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Santorum Out Of Race; Romney Presumptive GOP Nominee

Rick_Santorum

Former Senator Rick Santorum announced today that he will be suspending his presidential campaign, effectively making former Governor Mitt Romney the GOP Nominee for President.

From the AP:

A Republican close to the campaign says the former Pennsylvania senator was to make the announcement Tuesday in his home state of Pennsylvania, two weeks before the GOP presidential primary there. Santorum faced a tough fight in his home state against Romney.

For more on the story, listen to The Tony Katz Show at 6pm EST.

The Tony Katz Show – Podcast – 4/4/12 GOP Recap And A Truce With Occupy

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Santorum says Romney “Uniquely Unqualified” To Take On Obama, Obamacare

Rick_Santorum

Speaking at the Defending the Dream Summit in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, presidential candidate Sen. Rick Santorum stated that former Gov. Mitt Romney was “uniquely unqualified” to take on President Obama and Obamacare.

Is Romney Unstoppable?

Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney

Presidential candidate Mitt Romney won big in the Illinois primary, taking 47% of the vote and picking up 38 delegates, giving him 554 total. After winning the majority of states on Super Tuesday, and amassing more delegates than the rest of the candidates combined, one must wonder if Romney will be the GOP nominee? The answer is easy; not yet.

Romney has done well in obtaining delegates. Even when he doesn’t win, he wins. In Mississippi and Alabama, where he came in second and third respectively, he still took 23 delegates. Those loses were tempered with wins in American Samoa and Hawaii, giving Romney another 18 delegates. Romney came away from the week with more delegates than Santorum.

Add to that the 20 delegates he took in Puerto Rico, and Romney, just in the last week, took as many delegates as Santorum and Newt Gingrich combined. Rep. Ron Paul gained just 3 delegates in that same time period. Illinois just adds to Romney’s total.

Yet, still, the time is too soon to make a decision. Louisiana votes on March 24th, offering up 46 delegates in a proportional primary. One week later, political hotbed Wisconsin, along with Maryland and the District of Columbia, offer up 98 delegates in “Winner Take All!” primaries.

Rick Santorum has too many victories to be asked out of the race. He is favored to win in Louisiana, giving him (regardless of the delegates won that night) another state that he can claim wants him over Romney. A win there will also get him money, via donations, which he will desperately need to be competitive in Wisconsin.

A Louisiana win for Santorum will leave Gingrich looking in the mirror. He has pledged to take the race to Tampa, site of the GOP convention in August. However, the word is out that Gingrich is out of cash. Sheldon Adelson’s contributions to the Gingrich-leaning Winning The Future Super-Pac help, but having no cash on hand is a big problem. No victories or good showings since his Georgia win have left Gingrich unable to effectively fund raise.

Romney raised $12 million in February. Santorum raised $9 million.

The answer on Romney is, still, not yet. Lots of victories, lots of delegates, but still not running away with the nomination. A week ago I posited that what these candidates need is one more debate. Today, Ed Morrissey of HotAir came to the same conclusion, but on a two-man debate between Romney and Santorum. If Louisiana goes the way of the polls, he may get his wish as they’ll possibly be the only men left standing.

 

Tony On TownHall.com: It’s Official! We Need One More Debate!

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Here is Tony’s latest article on TownHall.com. With Santorum winning in Alabama and Mississippi, Romney winning Hawaii and Gingrich edging out Romney for second place in the South, it seems clear: We need one more debate:

It’s Official! We Need One More Debate!

Mitt Romney missed a chance to wrap up the GOP nomination the other night, placing a disappointing third in the Alabama and Mississippi primaries. The delegate count is still in his favor, but the bigger story here is that the “front runner” lost to both Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich. This means only one thing – we need another debate.

This news will be hard to take for the establishment. But what isn’t hard to take for the establishment when they don’t get their way? (Their way, of course, being you accept Romney and shut the hell up already!) The reality is that the American people don’t yet have a candidate, and they reject the “electability” argument. They agree with Santorum’s view that the establishment, with support from the media, is telling us that Romney is our only option.

Romney has more than double Santorum’s delegates and triple Gingrich’s, but he still can’t deliver a knockout blow. After five years and untold millions of dollars, he still can’t win in the South. Florida notwithstanding (and Florida, in the minds of many, doesn’t count as South), Romney has lost Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi. Louisiana is coming up fast.

The Romney campaign downplays these losses:

“It’s all about getting more delegates,” Romney told reporters Tuesday as he campaigned in Missouri, which holds caucuses Saturday. His campaign said he met his goal of claiming a third of the delegates up for grabs Tuesday.

So the goal of the frontrunner was to get a third of the delegates?

Delegates matter. The prize is 1144 delegates, enough to clinch the nomination. Each time the “front runner” comes in third, there’s less chance he will reach that magic number prior to the GOP convention.

What Romney needs – and he’s not the only one – is a debate. Romney needs a debate more than he needs oxygen, Kid Rock or Jeff “you might be a redneck” Foxworthy.

Sure, his lead is big, but it’s not big enough. With every third place finish the “front runner” has, the closer he gets to a decision being made for him at the convention. Does Romney really want to risk that? A debate can remove the risk, and allow him to – AGAIN! – restate his electability case to America.

He’s not the only one in need of a debate. Santorum lost Ohio, and, truth be told, badly. Three weeks before the primary, Santorum was ahead of Romney 42% to 24%. On primary night, Santorum lost by 1%. He went from +18 to -1; a 19 point swing in three weeks. With Wisconsin, New York and Pennsylvania fast approaching, Santorum needs to restate his case as well. “I’m Rick Santorum, I’m more than just the Heartland candidate and let me show you how I can beat Barack Obama!”

Only a debate can set one of these men free. Erick Erickson thinks a debate is a very good idea,especially for Romney:

The Romney camp signaled it was tired of the debates. But in the Florida debates the Romney camp largely destroyed Gingrich before winning Florida. In the Mesa, AZ debate on CNN the Romney camp ruined Rick Santorum before winning Arizona and barely Michigan.Both times the Romney campaign used good debate performances to rebound lagging poll numbers into real momentum. Then he decided to stop debating. Out of sight and out of mind, conservatives forgot why they thought he was the guy who could beat Obama.

Both of the those debates also highlighted horrible performances. In Arizona, Santorum showed himself as a Senator, not a President. In Jacksonville, Gingrich showed himself unwilling to fight back; rare for him, and deadly for his campaign.

Gingrich sits at a multi-pronged cross roads. He didn’t win in the deep South like he should have, but he beat Romney in both states. He has 1/3rd the delegates of Romney, but the talk of a Gingrich/Perry ticket could revitalize Tea Party supporters (of course, predicated on him lasting to the convention and getting past the first ballot, which is his entire plan!) To have a chance at his plan, regardless of the probability of success, Gingrich needs a debate.

We, The People, need one more debate. So, let’s have one! The Debate To End All Debates! Hosted and moderated by conservatives. Get the candidates up there and lets not waste time with gotcha questions about contraceptives, the candidates’ private lives or their religions (which, of course, means Charles Blow won’t be watching,) but about concrete plans for increasing domestically-produced energy and lowering gas prices. Let’s get in a few questions in about Operation Fast and Furious, and a full segment dedicated to Constitutional government – what it means, where we fall short, and how we get back to it.

One more debate. Winner takes all.

Let Democrats Vote for Santorum

Rick_Santorum

Here is my latest article on TownHall.com. The Romney campaign was infuriated that Rick Santorum was sending out robocalls to Democrats in Michigan, asking for their vote. Remember, the key to winning a political office is winning:

Let the Democrats Vote For Santorum

NOTE – This article was written before the Michigan and Arizona primary. Mitt Romney won both.

The biggest lie ever told is that there is something more important than winning in politics. For the rest of us, the concepts of valor, honesty and morals have clear cut lines and distinctions. Certainly, on a governing level, they do for the Presidential candidates as well. But first, you have to win. That’s what Rick Santorum is trying to do, and that feigned outrage of Mitt Romney and Co. is just laughable. They’re not offended…they’re scared.

In the state of Michigan, the primary system is open. Anyone who is a registered voter may vote in the GOP primary. Any registered Democrat may show up to a polling place, sign in (not sure if ID’s are required, but if they are, you know, racism!) and vote. Democrats are using this as an opportunity to vote for someone who they don’t believe in, but who they think will make it harder on the Republicans going forward.

As with all Leftist ideas, it has no originality or is straight out stolen from someone else. In this case, it was stolen from Rush Limbaugh, who called it Operation Chaos during the Obama-Clinton primary battle. In Michigan, they are calling it Operation Hilarity. Democrats are calling on Democrats to ask for a Republican ballot at their polling place, and vote for Rick Santorum. Their bet? According to Daily Kos:

“…to keep the Republican primary race in a deadlock in order to tarnish the viability of the frontrunners and ensure a second term for Obama.”

A Santorum win will make Romney a weaker candidate.  If Romney loses Michigan (his home state, where his father was a three-term governor) he can no longer claim the mantle of “obvious choice.” He is no longer the front-runner. Electability? Are you kidding?

Would it be so shocking to realize that Santorum can love God AND not be the Leftist caricature of someone who loves God? Santorum is not dumb, as the Left thinks of all of those “bible thumpers!” (He may be a believer in the value of big government, but that’s just wrong…far different than dumb.) Santorum has put out robo-calls to Democrat voters, asking them to vote for him. He’s pro-actively pursuing Democrat votes. Romney called it a “dirty trick,” saying:

“We don’t want Democrats deciding who our nominee is going to be, we want Republicans deciding who our nominee is going to be.”

It’s not a dirty trick. It’s called running for President!

Santorum has lost in Arizona with its large Mormon population and its early ballots that have had people voting weeks ago. He has Super Tuesday staring him in the face. He doesn’t have a full slate of delegates in Tennessee, and he’s not on the ballot in Virginia. His entire future presidential career is riding on a victory in Ohio. (And, to be clear, this is it for Santorum. If he loses the primary, he will never have an opportunity to run for President again. There will be no second chance for Santorum like Romney has received. None.)

Splitting the primaries is a must for Team Santorum. He must win Michigan to give himself the necessary boost to take Ohio, and force the race to Tampa, site of the 2012 Republican National Convention. Yes, Michigan is a proportionate state, with 30 delegates on the line. But, while the race for each delegate is necessary (1144 delegates are needed to get the nomination,) the win is greater than the delegate count right now. A win in Michigan proves that he can win the nomination. It proves that his victories in Colorado, Missouri and Minnesota were not a fluke.

Further, it sets in the mind that Mitt can’t take competition. If he can’t beat Santorum, how the hell is he going to beat Obama? Fast-forward to Super Tuesday. What happens if Newt Gingrich takes Georgia and Tennessee? Gingrich will rise, and the “inevitability” of Romney will become the “what happened to” Romney. It will take a Herculean effort on his part, along with an incredible amount of money, to get back into the game. Romney has taken on challenges before, and has remained at the top of the pack. But a loss in Michigan and a three-way race out of Super Tuesday brings about another possibility – the brokered convention. If he loses Michigan and splits Super Tuesday, you can almost (almost!) bet on it.

For those people unhappy with their current choices, what better news than a possible (possible!) brokered convention. Yes, let the Democrats vote. It doesn’t hurt the field, as the Democrats want to think. The opposite is true (as it is with most Leftist ideas!) it strengthens the field either way – determining it, or forcing a new look at it. Besides, maybe some of the Democrats will get used to the idea of voting for Republicans, and vote for them again in November. (Maybe!)

We’re all going to Tampa; make your reservations for Bern’s Steak House now!

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After reviewing the CNN-GOP presidential debate last night from Mesa, Arizona, it is becoming more and more clear that the Republican nominee won’t be determined by the road to Tampa, but in Tampa. Get your hotel rooms, your sun tan lotion and a reservation at Bern’s Steak House; this race is going to the convention.

Of all the four candidates, only former Speaker Newt Gingrich didn’t have a miss. Clearly, his commentary on President Obama and infanticide is going to generate lots of Leftist hate. However, Obama has tried to change history regarding his postion on the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act (BAIPA) as a State Senator in Illinois. Simply, Obama lied about his position of supporting the concept of leaving new born babies to die. Gingrich did not couch his stance, and his clarity on this will do well with social conservatives, and those who appreciate honesty. He also stayed the course on energy independence, making multiple references to making America free from other nations and never having an American leader “bow” to a Saudi king. His best line of the night was when he was asked by moderator John King what one word would define him. Gingrich’s answer? Cheerful. And, throughout the debate, Gingrich was in good humor, and seemed very at ease. His main goal, however, is not victory in Arizona or Michigan, (where he will, by all accounts, do poorly) it’s victory in Georgia on Super Tuesday. He stepped much closer to that goal last night.

Former Senator Rick Santorum proved two things. One, he really isn’t afraid of anyone or any subject. Second, too much time in the Senate will make you incapable of answers that America will pay attention to. Santorum looked at ease in taking on Rep. Ron Paul’s attacks on the idea that Santorum is “fake.” His body language was that of a man poised…relaxed and in charge. However, that didn’t stay with him, as the tedium of his answers midway through the debate clouded any actual answer he was giving. Santorum also allowed former Gov. Mitt Romney to goad him, to answer Romney’s questions on Romney’s timeline. It is stunning that no one has learned how to take Romney on in a debate. If Santorum wants to be the front runner, he has to be able to act it for the entire debate. He had great moments, including his contriteness on his vote for No Child Left Behind, but not enough of them to grasp a much needed victory.

Romney learns, and learns well. He came to the debate knowing that he was not the obvious choice he so desperately wanted all of us to believe he was after Florida and Nevada. His answers talked about Obama, and talked about what he would do as President. Most answers were clean, concise and presidential. However, “Mean Mitt” couldn’t stay dormant forever. He tried (successfully) to bully Santorum during Santorum’s conversation on earmarks (and no one can fully explain why Santorum didn’t turn to Romney and say, “Don’t be angry!” as Romney did to Santorum a few debates back.) Romney also took the last question of the debate from King and decided to be overly aggressive for no reason whatsoever, saying that he’ll answer the questions he wants to answer. It was not just aggressive, but severely aggressive! And, it severely dampened a fair night for Romney.

Rep. Paul should be admired on many levels. He believes what he says, and does not back down from it. He called Sen. Santorum fake, and when asked about it in the debate, didn’t engage a Pawlenty moment; he owed up to it, and explained it. In near every debate, Paul has moments of pure, perfect clarity. Conversations about spending, conversations about taxes, conversations about the overall economy and how we must get our house in order before thinking about another’s house. For too many, however, what he believes in foreign policy is more than enough to turn them off (though it was good to hear Paul say he doesn’t want Iran to get a nuclear weapon.) But in this debate he lost on economic issues, specifically losing the earmarks conversation, as did all the candidates. A fact check shows that Paul isn’t a prolific earmarker, as Santorum contested, but that might depend on what your definition of “prolific” is. Regardless, Paul made no real headway with voters last night, and won’t see a bounce in Arizona or Michigan.

The split of hearts and minds and votes will continue. This train will ride past Super Tuesday, through the big April contests and even give the people of California a chance to be a player with their 172 delegates. But, in the end, we will decide this thing in Tampa. I’ll be there….having a ribeye, medium rare.

 

TKRS – 2-1-12 – The Racist Racers, then the Florida Primary with Ben Domenech and Javier Manjarres

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Tony talks to Ben Domenech and Javier Manjarres about the Florida primary, and how the field looks going in to Nevada. Also, Tony rips apart the nonsense racial hate from Rachel Maddow and the entire MSNBC line up.