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Thread: Herman Cain

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Boom! Suck it Mitt For Brains!

    Herman Cain Rises, Rick Perry Slides In New CBS News Poll
    October 4, 2011

    Herman Cain has moved into a tie with Mitt Romney atop the field of Republican presidential candidates, according to a new CBS News poll, while Rick Perry has fallen 11 percentage points in just two weeks.

    The poll shows Cain, who stood at just five percent support two weeks ago, now holding 17 percent support among Republican primary voters. That puts the former Godfather's Pizza CEO into a tie with Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, whose support has essentially held steady over the past two weeks.



    Perry, meanwhile, has dropped from 23 percent support to just 12 percent support over the past two weeks, a sign that the Texas governor's shaky debate performances - in which he has alienated portions of both the Republican base and the party establishment - have taken their toll.

    Eight in ten Republican primary voters said the candidates' debate performances are at least somewhat important to them, and 58 percent said they have watched the debates that have already taken place. Just ten percent of Republican primary voters said they agreed with Perry that the children of illegal immigrants should be allowed to get in-state tuition, a contentious topic in recent debates.

    The silver lining for Perry is the race remains fluid: Three in four Republican primary voters who chose a candidate also said it was too early to make up their minds completely. Just 19 percent said they had definitively decided who they would support.

    Rounding out the field are Newt Gingrich with eight percent support, Ron Paul with seven percent, Michele Bachmann with four percent, Rick Santorum with three percent and Jon Huntsman with two percent. Eighteen percent said they were undecided or unsure.

    Cain's rise follows a flurry of positive media coverage for his upset victory over Perry in the Florida straw poll last month. The only African-American candidate in the GOP field, Cain has also been getting traction with GOP voters and conservative columnists with his 9-9-9 tax plan - a proposal to replace the current tax code with a nine percent flat income tax, a nine percent corporate tax and a nine percent national sales tax.

    The CBS News poll shows Cain as the top choice among self-described conservatives, with 21 percent support. (Two weeks ago, he polled at just six percent with this group.) Romney polls in second among conservatives with 15 percent support, followed by Perry at 13 percent. Cain is also the top choice of Republican primary voters who support the Tea Party, polling at 24 percent to Romney's 17 percent, Gingrich's 13 percent and Perry's 12 percent.

    Yet Cain's strong showing comes as he embarks on a book tour that will keep him busy for much of October - a scheduling decision that has some wondering how serious he is about his presidential campaign. Cain is not scheduled to return to the first-in-the-nation state of Iowa until the middle of November, and he has seen significant staff shakeup, most recently losing his respected communications director - a sign that his staff may not see him as mounting a serious challenge for the nomination.

    The poll suggests that Romney may gain traction with the argument that he has the best chance to unseat President Obama next year: 32 percent of Republicans say Romney is the candidate most likely to defeat the president. Twenty-one percent cited Perry, while just eight percent chose Cain.

    Romney also led the field on who exhibits the strongest leadership qualities, with 26 percent pointing to the former Massachusetts governor. Perry came in second with 23 percent, followed by Gingrich with 14 percent and Cain with nine percent.

    Asked who most cares about people, Romney and Cain topped the field, with both cited by 16 percent of Republican primary voters. Four candidates - Romney, Cain, Bachmann and Perry - finished close to each other atop the list of which candidate most shares voters' values.

    The poll is being released in the wake of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie's announcement that he would not enter the race despite pressure from Republicans unhappy with the GOP field (the poll was conducted before his announcement). With the filing deadline for many GOP primaries coming at the end of October and primary voting expected to begin in early January, time is running out for new candidates to enter the race.

    In the poll, Republican primary voters were asked if they were satisfied with the current field. Forty-six percent said yes - and just as many said they want new choices.

    It's not clear who that new choice might be. There is not a groundswell for the most prominent Republican still openly considering a run, 2008 vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, to jump in: Three in four Republican primary voters said they would not like to see her enter the race. Just 23 percent said they wanted to see a Palin candidacy.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    This is good.

    Heard about this on Bill Bennett's show this morning.


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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Posted a link to that back on page 1 but, it certainly bears posting again since it is great video!

    There weren't many times Ol' Slick Willy was at a loss for words but, that was definitely one of those times.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Dang...scooped again.


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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    LOL!

    Just watching Red Eye that I DVR'd and saw that Herman was on last night. Was a good one-on-one interview between Greg and Herman.

    I tried a quick search to find video but didn't come up with any. Hopefully some turns up.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Here's the Red Eye interview video...

    http://video.foxnews.com/v/120120892...in-on-red-eye/

    Sorry, it won't embed.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Herman was also just recently on The View where he readily handled those cackling hens.




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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    And Herman was also on Glenn Beck's show on Wednesday.

    Glenn Interviews 2012 Candidate Herman Cain
    October 5, 2011



    Herman Cain has been rising up the polls in recent days, and he joined Glenn on radio this morning to talk about his candidacy for 2012. Mr. Cain was pretty impressive and his 9-9-9 tax policy even had Glenn breaking out the Barry White, a ritual usually reserved for the Chris Christie conservative porn.

    “You notice I don’t give generic answers to some of these big things that we face. I talk about solutions. And this 9‑9‑9 economic growth and jobs plan has resonated with people. I’m talking about people who are out working every day, they are here one time and they get it,” Cain told Glenn.

    “Can I tell you something? I have to tell you, the first time I heard your 9‑9‑9 thing,” Glenn said as Barry White started to play over the airwaves. “I am absolutely in. It makes total sense.”

    “It first throws out the entire tax code,” Cain said. “Throw out the tax code. That’s where we start. And then we pass the 9% business flat tax, 9% personal income flat tax, and a 9% national sales tax.”

    “Here’s the other thing, Glenn. There are no loopholes. See, if you look at Romney’s plan, if you look at Newt’s, with all due respect, they pivot off the tax code. This has no loopholes, all businesses are treated the same. Small businesses, Subchapter S, sub corps, no loopholes,” Cain added.

    Glenn and Cain also talked about Cain’s time in the Federal Reserve. Cain agreed that the Fed was hurting America, and promised that Congressional legislation would help clip the wings of the organization.

    “Congress has the power to narrow back the mission of the Federal Reserve. That’s what we need to do,” Cain emphasized.

    And what does Cain think of the protests on Wall Street?

    “First of all, the Wall Street protestors are anti‑capitalism. The Wall Street protestors represent in my opinion ‑‑ I don’t have factual information. It is an attempt to distract from the failed policies of the Obama administration and so they want to blame the fat cats, they want to blame Wall Street for the fact that $14 million people are still out of work. They want to blame the fat cats for the fact that this economy is not growing when it is all the responsibility because of failed policies of President Obama and his administration. That’s all this is.”

    Cain also addressed his stance on several foreign policy issues, including his stance on Israel and Libya.

    “Let’s start with the fact that I have a philosophy of foreign policy, and I’ll give you an example of how I’m going to apply this. First, my philosophy of foreign policy is an extension of the Reagan policy which is peace through strength. My philosophy is peace through strength and clarity. We need to clarify who our friends are, clarify who our enemies are and stop giving money to our enemies,” Cain said.

    “The other thing that we would do is go through this clarification of just who are our friends is we let the rest of the few go including our enemies that we are going to stand with our friends. This is my approach to foreign policy. This president has made it very ambiguous in terms of where the United States stands with Israel. I have made it very clear that United States will stand for Israel with my statement: If you mess with Israel, you’re messing with the United States of America.”

    On Libya, Cain said, “Libya is in transition. I would need to know from our people, our intelligence agencies what is the status and what is our best route right now. On the surface, Glenn, it looks like we ought to just get out of there but I’m not sure of that because I don’t have enough information right now to make that decision. What I do know is that the Muslim Brotherhood has positioned itself for a much bigger role in what ultimately the government turns out to be.”

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Herman Cain To Occupy Wall Street Protesters: If You're Not Rich 'Blame Yourself'
    October 5, 2011

    Unemployed Wall Street protesters only have themselves to blame for lacking a job, so says Herman Cain.

    The Republican presidential candidate insisted that the demonstrations were being "orchestrated" to help President Obama.

    "I don't have the facts to back this up, but I happen to believe that these demonstrations are planned and orchestrated to distract from the failed policies of the Obama Administration," Cain told the Wall Street Journal.

    The Tea Party favorite then argued that the plight of the unemployed was their own fault.

    "Don't blame Wall Street, don't blame the big banks, if you don't have a job and you're not rich, blame yourself. It is not someone's fault if they succeeded, it is someone's fault if they failed," the ex-Godfather's Pizza CEO declared.

    The fiery remarks come as protest organizers plan for their biggest demonstrations yet -- at least 2,000 people are expected to gather in lower Manhattan Wednesday.

    Last week, 700 protesters who spilled onto the streets near the Brooklyn Bridge were arrested on charges of disorderly conduct.

    Cain acknowledged that the banking industry played a role in the 2008 economic meltdown, but argued they were no longer responsible.

    "They did have something to do with the crisis that we went into in 2008, but we're not in 2008, we're in 2011," Cain said."...These demonstrations, I honestly don't understand what they're looking for. To me, they come across more as anti-capitalism."

    Cain's campaign has been picking up steam since he won Florida's straw poll last month.

    And in a recent Rasmussen Reports poll, Cain trails Obama by just five points in a head-to-head matchup.

    SEE IT, beginning at 9:40:



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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Hoooolleeeyyy Sheeeiit!

    Poll: Cain Surges, Opens Up 20-Point Lead On Romney
    October 7, 2011

    In news sure to inject shock and awe into the Republican political primary season, a Zogby poll released Thursday showed Herman Cain leading the Republican field, topping former front-runner Mitt Romney by an astonishing 20 points. Cain would also narrowly edge out Obama in a general election, the poll found, by a 46-44 margin.

    Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, would lose by a point to the president, 40 percent to 41 percent. Texas governor Rick Perry, who has slipped in the polls of late, would lose to the president 45 percent to 40 percent.

    The poll found that 38 percent of Republican primary voters said they would vote for Cain if the primary were held today. Eighteen percent said they would throw their support to Romney, while 12 percent each said they would vote for Perry and Texas congressman Ron Paul. No other candidate attracted double-digit support.

    This is the second month in a row in which Zogby has found Cain leading the pack; he has surged another 10 points ahead of his competitors since September. Romney, on the other hand, has remained in the same place, while Perry’s share of the primary vote in the Zogby poll has steadily declined since he announced his candidacy in August.

    Other pollsters have found Cain at or near the top of the field, with Fox News declaring him a top-tier candidate following its poll last week. That poll found Cain had 17 percent of the vote, trailing Perry by just two points and Romney by five.

    A CBS News poll released Tuesday found Romney and Cain tied at 17 percent, with Perry trailing at 12 percent; a YouGov/Economist poll released Thursday found Cain leading with 21 percent, four points ahead of Romney.

    Though many have questioned Cain’s viability as a legitimate candidate, voters are clearly giving him another look.

    The IBOPE Zogby International poll is based on an online October 3-5 survey of 1,581 voters, with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points. The sample of likely Republican primary voters included 796 Americans, and has an margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Now that's impressive (20 pts).

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Right! I know its Zogby but, it is hard to be that wrong.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Help me out here; I'm a bit confused.

    Does Sharpton not like Cain? He's a big vague.


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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Ahhh... The sounds of a race hustler quickly becoming irrelevant. Music to my ears!

    And with the whole "sellout"/"Uncle Tom" thing, I like one of the definitions listed at Urban Dictionary:
    2. Uncle Tom 2333 up, 1216 down

    Uncle Tom is a term used by black people to try to convince other black people that working, education, living well, and setting a good example for their children is selling out.

    "De Shawn got a job? At Ameritech? He's a Tom

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    This is good.

    I like the way he calls things; the Dems are always first to play the race card.

    http://www.americanthinker.com/print...rman_cain.html

    October 10, 2011
    Why America Needs Herman Cain
    By Ed Kaitz

    Niccolò Machiavelli once said that "the man who adapts his course of action to the nature of the times will succeed, and likewise, the man who sets his course of action out of tune with the times will come to grief."

    What I'd like to argue in this essay is that based on the current "nature of the times" in America, Herman Cain must be the GOP nominee for president. In fact, Cain's nomination represents what could be the last and best opportunity Americans have to pry our battered country out from the clutches of the increasingly strident, divisive, and Marxist pro-Obama Democrat left.

    Conversely, if the nomination goes to Rick Perry or Mitt Romney, it will simply confirm my suspicion that the GOP base is absolutely clueless when it comes to appreciating the unique contours of the American left's long-term strategy to undermine our nation's constitutional heritage and disposition.

    The left has successfully poisoned any possibility for a white conservative to attract enough minority voters on a platform based on America's colorblind founding principles. Even a Romney or Perry victory, in other words, will leave America as viciously divided as ever and will merely set the stage for more Republican compromise with political opponents who rarely if ever compromise.

    Martin Luther King, in his 1963 "Letter from a Birmingham City Jail," said that when the "disinherited children of God sat down at lunch counters they were in reality standing up for the best in the American dream and the most sacred values in our Judeo-Christian heritage." In addition, said King, "[black people] were carrying our whole nation back to those great walls of democracy which were dug deep by the Founding Fathers in the formulation of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence."

    King's early Tea Party proclivities don't seem to garner much attention these days.

    Indeed, soon after King issued those inspiring remarks, the anti-American left began a long-term and sinister project to wed Marxist ideology to racial politics in order to frighten white conservatives into questioning the very basis of their country's constitutional identity. The left's goal back then was, according to philosopher Eric Hoffer, to "soften up the white majority and beat it into a pulp."

    The left's long-term objective was to both define a new standard of civic righteousness and increase the power of the state by championing the cause of America's minority populations against what the left considered the "oppressive" merit-based ethos of "reactionary" white America. Epithets such as "Oreo" and "sellout" and "acting white," for example, were fashioned by leftists in order to intimidate both whites and minorities into questioning the commonsense beliefs about personal initiative and self-reliance built into the European Enlightenment tradition. Duke professor Stanley Fish, for example, captured the essence of this racial strategy a couple of decades later in a defense of affirmative action that he wrote for the Atlantic back in 1993:

    Individualism, fairness, merit -- these three words are continually in the mouths of our up to date, newly respectable bigots who have learned that they need not put on a white hood or bar access to the ballot box in order to secure their ends.

    And over the years, while a sincere but incredibly naïve GOP pinned its election fortunes on the "economy," thousands of teachers in thousands of classrooms across the country found more and more reasons not to present America's founding tradition in a positive light.

    Indeed, in one of the most prophetic books written in the last few decades -- Beyond All Reason: The Radical Assault on Truth in American Law -- constitutional law professors Daniel Farber and Suzanna Sherry argued in 1997 that the quiet invasion of "radical multiculturalism" in American law schools has put professors "who cling to Enlightenment aspirations" at some risk "of being labeled racists or bigots." Radical multiculturalists were able to accomplish this amazing feat by relentlessly advancing the claim that "conceptions of merit are invented by the powerful to reinforce their dominant position in society."

    The reason why Ronald Reagan's conservative "revolution" miscarried so quickly, in other words, is precisely the same reason why constitutional law "scholar" and class warfare socialist Barack Obama captured the most powerful office in the world so soon after Reagan left it: a perfect storm or "righteous wind" that combined weak-kneed "compassionate" white conservatives newly softened and distressed over the moral underpinnings of their own merit-based ideology with legions of self-righteous champions of "people of color" eager to unleash academia's long, simmering, and toxic blend of Marxism, social justice, and identity politics.

    Mr. Obama stewed for years in this racially charged environment -- not only in college, but in the pews of his pastor Jeremiah Wright's black liberation "theology" church. The effects of Obama's one-sided and rather crude education slipped out occasionally on the campaign trail in 2008. At a Florida fundraiser, for example, Mr. Obama insinuated that Republicans would create a state of fear by using Obama's race as a means to harvest votes for John McCain:

    We know what kind of campaign they're going to run. They're going to try to make you afraid. They're going to try to make you afraid of me. He's young and inexperienced and he's got a funny name. And did I mention he's black?

    The Wall Street Journal's James Taranto was one of the few observers at the time to expose Obama's pathetic attempt to malign an entire political party as racist:

    Obama is baselessly accusing Republicans of racial prejudice, or at least of cynically pandering to racial prejudice. But by wording this 'accusation' as a prediction, Obama is able to cast aspersions without needing any evidence to back them up. He implicitly ascribes to the GOP the view that voters are prejudiced against blacks, then calls on voters to prove they are not by voting for Obama.

    One has to add the word "white" to "Republican," however, for Taranto's claims about "racial prejudice" to make any sense.

    Allan Bloom once said that "society's greatest madness may seem normal to itself." Indeed, an American candidate for president succeeded in getting himself elected even after implying that members of the opposition party in his own country are racists. However, according to Newton's Third Law, the left's carefully crafted attack on conservative white America was bound to give birth to its very nemesis: a highly driven, eloquent, and successful black political candidate who, unlike our current president, has nothing but effusive gratitude for the opportunities his country has given him.

    Highly esteemed pundits including Daniel Henninger, Dorothy Rabinowitz, and Michael Barone are coming to recognize that Herman Cain's unique combination of business expertise, educational credentials, inspiring background, and love of country is striking a deep cord among American voters. But the most important factor may be, as Ms. Rabinowitz observed recently, "Mr. Cain's unfailing capacity to speak as though from a core of fire deep inside him."

    The left has spent decades trying to smother that fire, and to some degree, most white political candidates for president are now damaged goods -- they tend to find it more prudent to triangulate, manage, strategize, compromise, and appease. They are also highly unlikely to accomplish anything close to marginalizing today's alarmingly radical Democrat party. In short, the GOP needs to elevate and highlight courageous and passionate Tea Party favorites like Star Parker, Allen West, and Nikki Haley rather than the more tepid Mitt Romney types.

    On a national stage, Herman Cain and other minority conservative candidates have the ability to send shockwaves not only through the political landscape, but down deep into the dark corners of academia, where legions of liberal professors continue to wield a very harmful but successful narrative in order to beat young America's potential defenders -- both white and nonwhite -- into a pulp.

    A Herman Cain-headed ticket for 2012 would be unbeatable. It would also represent a new dawn in America where gratitude, confidence, and initiative would overwhelm the resentment, anger and ingratitude so characteristic of left-wing political culture.

    It's the nature of the times.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Yep, that author nails it spot on. I hope he's right about with the closing.

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    I'm sure some of you have heard about it. Here is Herman's interview with that turd Lawrence O'Donnell (I think Gunny Hartman had a memorable line about individuals named Lawrence...). I don't think I've seen a more hostile interview before. Shame Obama doesn't get interviews like this.

    YouTube: Herman Cain vs Lawrence O'Donnell - Round 1


    YouTube: Herman Cain vs Lawrence O'Donnell - Round 2


    Some people have said Herman sounds like Samuel Jackson when he raises his voice. I would have liked him to respond to one of those inappropriate questions with this

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    Default Re: Herman Cain

    Here's Herman's recent speech at the Value Voter Summit. A great speech. Definitely recommend watching it even though it is 30 minutes.

    Herman Cain Brings The House Down At Values Voter Summit
    October 7, 2011

    This is a great speech from Herman Cain at the Values Voter Summit. As someone on twitter said, they lost count of how many standing ovations Cain got during the speech.

    Here’s the full speech:

    At first I saw this...

    Ron Paul Wins 2011 Values Voter Straw Poll, Herman Cain Takes Second Place
    October 8, 2011

    The Texas congressman and presidential candidate who remains in the single digits in most national polls emerged as the choice of 37 percent of those who cast ballots at the annual Values Voter Summit in Washington, D.C.

    Former Godfather’s Pizza CEO Herman Cain, who has been surging in national presidential primary polls, came in second with 23 percent of the vote, followed by Rick Santorum who garnered 16 percent. Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann tied for fourth — both with 8 percent.

    Current GOP front-runner Mitt Romney, who addressed the conference on Saturday, wound up near the bottom of the pack with 4 percent.

    Here are the results of the straw poll:

    Ron Paul – 37 percent

    Herman Cain – 23 percent

    Rick Santorum – 16 percent

    Rick Perry – 8 percent

    Michele Bachmann – 8 percent

    Mitt Romney – 4 percent

    Newt Gingrich – 3 percent

    Jon Huntsman – 0 percent

    Undecided – 1 percent

    Here are the top four vice presidential choices: Michele Bachmann; Herman Cain; Marco Rubio; and Rick Santorum.

    Saturday’s results were very different from last year’s Values Voter straw poll. The support for both Romney and Newt Gingrich declined markedly. Last year, Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., won the straw poll and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee took second place. Paul barely registered in 2010.

    As ABC News’ Jason Volack reported, Rep. Paul spoke to the audience of hundreds of social conservatives in Washington earlier today, telling them that war was the greatest threat to the modern family.

    And ABC News’ Amy Bingham spoke with several attendees at the annual conference this weekend to take the temperature of the cultural conservative voters. Despite Paul’s straw poll win, Bingham heard lots of support for Cain, but the door is still clearly open for other candidates:

    Bruce Gordon of College Grove, Ore., said he supported Cain because he seems “down-to-earth.”

    “He came up through hard times,” Gordon said. “His success wasn’t handed to him.”

    Mary Lynn Scott from Le Sueur, Minn., said she was also a Cain supporter.

    “The biggest problem right now is the economy, and he turned two companies around,” Scott said. “He has a good approach to problem solving, a solid sense of humor, he is a man of his word and he has never been in politics. So those things are all in his favor.”

    Scott said that while she did not know if Cain’s 9-9-9 economic plan would solve all of the country’s fiscal problems, she supports him because he has a “real plan” and it is a “good place to start.”

    But while Cain may have drawn the largest crowds, there was plenty of support to go around. Kelly Shackelford of Plano, Texas, said he was planning to vote for Texas Gov. Perry because “he has been around long enough and he knows what he’s doing.”

    “I wasn’t satisfied with the [GOP] field until Perry entered the race,” Shackelford said. “Then we finally had someone who was conservative across the board and who had the heft to compete nationally.”

    He said he was looking for a candidate who not only shares his views but who also has executive experience, such as a governor.

    “We need someone who as taken those values and then actually accomplished something through the political process with them,” Shackelford said.

    Perry’s recent decline in the polls is just a symptom of entering the race with so much hype, Shackelford said, adding, “Eventually, that bubble is going to burst.

    “I think it’s a matter of just bumps in the road,” he said. “Clearly, he has to do a better job of communicating the long list of conservative things he has accomplished.”
    But then I saw this...

    Leading Social Conservative Suggests Foul Play in Ron Paul Victory at Values Voter Summit
    October 8, 2011

    Texas Rep. Ron Paul grabbed another straw poll victory Saturday at the Values Voter Summit, winning by a healthy margin ahead of runner-up Herman Cain and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum. However, the National Journal now reports that an organizer for the annual Washington gathering of social conservatives has suggested that ballot-stuffing may have “skewed the results:”
    “In a press conference following the announcement of the straw poll results at the annual Washington gathering of social conservatives, Family Research Council President Tony Perkins all but dismissed the results as irrelevant, citing 600 people who registered Saturday morning and, he said, ‘left after Ron Paul spoke.’


    A total of 1,983 ballots were cast. ‘You do the math,’ Perkins said.”
    Paul’s victory at the summit came as a surprise considering his hardline libertarian views have at times been at odds with the views of social conservatives in regards to drug laws and gay marriage. Furthermore, Paul came in second-to-last at the very same contest only one year ago.


    Critics have taken Paul’s string of straw-poll victories with a grain of salt, arguing that Paul packs the electorate at these events with diehard supporters:
    “Perkins said his organization did ’everything to preserve the integrity of this straw poll,’ including denying campaigns from buying blocks of tickets, ‘which they attempted to do this year.’ But Santorum on Friday seemed dubious, and told National Journal that his success in the polls would depend ‘on how many people, how many campaigns, tried to buy a bunch of tickets and try to stack the poll, which unfortunately happens.’”
    Only those who registered and paid to attend the conference were allowed to vote. The New York Times reports that the fee was $99 for the entire three-day meeting, or $75 for a single day, and $50 for students.


    While critics may suggest ballot-stuffing, Paul’s speech before the straw poll results were announced argued that his staunch fiscal conservatism, opposition to war and defense of liberty, were in tune with family values and the Bible.

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