2008 US Presidential Election.

2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President.February 16, 2007 8:38 am

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has formally announced his candidacy for the Republican presidential nomination, ending an “exploratory” phase that he began Jan. 3.

Romney, in picking the place to make his announcement, chose his birth state — Democratic-leaning but politically competitive Michigan — over his home state, Massachusetts, where he overcame normally overwhelming Democratic voting tendencies in 2002 to win a term as governor.

Romney, after touring the country to test the waters for a possible presidential bid, retired as governor rather than seek re-election in 2006.

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President.February 11, 2007 11:50 am

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. - Republicans Mitt Romney and Sen. Sam Brownback (news, bio, voting record) promoted their presidential campaigns before nearly 3,000 party activists at the Michigan GOP convention Saturday.

Romney reminded the crowd that he grew up sharing the Automotive News each morning with his father, George, who headed American Motors Corp. before serving as Michigan’s governor from 1963 to 1969.

The younger Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, said his father brought many of the lessons he learned from business to the governorship.

“He got Michigan moving again,” Romney said, before running through his stands in opposition to abortion and same-sex marriage and in favor of tight controls on illegal immigration. “It’s time for Republican principles to come back to Michigan again.”

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2008 US Presidential Election, Democratic Party, Republican Party, Hillary Clinton for President., Mitt Romney for President., Al Gore for President.February 9, 2007 1:49 pm

Former Vice President Al Gore (D) leads former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney (R) 52% to 38% in the latest Rasmussen Reports Election 2008 poll. A month ago, Gore had an 11-point lead over Romney.

Senator Hillary Clinton (D) has upped her lead over Romney to double digits. She now leads the Republican Presidential hopeful 51% to 41%. A month ago, the former First Lady was ahead of Romney 49% to 41%.

Clinton leads all Democrats in polling for the Democratic Presidential nomination. Gore, who has not indicated whether he will run, is currently tied for third with former North Carolina Senator John Edwards (D). Polling for the Democratic nomination is updated each Monday.

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President.February 8, 2007 12:45 pm

DETROIT - Presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Wednesday made a direct appeal to Republican fiscal conservatives, arguing that the president should veto any spending bill that exceeds its targets.

Speaking to the Detroit Economic Club, the former Massachusetts governor addressed an issue that has riled the GOP base, who contend that the party’s loss of power last November was based, in part, on excessive spending.

“When our party has been in charge, we didn’t distinguish ourselves on spending restraint,” Romney said. “That’s got to change — and it would in my administration.”

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President.February 7, 2007 1:58 pm

BOSTON - Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney has had an epiphany on abortion — not once, but twice.

The first time was when Romney was a young man in the 1960s and his brother-in-law’s sister — an engaged-to-be-married teen who became pregnant — died in a botched illegal abortion.

Roughly three decades later, while campaigning for the Senate in 1994, Romney described that tragedy as the event that triggered his conclusion that regardless of personal beliefs, abortion should be safe and legal.

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President. 1:54 pm

WASHINGTON - Republican Mitt Romney will formally announce his candidacy for president next week in Michigan, his native state and an important early test for the GOP nomination, campaign aides said Tuesday.

The former one-term Massachusetts governor will make his announcement Feb. 13, and then will visit Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina — the first states to hold 2008 contests.

He will return to Boston two days later, where he will hold what his campaign is calling “a unity event” with supporters, aides said. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because the plans were not public.

The announcement had been expected.

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President.February 5, 2007 8:33 pm

BALTIMORE - Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney on Friday accused Democratic front-runner Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of “timidity” regarding the security threat posed by Iran

In a speech to a retreat of conservative congressional Republicans, Romney lashed out at Clinton for telling a pro- Israel dinner that a dialogue with countries hostile to Israel — including Iran and Syria — is needed to promote peace in the Middle East.

“At this point, We don’t need a listening tour about Iran,” Romney told the Republican Study Committee. “Someone who wants to engage Iran displays a troubling timidity toward a terrible threat of a nuclear Iran.”

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Rudy Guiliani for President., Newt Gingrich for President., Mitt Romney for President., Sam Brownback for President., John McCain for President. 7:58 pm

The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone poll shows that former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani (R) continues to hold an eight-point lead over Senator John McCain (news, bio, voting record) (R) in the race for the Republican nomination. Giuliani now earns 30% of the vote, up from 28% a week ago. John McCain (R) has support from 22% while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich remains in third at 12%.

Former Massachusetts Mitt Romney is back in double digits at 10%. Another former Governor Mike Huckabee registers just 2% as does Senator Sam Brownback (news, bio, voting record). Senator Chuck Hagel (news, bio, voting record) registers support from 1% of GOP voters.

While McCain continues to hold a solid second place in this polling, a separate survey shows he has lost ground in general election match-ups. In fact, for the first time in any Rasmussen Reports polling, McCain has fallen behind a Democratic competitor, trailing both Illinois Senator Barack Obama (news, bio, voting record) and former North Carolina Senator John Edwards. McCain may be hampered by the situation in Iraq (considered the most important issue by voters). Most Americans believe we should be reducing the number of U.S. troops fighting in that country while McCain supports the President’s call for more troops.

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2008 US Presidential Election, Republican Party, Mitt Romney for President. 7:28 pm

Mitt Romney’s candidacy for president has occasioned reams of speculation on how his Mormon faith would influence his conduct in the White House–some of it reminiscent of anxieties about John F. Kennedy’s Catholicism that were prevalent in 1960. In a recent cover story for The New Republic, Damon Linker, who once taught at Brigham Young University and presumably knows Mormonism well, argued that these fears are well-founded (”The Big Test,” January 15). “[W]ould it not be accurate,” Linker asked, “to say that, under a President Romney, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints would truly be in charge of the country–with its leadership having final say on matters of right and wrong?” According to Linker, Mormons believe their church presidents receive revelation from God; faithful Mormons have to comply with every directive from their prophet’s mouth; and, therefore, to remain true to his religious beliefs, a President Romney would have to knuckle under to church leaders.

‘Linker’s logic may sound straightforward, but, in fact, it has no grounding in reality. His concerns echo the controversy that greeted Mormon Church apostle Reed Smoot (he of the notorious Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act) when he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1903. Before eventually seating Smoot, a Senate committee debated his qualifications for nearly four years. To allay their fears, the senators repeatedly questioned church President Joseph F. Smith (nephew of the church’s founder) about his control of Mormon politics. Over and over, he assured the committee that he had no intention of dictating Smoot’s votes in the Senate–until, eventually, Theodore Roosevelt stepped in and swung the balance in Smoot’s favor.’

New Republic article