• Michele Bachmann,  Mitt Romney,  President 2012,  Rick Perry

    President 2012 GOP Watch: California Republicans Organize Fundraising for Texas Governor Rick Perry

    Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks at the 2010 Southern Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans, Louisiana in this April 9, 2010 photo

    White the Texas Governor says he is thinking about a run for the Presidency, California GOP operatives are starting the pre-requisite fundraising.

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) is far from making a decision about a White House bid, but a cadre of California Republicans are raising money on his behalf in the meantime by starting a 527 organization.

    California GOP consultant Bob Schuman filed paperwork Monday with the IRS to start Americans for Rick Perry, which aims to raise money and create a grass-roots operation on the governor’s behalf until he makes a decision about running for president.

    Elizabeth Blakemore, a well-known Houston-based GOP fundraiser, is raising money for the group. Schuman said the goal is to bring in $500,000 by Aug. 1.

    “It’s a 527 that we just started to start an independent expenditure campaign for Gov. Perry until he decides what he’s going to do,” Schuman told Roll Call in a phone interview. “We do have fundraisers on board, and they are frantically trying to raise money right now.”

    Perry is far from announcing a campaign for president, but he’s indicated that he is considering a bid and recently scheduled several high-profile appearances at conservative events across the country over the next few weeks. Polls have shown that many GOP primary voters are not satisfied with the current crop of candidates, and without a true Southerner in the hunt, many Republicans see an opening for the governor if he decides to run.

    Sounds like a go for Governor Perry.

    Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann have been fundraiising in the Golden State for some time now.

  • Michele Bachmann,  Mitt Romney,  Polling,  President 2012

    President 2012 GOP Poll Watch: Michele Bachmann Starts with Above-Average Recognition and Intensity


    According to the latest Gallup Poll.

    Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, who formally announced her presidential candidacy at Monday night’s Republican debate in New Hampshire, is currently recognized by 62% of Republicans nationwide. Her Positive Intensity Score of 18 essentially ties the better-known Mitt Romney’s 19.

    These poll results are fitting the DC punditry CW saying while Mitt Romney is the GOP front-runner, Michele Bachmann is an attractive candidate who will give him a race.

    Romney at this juncture is in the strongest position — given his high name recognition, rising Positive Intensity Score, and top position in Gallup’s trial heat measure. Former businessman Cain still generates significantly more positive intensity among Republicans who know him than does Romney, but Cain has only a 41% recognition level and trails Romney and Palin in Republicans’ current nominee preferences. Newly announced candidate Bachmann’s Positive Intensity Score has fallen back slightly in recent weeks, but she still ranks near the top on this measure. Palin has the virtue of nearly universal name recognition, and while her Positive Intensity Score is above average, it trails Romney’s.

  • Michele Bachmann,  Mitt Romney,  President 2012

    President 2012 GOP Debate: Who Won Last Night?

    As I tweeted during the Republican New Hampshire debate last night, the biggest winner was Michele Bachmann.

    Mitt Romney did fine and I think ultimately this will be a race between Bachmann and Romney unless Texas Governor Rick Perry or Sarah Palin enter the race. Then, all bets are off and a splitting vote scenario would be in play – as long as the campaign cash holds up.

    Most of the D.C. pundits, both Democrats and Republicans agree that last night was all about Bachmann and Romney. The Biggest Loser was Tim Pawlenty, but I never really figured him a viable candidate anyway.

    Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney was the winner of the first major presidential debate tonight according to a survey of Republican and Democratic political operatives, campaign consultants, and party strategists, in a special National Journal Political Insiders Poll conducted tonight. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann also had a good evening. 

    Asked who was the “biggest winner” in the debate, a slim majority of Republican Insiders picked Romney. Roughly one-third of the Democratic Insiders concurred.

  • Herman Cain,  Michele Bachmann,  Mitt Romney,  Polling,  President 2012,  Ron Paul,  Sarah Palin,  Tim Pawlenty

    President 2012 GOP Poll Watch: Romney 27% Palin 16% Cain 9% Paul 7% Pawlenty 6%



    According to the latest Gallup Poll.

    Republicans’ support for Mitt Romney as their party’s 2012 presidential nominee has increased significantly to 24%, compared with 17% in late May. As a result, Romney has widened his advantage over Sarah Palin in the latest update on rank-and-file Republicans’ nomination preferences.

    Going into tonight’s first GOP Presidential debate (without Sarah Palin in the field, by the way), Mitt Romney clearly is the front-runner for the GOP nomination. Unless another candidate emerges, the path to the GOP nomination should be Romney’s to lose.

    These results are based on a June 8-11 USA Today/Gallup poll, conducted on the eve of a candidate debate in New Hampshire that will be the first to include some of the better-known candidates.

    Romney appears to have gotten a boost in recent weeks after the official announcement of his candidacy. Gallup’s prior update of May 20-24 came just after former co-leaders Mike Huckabee and Donald Trump announced they were not candidates for the nomination; that poll showed Romney and Palin in a virtual tie. Since then, Romney’s support has increased and Palin’s has been flat, leaving Romney with an eight-percentage-point advantage.

    That is the largest numerical lead Gallup has measured for any candidate since it first began measuring nomination preferences in September. In that initial September poll, Romney held a seven-point advantage over the field of candidates. Romney or Huckabee held slim margins of no more than four points in subsequent polls.

    No candidate besides Romney has shown a significant increase in support since the May update, though Rick Santorum, who also recently announced his official candidacy, saw his support rise from 2% to 6%. Meanwhile, support for Newt Gingrich, whose campaign has been off to a rocky start since his official announcement last month, is now at 5%, a slight decline since May. The high point for Gingrich was 13% in November.

    And, Romney’s lead over the field expands with Sarah Palin out of the field.

    Let’s look at the graph:

    Note with Sarah Palin gone, Michele Bachmann does not rise substantially in the polls with Palin voters being redistributed throughout the field. However, Bachmann will stick in Iowa and be able to gain momentum there. Whereas, this is a national poll.

    What are the demographics of the GOP voters?

    The graph:

    So, what does this all mean?

    Mitt Romney is the early front-runner and the only challenger who is close in the polls is Sarah Palin, who has not decided whether to run or not. A number of candidates remain in the field but their chances of winning the nomination appear remote.

    Perhaps tonight’s GOP Presidential debate will deliver some momentum to the third and fourth tier candidates. But, I doubt it. This race is Romney’s to win or lose.

    Romney may be emerging as a front-runner in a GOP race that has been characterized to date by its lack of a leading candidate. Republican nomination contests usually have a clear front-runner, and that candidate often goes on to win. But that did not hold true in the last presidential election cycle, when Rudy Giuliani led in national preference polls throughout 2007 but performed poorly in the actual nominating contests in 2008. Additionally, even if Romney were to expand his lead into the double digits in the coming months, he still would rate as one of the weakest Republican front-runners in recent GOP nominating history.

    Romney remains behind lesser-known candidates Cain and Bachmann in Gallup’s measure of positive intensity toward candidates, though his score seems to be on the rise.

    Whether Romney is actually assuming the mantle of the front-runner will be clear in future polls. The current results could be a short-term bounce due to increased attention paid to his campaign after his official entry into the race, or could indicate a more lasting shift in preferences that has put him in the top position in the GOP field.

  • Day By Day,  Ed Rollins,  Michele Bachmann,  President 2012

    Day By Day June 9, 2011 – Pains

    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    Ed Rollins who successfully ran Ronaled Reagan’s re-election campaign is an experienced political operative. But, he does have a history of working for POLS and then kissing and telling after the campaign blows up e.g. Florida’s Katherine Harris and Arianna/Michael Huffington.

    Michele Bachmann will have to watch her back with Rollins but he may lead her to success, if given the chance.

    Previous:

    The Day By Day Archive

  • Michele Bachmann,  President 2012,  Sarah Palin

    President 2012: Ed Rollins Walks Back His Comments About Sarah Palin?

    Well, sort of….

    “As far as we’re concerned, it’s not” an ongoing fight, he insisted. “This was my one comment, which I shouldn’t have made, at the end of the day this has nothing to do with Michele, Michele’s campaign, or any of the rest of it. This was my transition from being an analyst to a political strategist, and I missed a step.”

    Rollins had suggested to POLITICO that Bachmann would fare well in a Palin contrast, and told a radio interviewer that the former vice presidential contender is “not serious.”

    Of Team Palin’s call for a retraction, he said, “What’s the retraction? I say she’s serious?”

    There is tension between the two campaigns or one campaign and one wannabe campaign. This “slip” is just the beginning.

  • Michele Bachmann,  President 2012,  Sarah Palin

    President 2012 Video: Game On – Bachmann Vs. Palin

    Just as Sarah Palin begins a renaissance so to speak wit her bus tour, another conservative sends her spokesman out to spoil the party.

    Game on between Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin.

    But Rollins, with his own history of playing offense in presidential campaigns, took a few shots at former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who could be a potential rival for Bachmann.

    “Sarah has not been serious over the last couple of years,” Rollins said. “She got the vice-presidential thing handed to her. She didn’t go to work in the sense of trying gain more substance. She gave up her governorship. You know, I think Michele Bachmann and others have worked hard. She has been a leader of the Tea Party, which is a very important element here. She’s an attorney, done extraordinary things with family values and what have you. So I think she will connect.

    In other words, Sarah, if you decide to enter the race in Iowa, I, Michele Bachmann, will NOT lie down and let you walk all over me. And, yes, I will have to money to run television commercials in Iowa and South Carolina, reminding all of the voters you resigned your Alaska governorship because you couldn’t take the heat or wanted to make money or wanted to run for President (take your pick of the memes).

    Plus, I have, Ed Rollins, Ronald Reagan’s crusty old campaign guy who will remind everyone time and again, Sarah you ain’t NO Reagan.

    As, I said game on – over to you, Sarah.

  • Herman Cain,  Michele Bachmann,  Mitt Romney,  Newt Gingrich,  Polling,  President 2012,  Rudy Giuliani,  Sarah Palin,  Tim Pawlenty

    President 2012 Poll Watch: Romney 49% Vs. Obama 46%



    According to the latest Washington Post-ABC News Poll.

    The public opinion boost President Obama received after the killing of Osama bin Laden has dissipated, and Americans’ disapproval of how he is handling the nation’s economy and the deficit has reached new highs, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.

    The survey portrays a broadly pessimistic mood in the country this spring as higher gasoline prices, sliding home values and a disappointing employment picture have raised fresh concerns about the pace of the economic recovery.

    By 2 to 1, Americans say the country is pretty seriously on the wrong track, and nine in 10 continue to rate the economy in negative terms. Nearly six in 10 say the economy has not started to recover, regardless of what official statistics may say, and most of those who say it has improved rate the recovery as weak.

    New Post-ABC numbers show Obama leading five of six potential Republican presidential rivals tested in the poll. But he is in a dead heat with former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, who formally announced his 2012 candidacy last week, making jobs and the economy the central issues in his campaign.

    Again, this is a national poll, so take it with a grain of salt. We all know that it is the election in key battleground states that really matter.

    Mitt Romney is leading President Obama, 49% to 46% among registered voters but it is within the margin of error, so it is not statistically relevant, although it does point out Obama’s vulnerability. The other GOP candidates do not fair as well as Mitt Romney (see the graphic above).

    GOP Primary election:

    • Romney – 21% (16%, 4/172011)
    • Palin – 17% (5%)
    • Giuliani – 8% (NA)
    • Gingrich – 6% (2%)
    • Paul – 6% (2%)
    • Pawlenty – 4% (1%)
    • Cain – 4% (NA)
    • Bachmann – 3% (1%)
    • None of the above – 5% (12%)

    Well, Mitt Romney is polling the best against Obama but it is uncertain as to whether he can win in the GOP nomination race. It is also uncertain whether Sarah Palin or Rudy Giuliani will run.

    My best guess, is that should Sarah Palin decide to roll the dice and run, that Rudy Giuliani will also enter the race. Rudy will count on the divisiveness of a Romney Vs. Palin contest, while he easily wins  East and West Coast Republican primary elections and delegates. He might also figure a deal with Romney to defeat Palin. A wild card in all of this will be Michele Bachmann who will run strong in the Iowa Caucus and may gather some momentum going into South Carolina.

    So, what does this all mean?

    The economy is weak, voters do not think it is improving, Obama is in trouble and the GOP Presidential field while hopeful, is uncertain, with no front runner.

    The entire poll is here.

  • Michele Bachmann,  President 2012

    President 2012: Michele Bachmann Selects Former Reagan and Huckabee Campaign Manager Ed Rollins

    And, pundits have been focusing on Sarah Palin? Michele Bachmann IS going to run and is seriously staffing up.

    As she prepares to enter the race in Iowa later this month, Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann has signed on high-profile political strategist Ed Rollins to run her presidential campaign, according to two sources close to Bachmann. Rollins, who was Mike Huckabee’s national campaign director in the 2008 campaign, is an experienced political operative with a well-earned reputation for his tough tactics and willingness to play hardball. He’s probably best known for running the 1984 Reagan-Bush reelection campaign, which Reagan won in a landslide.

    Rollins will run a campaign that already has a number of experienced advisors on board, including Brett O’Donnell, who advised George W. Bush and John McCain and is considered the best debate coach in politics. Bachmann also has brought on Bob Heckman, who is prominent in the conservative movement.

    I don’t think Bachmann has been getting as much attention as an anti-Romney candidate. She can easily beat Mitt in Iowa and then continue the momentum with her Tea Party base into South Carolina.

    I would not underestimate this Minnesota Congresswoman and former federal tax lawyer.