina was first reported by The Washington Post.

The visit to South Carolina next Wednesday, and West Virginia the following day, will focus on Kasich's push for a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget, according to a spokesperson for the governor. Kasich traveled to South Dakota, Wyoming and Idaho last month to also put a spotlight on his balanced budget effort.

While in the state Kasich will hold a reception with GOP and elected officials on Wednesday evening and then speak to the House caucus on Thursday, according to a Republican source familiar with the plans.

Kasich resoundingly won re-election to a second term in 2014, trouncing Democrat Ed FitzGerald by more than 30 points in the all-important battleground Buckeye State.

The Ohioan has made little noise about launching a 2016 campaign, with the South Carolina visit the first by Kasich to an early voting state this year.

In a CNN/ORC poll released last December Kasich received the support of 3 percent of likely GOP voters.

http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/11/politics/john-kasich-2016-candidate-south-carolina/index.html

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #433 on: February 25, 2015, 10:15:30 AM »
Carly Fiorina forms new political action committee
By Tom Hamburger
February 24, 2015

Supporters of former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina announced the establishment of a new super PAC Tuesday to support a possible GOP presidential candidacy by the former Senate candidate from California.

The new organization, Carly For America, is designed to "build conservative support and help lay the groundwork for a potential presidential candidacy," said Steve DeMaura, the PAC's executive director.

The announcement was sent via e-mail to potential supporters Tuesday evening, two days before Fiorina is due to address the Conservative Political Action Conference that meets in Washington.

In the e-mail, DeMaura said that Fiorina received a strong response to the PAC she formed in 2014 called "Unlocking Potential," also a super PAC that could collect unlimited donations from individuals, unions and corporations. That super PAC was set up to galvanize women voters and boost the Republican ground game. It provided modest support to several GOP Senate campaigns.

"This is an entirely new effort being brought forward by Carly's supporters because they'd like to see her run for president," DeMaura said of Carly For America on Tuesday evening.

An accompanying press release announced new staff for the organization, including William B. Canfield, who will serve as general counsel; Greg Mueller, a former senior adviser to the presidential campaigns of Pat Buchanan and Steve Forbes, who will serve as president.

Like other potential candidates in 2016, Fiorina is not yet saying whether she will actually run. That decision may coincide with the upcoming release of her second book, "Rising to the Challenge: My Leadership Journey."

In a new video, Fiorina touts her rise from secretary to Silicon Valley CEO and offers viewers a look at a determined and resolute conservative.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2015/02/24/carly-fiorina-forms-new-political-action-committee/?wprss=rss_politics

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #434 on: February 26, 2015, 12:31:58 PM »
Good commentary. 

Bobby Jindal for President?
By Cal Thomas | February 13, 2015

Gov. Bobby Jindal's name is not first on most people's list of candidates for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016, but maybe we should at least start paying attention to him. If one's political enemies are any indication of potential strength, Jindal of Louisiana may be a more formidable force than some people realize.

During a visit to Washington Monday, Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank couldn't wait to attack Jindal and his record. Why bother with someone he and others consider a lightweight from a small Southern state, unless there is more there than the elites think?

In an interview with me, Jindal gave long and rapid-fire answers. The governor, ineligible for re-election due to term limits, seemed in a hurry. He said he'd decide in "two to three months" whether to run for president.

In January 2009, when I interviewed Jindal in his office in Baton Rouge, just days before President Obama's inauguration, the governor told me Republicans must decide what they are for before picking a presidential candidate. How's that going?

"We're doing better," he says, "but we have more work to do." He thinks Republicans should stop attacking Obamacare and start emphasizing what they would replace it with. He also faults members of his party for running against Obamacare in the last election and then "throwing in the towel and saying, 'Well, you can't really repeal tax increases; you can't really undo an entitlement program.'"

Jindal wants Republicans to get away from defining themselves as anti-Obama and the party of "no" and start showing people "we can be principled, conservative, not just a cheaper version of the Democratic Party."

What about Hillary Clinton? Can she be defeated if she runs?

"Absolutely," says a confident Jindal, as if he were coaching a team against a superior opponent. "As Republicans we don't need to obsess about our opponents, we don't need to define ourselves in opposition to our opponents. Let (Democrats) look backward; we need to look forward."

He says voters want the hard truth told to them, which immediately brings to mind the oft-quoted Jack Nicholson line from "A Few Good Men": "You can't handle the truth." In the age that obsesses with cultural embarrassments like the Kardashian family, the truth -- if we can agree on what that is -- may be the last thing people want to hear. But Jindal's sentiment is a noble one.

I ask him about the potential candidacy of former former-Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida, and Jindal adopts Reagan's "11th Commandment" admonition never to criticize a fellow Republican: "Anybody who is thinking about running doesn't need to define himself against particular candidates. We need to say what we are for." While Jindal says he "has a lot of respect" for Bush, who once championed Common Core federal education standards. Jindal, however, opposes it. He adds he doesn't want to see "the establishment, the party donors, trying to clear the field for anybody. An open debate is good for the voters."

On foreign policy, he and former Sen. Jim Talent (R-Mo.) have written a paper on the subject. Among other things, he wants to arm the Kurds in their fight against ISIS in Iraq and demonstrate to our allies America's resolve to support them in any fight against the Islamic State, support he thinks is lacking under the Obama administration. He would also send arms to the Ukrainian military now fighting Russian troops.

On social issues, Jindal, a Roman Catholic, says: "I'm not changing my position on marriage or protecting human life. I know it's fashionable for a lot of politicians to change their minds..." It doesn't matter what the polls say on this. I'm not evolving with the polls."

Jindal is a long shot for president and even vice president, but he brings enthusiasm, a positive outlook and a decent record as governor and that's not a bad start for any presidential candidate.

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/cal-thomas/2015/02/13/bobby-jindal-president#sthash.j0PBxaVa.dpuf

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #435 on: February 27, 2015, 11:35:37 AM »
Scott Walker Winning Support Across Entire GOP Spectrum

Image: Scott Walker Winning Support Across Entire GOP Spectrum (Pete Marovich/Getty Images)
Friday, 27 Feb 2015
By Melanie Batley

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has distinguished himself among a large field of potential 2016 presidential contenders for having achieved widespread support across a broad range of Republican voters, National Journal reported.

The Journal noted a Quinnipiac poll out this week that gave Walker a 25 percent lead among likely participants in the Iowa Republican caucus, twice as much as the second-place finisher, with consistent support across almost all of the party's religious, class and ideological factions.

The Journal noted that no Republican presidential candidate has demonstrated that level of broad appeal since George W. Bush in 2000.

"The real opportunity for the party is if someone like a Scott Walker can unite this populist wing with the more establishment wing. I think that's a stronger general election candidate than just going down the establishment side [for a nominee] with a lack of energy on the populist wing," John Weaver, chief strategist for John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign, told the Journal.

"He has the opportunity to do so — but he doesn't have any definition yet."

The Journal pointed out that in the Quinnipiac poll, Walker leads with both evangelical voters, who make up a substantial voting bloc, as well as non-evangelical voters, by double digits, in sharp contrast with every other rival.

It is unclear whether Walker will be able to continue to appeal to a wide range of Republicans and also the broader public as the fight for the nomination gets underway, the Journal said.

Walker had a difficult few weeks after he refused to clearly embrace evolution, renounce Rudy Giuliani's comments about the president, or describe Obama as a Christian.

"He can't have more weeks like that where he cross-pressures the non-evangelical, secular wing of the party," Weaver told the Journal. "There is going to be tremendous pressure on him to define himself with that one wing in order to produce an Iowa victory."

According to the Journal, all of the other leading candidates in the Quinnipiac poll had a much narrower range of support. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's support drops the more conservative the voter is, while Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul's support demonstrated a similar trend.

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/Scott-Walker-gop-conservatives-establishment/2015/02/27/id/627232/#ixzz3SyYg6ieY

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #436 on: February 27, 2015, 02:56:40 PM »
Rand Paul Wins CPAC Straw Poll
BY MICHAEL O'BRIEN

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul won an influential straw poll of conservative activists' preference in the next GOP presidential nominee.

Thirty-one percent of attendees of the 2014 Conservative Political Action Conference named Paul, the libertarian-minded, first-term senator, as their top choice for the Republican presidential nominee in 2016.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz finished second at 11 percent, and longshot neuroscientist Ben Carson registered a surprising third place finish, at 9 percent.

The straw poll is traditionally an early benchmark of conservatives' passion for various Republican candidates for the presidency.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a favorite of establishment Republicans who has sometimes tangled with conservatives and who has struggled with a recent political scandal, finished in fourth place at 8 percent. Christie made an appearance at CPAC this year after organizers declined to invite him in 2013.

Other notable finishers: Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker at 7, Rick Santorum at 7 percent, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio at 6 percent, Rep. Paul Ryan at 3 percent and Texas Gov. Rick Perry at 3 percent.

The Paul family has often represented itself well in the CPAC straw poll. Fueled in part by fervent, college-aged supporters (participants aged 18-25 made up almost half of straw poll participants), Ron Paul won the event in 2009 and 2010. His son, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, won his first straw poll last year.

But it's also an imperfect predictor of White House hopefuls' fortunes once they reach the Republican primaries. Mitt Romney won the straw poll in 2012, but over the significant criticism of other candidates who accused him of gaming the process. Sen. John McCain, the GOP's 2008 nominee, never won the straw poll.

http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/cpac/rand-paul-wins-cpac-straw-poll-n47996

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #437 on: February 27, 2015, 04:46:38 PM »

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #438 on: February 28, 2015, 07:22:50 AM »


Would love to see Donald Trump and Ted Cruz going at it on the debate stage.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #439 on: February 28, 2015, 07:46:21 AM »
Would love to see Donald Trump and Ted Cruz going at it on the debate stage.

Cruz would DEMOLISH Trump.

Trump's entire 2012 "platform" was birth cert (which I believe, but he's very terrible and talking about it without making it all about himself).   Trump was awful on issues such as China. 

I've said it many, many times... CRUZ OR LOSE.  It's that simple.  Run a strong, far-right fiscal conservative like Cruz or a Walker, or lose with another RINO.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #440 on: March 02, 2015, 06:04:58 AM »
Rand Paul wins 2015 CPAC straw poll
Published February 28, 2015
FoxNews.com


Feb. 27, 2015: Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Md. (AP)
Kentucky GOP Sen. Rand Paul won the 2015 Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll for potential GOP White House candidates for the third consecutive year.

"Our party is filled with constitutional conservatives who have chosen to stand with me for a third consecutive straw poll victory," Paul said. "Since President Ronald Reagan, the (conference) has been the gold standard on where conservatives stand. The constitutional conservatives of our party have spoken in a loud and clear voice today."

Paul finished with 26 percent of the vote, ahead of Wisconsin GOP Gov. Scott Walker, who finished with 21 percent of the vote.

Former Florida GOP Gov. Jeb Bush, a popular establishment candidate who has struggled to reconnect with conservatives, finished in fifth place, with 8 percent of the vote.

The poll was conducted over the conference’s three days of seminars and speeches by most the leading potential Republican candidates. CPAC organizers said 11,344 people attended the event in Oxon Hill, Md., that 3,007 people participated in the poll and that 42 percent of the voters were students.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, consider a top-flight candidate since the 2012 presidential elections, finished 10th with 2.8 percent of the vote.

His would-be candidacy has since been plagued by the political scandal known as BridgeGate, an up-and-down state economy and his reputation of being a hot head.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz finished in third place with 11.5 percent of the vote, followed by retired neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson in fourth with 11 percent.

The others receiving votes were former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, in sixth place with 4.3 percent of the vote. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio finished in seventh with 4.3 percent. Donald Trump finished eighth with 3.5 percent, Carly Fiorina was ninth with 3 percent, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry finished after Christie, in 11th place, with 1.1 percent and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal finished 12th with .9 percent of the vote.

Former GOP vice presidential candidate and Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin finished 13th with .8 percent, and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee finished 14th with .3 percent of the vote.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2015/02/28/rand-paul-wins-2015-cpac-straw-poll/

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #441 on: March 04, 2015, 10:16:03 AM »
Ben Carson Establishes Presidential Exploratory Committee
by ELIANA JOHNSON   
March 3, 2015 9:45 AM

Dr. Ben Carson on Tuesday announced that he has established a presidential exploratory committee. The retired pediatric neurosurgeon who rocketed to national fame after tut-tutting the president at the National Prayer Breakfast in 2012, has publicly toyed with a presidential bid for months now and has in recent weeks begun to hire the personnel to make it happen.  “In every aspect of Dr. Carson’s life, he has exemplified true leadership,” Carson’s longtime friend Terry Giles, who is likely to serve as chairman of his campaign, said in a statement. “Overcoming dire poverty in his youth to become head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins, Dr. Carson is uniquely situated to understand the needs and hopes of all Americans. His undeniable abilities and extraordinary life experiences drive his passion to ensure that, through hard work and perseverance, the American dream remains attainable to all. For the next few months, Dr. Carson looks forward to listening to the American people to gauge support for a presidential candidacy.”  Carson has also launched a new website, www.bencarson.com, which previews the themes of his likely campaign: “Unite. Heal. Thrive.”

http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/414727/ben-carson-establishes-presidential-exploratory-committee-eliana-johnson

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #442 on: March 04, 2015, 10:21:22 AM »
I can't wait for Carson to hit the primary debates.  He is going to provide plenty of LOL material for the nation.

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #443 on: March 04, 2015, 06:22:47 PM »
I can't wait for Carson to hit the primary debates.  He is going to provide plenty of LOL material for the nation.

don't worry, if it's anything like 2008 and 2016, his logical words will be drowned out by the screams from Rush, Levin, and their RINO peons on getbig.    You know the argument, "he's not electable, he's too extreme, we need a moderate!"

I really hope carson runs, and I hope he kicks the fcking shit out of the RINOs, and I hope he cleans Warren's clock in the main election.  I hope the repubs wont' stand in his way

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #444 on: March 11, 2015, 10:27:08 AM »
Mar 10, 2015
Jim Webb Ramps Up Careful Approach to 2016
By  REBECCA BALLHAUS


Former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb walks off stage after speaking at the International Association of Firefighters forum in Washington on Tuesday. Associated Press

Mr. Webb, who became the first presidential candidate of the 2016 cycle to launch an exploratory committee in November, has since appeared to take a more leisurely pace as he prepares to launch his official campaign. Whereas Republican 2016 hopefuls have been making frequent trips to the early-nominating states of Iowa and New Hampshire, Mr. Webb has yet to venture to either of those this year. His most recent public trip to Iowa was last August.

Whether Mr. Webb—seen as a long-shot candidate, particularly for a nomination that is widely expected to go to Hillary Clinton, if she runs—will mount a serious campaign has come under scrutiny because of the dearth of viable Democratic candidates who are considering running against Mrs. Clinton. Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley is the only other Democrat who has so far expressed interest in entering the race. Republicans, meanwhile, have nearly a dozen potential candidates to choose from.

Addressing reporters in Washington, D.C., Tuesday, Mr. Webb said he and his team are still “carefully and methodically” considering whether to officially launch a presidential campaign. “I’m looking at this issue in terms of whether this is something that I can fully commit myself to, and we’re also trying to figure out if we can get the sort of financial support” needed, he said.

Next month, Mr. Webb will head to Iowa, followed by a trip to South Carolina in May and another to New Hampshire in June. On Tuesday, his team also launched a new website (http://webb2016.com) that better reflects a campaign, his spokesman said.

Mr. Webb said he began “doing more media” last month and said he has seen “tremendous support” in response. “In terms of the visits, we’re a little bit behind, but in terms of putting together the structure that will allow us to make a decision, we’re right where I want to be,” he added.

Speaking at an event Tuesday sponsored by the International Association of Fire Fighters, Mr. Webb received a warm reception as he emphasized his time as a marine in Vietnam. “I suppose there are a lot of people who can say that they’ve seen firefighters fight a fire. But there aren’t very many who can say they’ve fought a fire,” he said. “When I was in the Senate, a lot of my colleagues liked to point out how many times they’d been to Iraq and Afghanistan. But watching a war isn’t the same thing as fighting a war.”

William McQuillen, the secretary-treasurer of the Professional Fire Fighters of New Hampshire, called Mr. Webb a “fascinating guy” with an “important and powerful story to tell.”

Talking to reporters, Mr. Webb once again steered clear of any criticism of Mrs. Clinton. Asked his opinion about last week’s revelation that she used a private email account as secretary of state—which she is expected to address in a press conference Tuesday afternoon—he said, “I think it’s a good time for the air to be cleared.”

Mr. Webb has been hesitant to take a stance on a number of issues since expressing his interest in the 2016 race. Asked Tuesday his opinion of states legalizing marijuana, he said it’s an “interesting national experiment” and “we’ll see how it plays out.”

The senator acknowledged his own vagueness, citing a list published following President Barack Obama‘s inauguration of people the president “needed to worry about” on which he ranked No. 9—because “no one understands where he stands on any one issue.” He called himself “intellectually independent.”

In articulating how he might contrast his candidacy against the rest of the contenders eyeing the White House, Mr. Webb emphasized that he has spent time both in and out of public office. He described his career as “a lifetime of leadership that has been interspaced with periods out in the private sector where you live in the world that the government creates.”

If he launches a campaign, he would face a number of contenders who have spent nearly their entire careers in public office. Mrs. Clinton went from the White House to the U.S. Senate to the State Department. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, has been a politician since he was in his 20s. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was elected to the Florida House of Representatives before he was 30.

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2015/03/10/jim-webb-ramps-up-careful-approach-to-2016/

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #445 on: March 11, 2015, 08:17:59 PM »
If no hilary in the race, I could see a Warren/Webb ticket.... the extreme left, the military middle dems.

Warren would need some military credibility. 

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #446 on: March 13, 2015, 10:47:06 AM »
Insider Buzz Grows for Marco Rubio
by ELIANA JOHNSON   
March 12, 2015

Are we on the cusp of a Rubio moment? ‘Everybody’s talking about Rubio.”  So says a top Republican operative who’s been in touch with nearly every potential presidential campaign, as well as with several top donors.  Jeb Bush’s announcement in December launched both a fundraising juggernaut and an aggressive hiring spree, and Scott Walker’s speech in Iowa the following month lifted Walker to the top of national polls. But a little more than a month later, says the operative, “The Jeb boom is over and people are having second thoughts about Walker.” 

The beneficiary in terms of buzz is Marco Rubio, who now has many of the party’s top donors looking at him in a way they weren’t even a month ago. Though Rubio hasn’t made as much noise as his competitors as the 2016 campaign has gotten underway in earnest, his knowledgeable presentations and obvious political talent are nonetheless turning heads or, at least, enough of them. Rubio hasn’t made a big splash, neither building a “shock and awe” campaign like Bush nor delivering a marquee speech like Walker (who afterward seemed almost to be caught off guard by his rapid ascent). Instead, Rubio appears to be gambling on the idea that, in what is sure to be a long primary with a crowded field, a slow-and-steady approach will prevail. 

The buzz about Rubio comes on the heels of a successful but nonetheless low-profile book tour that took him through the early-primary states of Iowa, South Carolina, Nevada, and New Hampshire, and as the frenetic motion around Bush and Walker has begun to subside. 

Bush’s announcement left many conservatives searching for an alternative to the establishment candidate, and Walker has at times looked like he could fill that space. But he has stumbled a couple of times before the press and displayed some shakiness on policy issues. 

“He hit his escape velocity so quickly that I’m not sure his infrastructure, or he, can sustain this,” says a top Republican policy adviser. At the Club for Growth’s winter economic conference last month in Palm Beach, Fla., the governor fumbled responses to questions on the Dodd-Frank regulatory bill and the Export-Import Bank. His campaign has hired foreign- and domestic-policy experts and, because Walker spends his days running the state of Wisconsin, he is fitting in briefings in hour-long increments when time permits. The scramble to get him up to speed on national issues has shown. 

We haven’t heard nearly as much about Rubio as about Walker, but it’s been a good few months for the Florida senator. Just last week, the Miami billionaire auto dealer Norman Braman told multiple news outlets, including National Review, that he will make a substantial financial contribution to Rubio’s presidential campaign if, as seems likely, he decides to run. At the American Enterprise Institute’s annual donor retreat in Sea Island, Ga., one attendee says Rubio got rave reviews from a crowd that included several billionaires. And in late January, the senator impressed the libertarian-leaning crowd at the Koch brothers’ donor conference in Palm Springs, Calif., and came out on top of an informal straw poll conducted there. 

Rubio is also getting positive reviews from conservative intellectuals, and not just from the reform conservatives among whom he’s long had a fan base.

“Senator Rubio is going to be a formidable candidate in 2016, should he decide to run,” says Lanhee Chen, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution who served as policy director for Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign. “He’s spent the last several years developing thoughtful, conservative policy proposals, and he will be a dynamic messenger who can tell the story of how his ideas will contribute to upward mobility, opportunity, and security for all Americans.” 

Rubio has made it a point to offer a series of detailed policy proposals over the past two years, including on foreign policy, where he has staked out a muscular internationalist position that has won him plaudits from several officials who served in the George W. Bush administration and who have broadly been referred to as “neoconservatives.” 

A major question lingering over Rubio and threatening to dog him with tea-party voters who boosted him to victory in 2010 is his support for the Senate’s Gang of Eight bill, which would have provided a path to legal status for illegal immigrants already in the country. Though Rubio has since said he favors an approach that would secure the border first, it remains to be seen how his role in the 2013 immigration showdown will play with voters. But the latest NBC News/WSJ poll gives some indication: More Republicans say they could see themselves supporting Rubio — a full 56 percent — than anybody else. Forty-nine percent said they could see themselves backing Bush. By the same token, the resistance to a Rubio candidacy is also lower than to a Bush candidacy: While 26 percent said they couldn’t see themselves supporting Rubio, 42 percent said so of Bush. 

As conservatives search for an alternative to the establishment candidate, the question right now is whether Rubio can actually break out. Says the GOP policy adviser, “If he never gets escape velocity, he’ll linger around 7 or 8 percent” in the polls. Then again, he says, Rubio “has the greatest potential to make noise in this race.” 

For now, he is taking advantage of his opponents’ mistakes and turning the right heads.

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/415280/insider-buzz-grows-marco-rubio-eliana-johnson

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #447 on: March 13, 2015, 11:08:07 AM »
Insider Buzz Grows for Marco Rubio
by ELIANA JOHNSON   
March 12, 2015

LOL @ "EVERYONE" is talking about Rubio...

The mainstream republican news machine is talking about Rubio. 

The BASE won't vote for the dude.  They didn't vote for a RINO named Mccain, they didn't vote for a RINO named Romney. 

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #448 on: March 16, 2015, 12:20:08 PM »
WaPo: 'Lost' Bobby Jindal Looks to Reclaim GOP Star Status
Monday, 16 Mar 2015
By Andrea Billups

Bobby Jindal was once a rising GOP star, but now his future political interests have stalled as he travels to reclaim his spotlight and define what might set him apart in what is shaping up to be a crowded 2016 presidential field, The Washington Post reported.

Jindal, noted the Post, seems "lost" and "an afterthought" for his party, after early successes, dropping off to just 2 percent in national GOP polls, and coming in at 12th place in a February Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll.

In seeking to reclaim his stature, wrote the Post, Jindal appears to have "wound up looking as if he's trying to be every politician at once. A hawk. A wonk. A tea party rebel. A Christian revivalist. A first-generation American. A Bubba."

The Post added of the Louisiana governor's positioning quandary: "Not long ago, the Louisiana governor was the Republican candidate of the future — the son of immigrants and also a proud product of the Deep South. He is a devout Catholic, an experienced governor and — in a political sphere dominated by shallow cable-television shouters — a data-driven Rhodes scholar."

Jindal himself told the Post that he isn't yet running for president.

"We don't have a campaign strategy," he told the Post. "So it would be too early to change it."

The Christian Post reported that Jindal says he's about two months from making a decision on running in 2016. He said he believes the next president should come from the ranks of governors as he continues to discuss policy issues in speeches around the country.

ABC News described his latest pitch to possible voters as a "full-spectrum conservative."

"We need to be the party of everybody," Jindal told ABC at the most recent Conservative Political Action Conference. "We need to fight for 100 percent of the votes."

http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/Bobby-Jindal-GOP-CPAC-poll/2015/03/16/id/630354/#ixzz3UZtkq196

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Re: 16 for '16: The Most Talked-About Potential GOP Presidential Candidates
« Reply #449 on: March 16, 2015, 12:21:11 PM »
Mike Huckabee returns to Iowa
By Chris Moody, CNN Senior Digital Correspondent
Fri March 13, 2015


(CNN)Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee plans to return to Iowa next week in anticipation for a possible second presidential campaign, CNN Politics has learned.

According to a schedule provided by Huckabee's political action committee, he intends to make a brief, one-day swing through the western part of the state on Wednesday, with stops in Council Bluffs and Sioux City.

READ MORE: Jeb Bush makes his first Iowa foray

Huckabee, who won a majority of Republican votes in the Iowa caucuses when he first ran for president in 2008, will likely make a major push in the state if he launches another bid.

A Quinnipiac University poll conducted in late February found that 11 percent of likely caucus-goers supported Huckabee among a crowded field of Republican contenders, with Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in the lead with 25 percent

Huckabee's Iowa trip comes after a brief swing through Washington, D.C., where he met with the American Enterprise Institute President Arthur Brooks and Senate GOP lawmakers. Last week, Huckabee joined several other Republican potential White House contenders at the Iowa Agriculture Summit in Des Moines.

http://www.cnn.com/2015/03/13/politics/mike-huckabee-iowa/index.html