Ya man.  me too.

Kevin
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: [email protected] 
  To: [email protected] 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, November 19, 2011 3:19 PM
  Subject: Re: [RC] New Hampshire


  Kevin :
  Just about all politicians are hypocritical, HOWEVER, this really takes 
  some kind of prize. Newt has compromised himself big time.

  No wonder he can afford to indulge his wife with a half-million $ line of 
credit
  at Tiffany's. Basically Gingrich married a gold-digger and basically he
  is in denial about it. Don't know how many bad judgments he has made
  because of her, but all of those judgements have been his, no-one else's.

  What a waste. There was one potential GOP party suicide when Cain was riding 
high
  in the polls. Recently it has become painfully obvious to just about everyone
  how poorly informed he is. Smart people saw it coming almost from day # 1.

  Now it is Newt. If the GOP nominates him it would be political suicide.
  But, at the moment, there he is, top of the heap.

  Well,  I am doing my bit to push Humpty  Dumpty off the wall.

  Billy

  ------------------------------------------



  11/19/2011 12:04:12 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected] writes:
    Just composed this srticle:

    
http://www.examiner.com/independent-in-manchester/paul-s-sincerity-vs-gingrich-s-hypocrisy

    Kevin


      Your prediction sounds about right.

      Billy


      --------------------------


      11/19/2011 6:27:43 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected] writes:
        This is a blockbuster poll result.  This result and Ernie's 
encouragement have caused me to reconsider my life strategy.  

        I predict New Gingrich will last in the top tier for eleven days.

        The prediction is also noteworthy:

        http://youtu.be/9K2ktRZ4T48

        Kevin
          New poll shows Romney now in dead heat with Gingrich in …
          posted at 11:45 am on November 18, 2011 by Ed Morrissey
          Yes, I think it’s safe to say that the Newt Gingrich bubble has 
gotten serious.  A new poll from Magellan Strategies in New Hampshire — Mitt 
Romney’s long-held redoubt — shows Gingrich now in a virtual dead heat with the 
presumed Republican frontrunner.  As NH Journal reports, the internals look 
even better for Gingrich than the top-line numbers:

            The latest NH Journal poll of likely Republican primary voters 
conducted by Magellan Strategies shows Romney and Gingrich in a statistical 
dead heat for the January 10th primary. If the election were held today, Romney 
would earn 29% of the vote and Gingrich would earn 27%. Texas Congressman Ron 
Paul continues to show resolve by earning 16%. Herman Cain gets 10%. No other 
candidate is in double digits.

            This is the first time any of NH Journal’s polls have shown anyone 
candidate even close to Romney. It also shows tremendous movement for Gingrich 
since NH Journal’s October survey, in which Gingrich was in third place, but at 
only 10% versus Romney’s 41%. …

            A close look at the data shows Gingrich is actually leading Romney 
among certain important subgroups of the electorate. Among self-identified 
conservative voters, Gingrich beats Romney 34%-27%. Among self-identified tea 
party voters, he leads Romney 38%-21%.

            However, Romney has a wide lead over Gingrich among Undeclared 
voters, who give the former Massachusetts Governor 29% over Paul’s 19% and 
Gingrich’s 18%. There is also a significant gender gap for both Romney and 
Gingrich. Romney beats Gingrich 33%-22% among women while Gingrich defeats 
Romney 32%-24% among men.

          If this is not an outlier (Magellan is a fairly reliable pollster), 
then this is a blockbuster result.  Romney doesn’t need to win Iowa to garner 
the nomination; a strong second-place finish there could propel him quickly to 
the ticket — but only if he wins New Hampshire.  A loss in this state would be 
a body blow, especially if Gingrich wins Iowa ahead of New Hampshire and then 
takes aim at South Carolina and Florida.  Even a win in Michigan and Nevada 
might not slow down Gingrich, and Romney could be looking at a second 
consecutive CPAC concession in his presidential-campaign career if he loses 
either or both of those.

          There are, however, a couple of big caveats.  No one has really 
tested Gingrich in this campaign, mainly because no one has needed to go on the 
attack against someone who hasn’t been a front-runner.  Romney will have no 
choice now but to open fire on the man who has praised him in the debates, and 
probably with much more gusto than he did against Rick Perry, who was never a 
threat to Romney in New Hampshire.

          Another point to keep in mind is that Gingrich himself has only begun 
to perform as a front-runner, and he comes to this polling result with a huge 
disadvantage in organization.  Last night, Gingrich welcomed back the staff who 
walked out on him in June, which might accelerate the organizational build-up 
he needs to really compete in Iowa and New Hampshire:

            For Newt Gingrich, the latest twist on “what goes around, comes 
around” has an unusual personal dimension. On top of his surge in polls and 
fund-raising, Mr. Gingrich has rehired two of the Iowa staff members who quit 
during a mass exodus from his campaign in June. …

            Thanks to his solid performances in national debates, he has 
gradually gained supporters and donors, emerging at the top of some recent 
polls and flush with enough money to hire a new staff.

            Last week he opened offices in New Hampshire and South Carolina. 
And on Thursday the campaign announced it had rehired Craig Schoenfeld, who had 
been state director in Iowa before the departures, and Katie Koberg, who had 
been deputy director. The hirings were first reported by The Des Moines 
Register.

          Still, the polling results offer a bad omen for Romney, who had been 
quietly building a narrative of inevitability for his nomination.  If he 
becomes vulnerable in the one state he had thought was locked into his camp, 
then the state might be open to nearly any one of the candidates who can manage 
to boost their polling.  If Gingrich can build his organization quickly and 
manage to withstand the scrutiny of being the front-runner, he could push 
Romney out of the nomination by early January … but those are mighty big ifs, 
too.






  -- 
  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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