Romney is suppose to be announcing this at the Conservative Conference.
This "would" leave McCain, Huckabee and Paul. IF this is true I wonder if he'll endorse McCain.....
Have a good one!:s4:
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Romney is suppose to be announcing this at the Conservative Conference.
This "would" leave McCain, Huckabee and Paul. IF this is true I wonder if he'll endorse McCain.....
Have a good one!:s4:
Wow... He seemed like he had a lot going for him, I kind of liked him.
I don't think endorsing McCain at this point would really do anything... He's just... McCain. Hopefully he'll endorse Paul!
He said he's dropping out because of the war effort. He backs McCains position on the war on terror and feels that the party would be better off when they face either Clinton or Obama.
Let the Dems drag each other over the coals for a few months more then have all the more resources to bury them in the national election. VERY good move for the GOP!:thumbsup:
Have a good one!:s4:
Romney suspends presidential campaign - CNN.com
here's a link...
(CNN) -- Mitt Romney suspended his bid for the Republican presidential nomination Thursday, saying if he continued it would "forestall the launch of a national campaign and be making it easier for Sen. Clinton or Obama to win."
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Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney is suspending his campaign.
"In this time of war, I simply cannot let my campaign be a part of aiding a surrender to terror. This is not an easy decision. I hate to lose," the former Massachusetts governor said.
"If this were only about me, I'd go on. But it's never been only about me. I entered this race because I love America, and because I love America, in this time of war I feel I have to now stand aside for our party and for our country."
Romney made the announcement Thursday afternoon at the annual Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington.
With Romney out, Sen. John McCain is locked in as the front-runner in the GOP race.
Romney had won 286 delegates in through the Super Tuesday contests, compared with McCain's 697.
The crowd booed when Romney mentioned McCain, saying, "I disagree with Sen. McCain on a number of issues." Video Watch as Romney bows out ยป
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"But I agree with him on doing whatever it takes to be successful in Iraq, on finding and executing Osama bin Laden, and I agree with him on eliminating Al Qaeda and terror worldwide," he said.
Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama saw Romney as a vulnerable candidate that they would rather run against instead of McCain, CNN senior political correspondent Candy Crowley said.
"They were looking at Mitt Romney as pretty doable in the political sense saying, 'This is a guy that has a record that we can really run with' and they ran with it in the Republican Party as you know, saying that he used to be pro-choice, now he's anti-abortion. He has changed his position on stem cells he has changed his position on gay unions, that sort of thing," she said.
As recently as Wednesday, Romney met with aides to discuss strategy to stay in the race through March 4.
Although he outspent his rivals, Romney received just 175 delegates on Super Tuesday, compared with at least 504 for McCain and 141 for former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, according to CNN estimates.
Romney came in first in Massachusetts, Alaska, Minnesota, Colorado and Utah on Super Tuesday. In the early voting contests, he won Nevada, Maine, Michigan and Wyoming.
After his win in the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses, Huckabee became Romney's chief rival for the party's conservative vote.
Huckabee on Tuesday won Arkansas, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama and West Virginia.
"Primaries are a killing field," said CNN senior political analyst Bill Schneider. "They take losing candidates and get their bodies off the field."
Suspending a campaign has a different meaning depending on the party.
On the Republican side, decisions on how to allocate delegates is left to the state parties.
On the Democratic side, a candidate who "suspends" is technically still a candidate, so he or she keeps both district and statewide delegates won through primaries and caucuses. Superdelegates are always free to support any candidate at any time, whether the candidate drops out, suspends or stays in.
National party rules say that a candidate who "drops out" keeps any district-level delegates he or she has won so far but loses any statewide delegates he or she has won.
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The 60-year-old former investment banker had touted his management credentials throughout the campaign, citing his experience in Massachusetts and his turnaround of the scandal-plagued 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.
But despite pouring millions of his own fortune into the campaign, he struggled after Huckabee upset him in the Iowa caucuses and McCain came from behind to beat him in the New Hampshire primary.
Good ridance. We don't need a cult member in the presidency.
Romney would have been a pretty good president,Ron Paul first but I kinda liked Romney in a way.
Anyone watching McCain live on telly now? Another boring old grey haired twat in a suit, but I suppose at least he can string a sentence together. I reckon it's all a show, Romney bows out and instantly McCain takes the centre stage. It's a cunning ploy, they know as well as I do the general electorate are stupid and buy this kind of thing. Oh well, I've learned not to expect anything other than bullshit from politicians...
Adios, Mittwit! We shall miss your perfect hair and spectacular flips!
Good ridance! I like that guy least of all the candidates. His speeches sound oh-so inspiring; he has some great speech writers after all. But every time I've heard him answer a question he wasn't already prepared for, the man let off as the biggest phony I'd ever seen. Don't go off his inspiring well-written public talks, listen to him in the debates, or when a crowd-goer asks a pop-up question. He gives answers that don't mean anything, never says anything that might risk losing a vote. A slick salesman is all he is, and like a good salesman had lots of the voters fooled.
It's always funny how these guys deny they are going to drop out, insist they are in it to the end, and then BOOM, they're out! Their supporters are left going WTF? Weren't we in to the end?
The Republicans do a good job of narrowing their field quickly and then working on the November race. I will give them that. They don't bloody themselves as much in the primaries as the Democrats usually do. Earlier in the race, it seemed like the Democrats might pick a candidate early and it would be the GOP that would fight itself all the way through the primaries, but that's not the way it's shaping up. Hopefully Clinton and Obama don't tear each other to shreds.