• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • msnbc.com sites & shows:
  • TODAY
  • Rock Center
  • Nightly News
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • Morning Joe
  • Hardball
  • Ed
  • Maddow
  • Last Word
  • msnbc tv
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech & science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
  • Recommended: Inside the Boiler Room: What's old is new again
  • Recommended: VIDEO: First Read Minute: Where we stand five months out
  • Recommended: First Thoughts: Mr. 48%
  • Recommended: Powell to Romney on foreign policy: 'Come on, Mitt, think.'
The first place for news and analysis from the NBC News Political Unit. Follow us on Twitter.
  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • Advertise | AdChoices
    2
    May
    2012
    2:07pm, EDT

    Rick Perry: God forgives 'oops moments'

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    The Bible may describe God's eternal redemption of mortal souls in a more soaring spiritual fashion, but Rick Perry has a more, well, personal way to describe it. 

    "Every one of us has ‘oops moments’ every day,” the Texas governor and former presidential candidate told his audience at an Austin breakfast to celebrate the National Day of Prayer. “America may not forgive you for it, but God will.”

    According to the Associated Press, Perry's self-effacing joke -- referencing the infamous Nov. 9 debate when he was unable to remember the third of three federal agencies he would pledge to eliminate -- won laughter and applause from the crowd. 

    The November gaffe proved fatal to Perry's already-struggling presidential campaign, despite his team's attempts to diffuse the moment with light-hearted humor and a frenzy of interviews explaining why he "stepped in it." 

    Perry also took the occasion of the faith event this morning to pray for the current president, as he did at several prayer rallies during the campaign. 

    He says he hopes that President Barack Obama will "truly understand God's will to protect innocent life. I pray for his true understanding of God's will for this country," he said, per the AP. 

    55 comments

    God does forgive oops moments but I doubt he forgives 230+ executions moments

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, featured, carrie-dann, perry-embed
  • 9
    Apr
    2012
    4:52pm, EDT

    Obama camp: Romney benefits from 'broken tax system'

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    With a peg to the upcoming legislative push for the "Buffett rule" adjustment of tax rates for the very wealthy, the message of the day from President Obama's Chicago-based re-election campaign was this: "Mitt Romney is the beneficiary of a broken tax system, and he wants to keep it that way."

    Those were the words of campaign manager Jim Messina, who joined Sen. Dick Durbin and Wisconsin Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin in a conference call to talk about what they dub economic "fairness" in the tax system.

    According to Durbin, who hammered Romney on his reported past holdings in overseas banks, fairness is a foreign concept to a candidate who benefited from a "Swiss bank account."

    Durbin said of the semi-presumptive GOP that it is "impossible for him to explain or defend" the overseas account, paraphrasing Buffett Rule-envisoner Warren Buffett himself in saying "there are plenty of good banks in the United States."

    Participants were pointed in naming examples of Romney's personal wealth (Messina invoked the famed car-elevator in plans for the former governor's La Jolla, CA home), saying that Romney's tax structure "looks out for people just like him."

    Another example: Romney's limiting of his tax return disclosure to just two years -- 21 fewer than the number of years worth of documents he reportedly disclosed to the McCain campaign when being vetted for the VP slot four years ago.

    "Romney supports tax policies that reward people like him, and now he's just trying to obscure just how much he would benefit by hiding his own financial records," Messina said.

    But  the campaign demurred when asked by a reporter if Obama would agree to release as many years of records as the 23 it's demanding of his rival, saying only that Romney must live up to the standard set by his own 2008 vetting process.

    Obama has released tax records dating back to 2000.

    The Romney camp released this statement before today's Obama campaign conference call: “President Obama is the first president in history to openly campaign for re-election on a platform of higher taxes. He has already raised taxes on millions of Americans, but he won’t stop there. He wants to raise taxes on millions more by taxing small businesses and job creators. We appreciate the Obama campaign reinforcing Mitt Romney’s platform of lowering tax rates across the board in order to jumpstart this bad Obama economy.”

    182 comments

    Romney benefits from 'broken tax system' Hello? You think? Why is Willard so afraid of disclosing additional tax returns? 21 fewer than the number of years worth of documents he reportedly disclosed to the McCain campaign when being vetted for the VP slot four years ago.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, decision-2012, mitt-romney, carrie-dann
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    3:08pm, EDT

    Romney: Time to resolve GOP nomination ASAP

    By NBC's Carrie Dann

    WASHINGTON -- At his speech before newspaper editors in DC today, Mitt Romney also made this not-so-subtle point: It's time for Republicans to wrap up the nomination process as soon as possible.

    Asked during a question-and-answer session after his remarks whether he has spoken to Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich about exiting the GOP contest, Romney quipped, "No, I haven't. But now that you bring it up..."

    As laughter subsided, he added that "people are free to make their own decision."

    But he noted confidently, "I hope that we're able to resolve our nomination process as soon as possible." He added, "I'd like to focus our time and attention on those key battleground states and raising the funds to be somewhat competitive with the president and his billion-dollar quest."

    52 comments

    O-o-o-h getting impatient are we??? Hmmm, is Ann itching to measure the drapes?. You've got plenty of time dear, four years from now you can start working on that!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, mitt-romney, first-read, romney-embed, carrie-dann
  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    10:31am, EDT

    New Santorum TV ad morphs Obama into Romney

    By NBC's Carrie Dann and Mark Murray
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews Follow @mmurraypolitics

     

    Down in the polls to Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum is up with tough new TV ad in Wisconsin, which shows President Obama's face morphing into Romney's.

    The script:

    “I’m Rick Santorum and I approve this message.

    Female narrator: "What if I told you this man’s big government mandated healthcare included $50 abortions and killed thousands of jobs?

    Would you ever vote for him? What if I told you he supported radical environmental job killing cap and trade and the Wall Street bailouts?

    And what if I told you he dramatically raised taxes and stuck taxpayers with a $1 billion shortfall? 

    One more thing: What if I told you the man I’m talking about isn’t him?

    [picture morphs from Obama to Romney]

    It’s him.

    *** UPDATE *** The Romney campaign issues this response: “Rick Santorum is attacking pollsters, attacking reporters and attacking Mitt Romney. It is sad to see him completely lose his bearings and revert to patently false claims. Senator Santorum is at a point of desperation that he will say or do anything. It is pretty clear that he is lashing out at everyone around him in order to prop up his sinking campaign.”

    59 comments

    My, aren't these tea baggers ever so clever... lol File this under chapter #3841 in the book of you just can't make this crap up... Nothing is better to start the week then watching the right wing nuts feast on their own! ;o)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, rick-santorum, first-read, santorum-embed, carrie-dann
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    2:07pm, EDT

    Defiant Santorum uses Supreme Court to draw contrast with Romney

    By NBC’s Andrew Rafferty and Carrie Dann
    Follow @AndrewNBCNews Follow @CarrieNBCNews

    WASHINGTON -- Rick Santorum used the start of oral arguments over President Obama's health-care law on Monday as an opportunity to pounce on his top rival for the Republican presidential nomination.

    Standing outside the Supreme Court here, Santorum quickly pivoted from his opposition to the law being discussed in the stately courthouse behind him to an aggressive contrast with Mitt Romney.  The former Pennsylvania senator repeated one of his often-used critiques of Romney, calling him "uniquely disqualified" to face off against Obama because of the similarities between the law being debated today and one that Romney signed as governor of Massachusetts.

    "There's one candidate who is uniquely disqualified to make the case,” Santorum said. “It's the reason I'm here, and he's not -- the reason that I talk about ‘ObamaCare’ and its impact on the economy and fundamental freedoms and Mitt Romney doesn't. It's because he can't, because he supported government-run health care as governor of Massachusetts."

    Santorum used the backdrop of the Supreme Court's west entrance, where a security detail steered him through a crush of reporters hastily gathered for the press conference.  Advocates of the health law - who vastly outnumbered opponents outside the courthouse during the opening day of arguments – chanted, “Health care is a right!" at points during Santorum's address.

    The setting was fitting for Santorum's frequently touted message.  On the campaign trail, he often calls the 2010 health-care law "the most important issue of the day." Repealing the law has been a top priority for Republican voters this primary, and today, Santorum called himself the only person able to do it.

    "There's only one candidate that has a chance of winning the Republican nomination who can make this the central issue, that will be a winning issue for us to win the presidency back, and that's Rick Santorum,” Santorum said. “And unfortunately the worst person to make that case is Mitt Romney.”

    The fiery rhetoric Santorum has used against his top rival has, at times, caused controversy on the stump. The most recent case happened on Sunday in Franksville, Wisc., when the GOP hopeful called Romney "the worst Republican in the country to put up against Barack Obama."

    Pressed by reporters about the comments after the event, Santorum lashed out, accusing the media of "distorting" his words and calling questions about his remarks "bull----."

    Asked about it today, Santorum did not apologize for the profanity.

    "I don't regret taking on a New York Times reporter who was out of line," he said. The campaign is now using the confrontation as a fundraising appeal.

    Santorum took a break from campaigning in Wisconsin to visit the nation's capitol, even though he is not on the ballot here for the April 3 primary. His efforts in the coming days will largely be in the Badger State, where he is struggling to keep pace with Romney. 

    Romney and the pro-Romney Super PAC Restore Our Future are outspending Santorum and allies nearly 10-to-1. Red, White, and Blue Fund today placed a $305,000 ad buy, but that brings the totals to $3 million for Romney to $340,000 for Santorum.

    Santorum has remained dismissive of delegate math that has him far behind Romney. In response to a question about the electoral hurdles he faces, Santorum mocked top Romney surrogate John Sununu.

    "I heard Governor Sununu say today that all of the significant people have said that Rick Santorum should get out of the race,” Santorum said. “Well, I guess we'll have to leave it to the insignificant voters of America in the remaining primaries to step forward and challenge the significant people who are speaking here in Washington, D.C.”

    *** UPDATE *** Romney campaign spokesman Ryan Williams sends along this response:

    "Senator Santorum is becoming increasingly shrill as his campaign hopes fade. It's important that all Republicans keep their focus on President Obama because if we want to repeal Obamacare we need to defeat him first. Obamacare is bad policy and bad law and when Mitt Romney is president he will get rid of it."

    81 comments

    Rick Santorum, holier than thou and self-righteous hypocrit, is determined to end ObamaCare and replace it with what? Nothing, that's what.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, first-read, santorum-embed, andrew-rafferty, carrie-dann
  • 9
    Mar
    2012
    8:15pm, EST

    Santorum: Romney wouldn't 'tell the truth to the American people'

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    TOPEKA, Kansas -- As he aims to frame the GOP nominating contest as a "two-man race," an aggressive Rick Santorum on Friday attacked rival Mitt Romney as untrustworthy and politically moderate at his core.

    "Ladies and gentlemen, we already have one president who doesn’t tell the truth to the American people," he told a crowd of about 250 supporters at a railroad station-turned-museum in Topeka.  "We don’t need another nominated by our party to do the same."

    Santorum, seeking a strong showing in upcoming Southern primary contests, accused Romney of planning a swift move away from conservative principles if he wins the nomination.

    "The Romney campaign can’t wait to get out of this primary," he said. "Guess why? They can start tacking to the middle now, start getting back in the comfort zone."

    In his critique, Santorum zeroed in on Romney's backing of mandated health care coverage during his tenure as Massachusetts governor. Romney says he never advocated for such a requirement on a national level, while Santorum pointed to several recently uncovered video clips as evidence to the contrary.

    "Washington insider Rick Santorum is lashing out at Mitt Romney because he can’t accept the fact that it’s nearly impossible for him to win the number of delegates needed to secure the Republican nomination," Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul responded, pointing out Santorum's statement in a recent debate that he "took one for the team" in helping pass bipartisan legislation. "This is yet another case of Sen. Santorum abandoning principle for his own political advantage."

    Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback made an appearance at the Topeka rally, standing in the back of the audience clad in a sweater vest - a garment frequently worn by the presidential hopeful. Brownback told reporters that his presence was no endorsement but was merely intended to show support for the GOP candidates appearing in the state; he also made a stop at an event held by Ron Paul earlier in the day.

    Despite a strong performance expected in this weekend's caucuses in Kansas, Santorum's path to victory over Romney remains hazy. 

    But Santorum was cheery about that possibility on Friday.

    "You know the other day Governor Romney was going through the math of all the delegates and said it would take an act of God for Rick Santorum to get all of the delegates he would need," he said. "Well, I don’t know about him, but I believe in acts of God."

    332 comments

    Tell us something we don't know. He sais what he needs to in order get elected and then he does what benefits his investors the most. Why do you think he didn't run for reelection in Massachusetts and left office with all hard drives in tow? Because he did not steal tax payer money for the benefits  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, rick-santorum, santorum-embed, ks, carrie-dann
  • 1
    Mar
    2012
    5:14pm, EST

    Santorum predicts first or second in every Super Tuesday state

    By NBC's Carrie Dann

    Completing a two-day Southern swing that wrapped up in Newt Gingrich's home state of Georgia, Rick Santorum predicted Thursday that he will win or place in each of next week's primary contests. 

    "We're going to do well in every state," he told supporters at an Atlanta-area rally in an airplane hangar. "First or second, every state, right?"

    (Of course, as readers and Twitter followers remind, Santorum isn't on the ballot in Virginia -- just Mitt Romney and Ron Paul are.)

    The former Pennsylvania senator leads by a wide margin in Tennessee, where he campaigned yesterday, while Gingrich bests him by double digits in the Peach State. 

    He implored Georgians to take his side in the state, hinting that a vote for Gingrich would ultimately be a boost to "moderate"  Romney, whom he says would follow in the footsteps of failed general election candidates like Bob Dole and John McCain. 

    "Georgia needs to be a part of transforming this race," he said. "The good people in this race, people I admire, but this race is narrowing down and we need the people of Georgia to stand with the conservative to make sure that the Washington establishment doesn't again give us another moderate Republican who will not motivate our country and who will lose this election in the general election." 

    Santorum also took aim at Romney for what critics called a high-speed flip-flop yesterday on the so-dubbed Blunt amendment, a measure pegged to the controversy over federal funding for mandated contraception coverage. 

    After telling an Ohio radio host that he was "not going there" on an issue he said should be made by families, Romney's team quickly clarified that their candidate did support the bill and that he had been confused by the wording of the question that prompted his answer. 

    Santorum appeared unconvinced by that explanation, telling supporters that "after [Romney's] consultants talked to him and then he came back, ‘Oh,' he said, ‘I didn't understand the question.'  Well, maybe he did and maybe he didn't." 

    The Blunt measure narrowly failed in the Senate today. 

    *** UPDATE *** The Romney campaign passes along this response: “Washington insider Sen. Santorum’s ‘gut reaction’ is to ‘take one for the team’ instead of standing up for what he says he believes in," Romney spokeswoman Andrea Saul said. "Rick Santorum plays for Team Washington, while Mitt Romney’s team is the American people.”

    24 comments

    Santorum predicts first or second in every Super Tuesday state! Wooow! That Santorum must be a fu#king Nostradamus! There's only two real candidates "Duh"

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, santorum-embed, carrie-dann
  • 25
    Feb
    2012
    3:09pm, EST

    Mitch Daniels: Still a 'no' on 2012 presidential run

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    WASHINGTON -- For Republicans dreaming of a knight in shining armor to save the GOP day, Gov. Mitch Daniels ain't budging.

    Asked by a reporter if a loss for Mitt Romney in Tuesday's Michigan primary would prompt him to reconsider his decision not to enter the Republican race, the Indiana governor offered a flat "no."

    Daniels said he's confident that the eventual Republican nominee will provide a strong contrast to President Barack Obama, and he dismissed the notion that a long and bruising primary is cause for concern from Republicans who have suggested a new entrant like himself would be their best hope should Romney falter.


    "I'm in the camp that believes that these folks are being refined and improved by this very difficult process," he said.

    "After a while here, by and by, this is going to be a binary choice," Daniels added. "This president, this administration, this record, versus an alternative. And if that alternative is positive and reasonably specific about a better way forward, we got a great chance to win."

    Romney backer Gov. Bob McDonnell conceded that a loss for Romney in his home state "wouldn't be good" but said that momentum there appears to be moving in the onetime Massachusetts governor's favor.

    And McDonnell echoed Daniels' belief that Republicans will coalesce around the nominee  and charge forward to a competitive general election.

    "We're always looking for that knight in shining armor to come in that's going to slay Obama with one blow. That's not the kind of campaign it's going to be. That's why we've had 5 different frontrunners over the last 6 months or so," he said.

    "But I will say this: Whenever that nominee is decided and I think it will be Mitt Romney there will be a galvanization of the Republican and conservative and libertarian and independent base in a significant way within 30 days that all our focus at combating these incredible big government one size fits all statist policies that Obama has promoted over these last four years."

    107 comments

    Oh NO! A certain long time poster who suffers from ODS & resides in NJ will be bawling in her beer at this news! lol There is NO white knight riding in to save her bacon! Daniels isn't stupid enough toss his hat into today's GNOP freak show!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, romney, mitch-daniels, carrie-dann
  • 21
    Feb
    2012
    3:40pm, EST

    For first time, Obama campaign targets Santorum, too

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    While Rick Santorum's positions on social issues and religion have been getting plenty of attention, President Barack Obama's campaign team took specific aim today at his economic policies, discussing both Santorum and Mitt Romney's plans for tackling the deficit. 

    The conference call with reporters was one of the first times that Team Obama has taken explicit aim at Santorum and placed him at the same level as chief rival Romney. Obama backers alleged that both Romney and Santorum's tax cut and defense spending proposals would actually add trillions to the national debt over 10 years. 

    Campaign economic advisor and Harvard professor Jeffrey Liebman estimated that Romney's proposals to boost both corporate tax cuts and defense spending -- plus relatively muted spending cuts -- would raise the deficit to at least 6 percent of GDP in 2016. He said the same number could be as high as "7, 8, 9 percent of GDP" for Santorum. 

    Obama's proposal, his team says, would reduce the deficit to just 3 percent of GDP in the same year. That's in comparison to a current CBO "alternative scenario" -- which assumes the extension of the Bush tax cuts -- that would put the deficit at 5 percent of GDP in 2016.

    On the call, campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt declined to re-address the recent controversy over Santorum's "theology" comments, saying that the campaign responded to it over the weekend. 

    (LaBolt last week called Santorum's comment "the latest low in a Republican primary campaign that has been fueled by distortions, ugliness, and searing pessimism and negativity.")

    "What's clear is that Sen. Santorum is focused on issues that divide Americans rather than the issues that the American people are focused on right now, which is who's going to restore our economic security for the middle class and who's going to create jobs now," he added today.

    *** UPDATE *** The Romney campaign sends along this response: "President Obama is in no position to criticize Mitt Romney's proposals to cut taxes and restore fiscal responsibility," spokesman Ryan Williams said. "After all, this is the President who just proposed the largest tax increase in American history and has given us four straight trillion-dollar budget deficits.  Middle-income Americans have been crushed by the Obama economy and millions of American workers have just given up looking for work.  This was the president who told us that if he didn't fix the economy in three years, he'd be looking at a one term proposition.  It's time to collect."

    68 comments

    Let the right-wing whining begin--ignoring, of course, that Santorum, Romney, Gingrich and Paul have all been in full-voiced anti-Obama attack mode for months. Obama/Biden 2012!!!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, featured, carrie-dann, obama-embed
  • 15
    Feb
    2012
    3:21pm, EST

    Examining Romney's '08 Michigan performance

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    As was pointed out in First Read this morning, Mitt Romney won the state where his father served as governor by only nine percentage points, coming up with 39% of the vote compared to John McCain's 30%. (That's 338,316 votes for Romney.) Mike Huckabee came in third place with 16% of the vote in the state.

    And here's a little more on Romney's Michigan performance, according to the exit polls.

    Let's start with a telling data point: Among the 42% of GOP primary voters who said said that "Romney's ties to Michigan" were "important," 58% backed him. But among those who said home state connection was "not important," only 23% said they voted for him.

    Romney performed well among a wide range of demographics in 2008. He won a plurality of born-again evangelicals, beating out Baptist preacher Huckabee. He beat McCain fairly soundly with voters both with and without a college degree. And he won all income brackets, except for those earning less than $30,000 a year.

    But one data point that might not make Boston smile was his performance among voters -- about a third of the electorate -- who said that their top criterion for picking a candidate was that he "says what he believes." McCain trounced Romney on that measure by 19 points.

    He did soundly win GOP voters most concerned that their nominee "shares my values" (44%). And Romney cleaned up among voters most concerned with "electability," although only 5% of Michigan GOP primary voters in 2008 said electability was the top quality they were looking for.

    Romney's best performance was in the Detroit area and surrounding suburbs, with his highest win percentage in Oakland County (47%), where all three auto manufacturers have a strong presence. He also broke the 40% support threshhold in the Traverse City area.

    His worst performance was in the sparsely populated Upper Penninsula. In Iron -- his weakest county -- he won just 20% of the vote, versus McCain's 39%.

    There's chatter today that some Democrats may vote in the state's "open" primary to make mischief. For what it's worth, 7% of those voting in the 2008 Michigan GOP primary identified themselves as Democrats, and McCain won 41% of those voters compared with Romney's 33%. (There was a contemporaneous Democratic primary going on in 2008, but neither Obama nor John Edwards was on the ballot due to wrangling over the primary date.)

    46 comments

    Maybe Romney should just quit now.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, mitt-romney, carrie-dann
  • 13
    Feb
    2012
    12:49pm, EST

    Obama 'Truth Team' aims to counter attacks

    By Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    While Republicans continue to wrangle over exactly who they should pick as their flagbearer against the Democratic incumbent in the White House, President Barack Obama's re-election team is arming itself against the GOP's arguments against granting him a second term. 

    In a move reminiscent of Team Obama's 2008's "Fight the Smears" effort, the president's re-election campaign today launched its "Truth Team" along with three independent web sites offering opposition research and talking points for the president's backers on the ground. 

    The "network of supporters" has its hub at Obama's re-election web portal, which contains links to three individual sites. AttackWatch.com monitors the GOP 2012 candidates' slams of the administration's record; KeepingHisWord.com offers examples of Obama's fulfilled campaign promises; and KeepingGOPHonest.com critiques Republican presidential candidates' proposals with opposition research.

    In addition to offering new online and social media tools for Obama fans, today's exercise also serves as an initial run for the localized rapid-response infrastructure that will activate "validators" in swing states who can quickly respond to Republican attacks in person-to-person meetings and local media markets. 

    Press conferences to unveil the "truth teams" -- groups of between five and 15 state legislators and other opinion leaders -- are being held in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Minnesota, Nevada, Ohio, and Virginia. Teams are also being announced in Iowa, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, and Wisconsin. 

    In Florida, for example, state Democratic Party Chairman Rod Smith, as well as five state legislators, will hold a 4:30 pm press conference in Tallahassee to unveil their team. In Minnesota, it's a team of over a dozen that includes the mayor of Minneapolis, the DFL party chair, and civil-rights figure Dr. Josie Johnson. In Arizona, local leaders will also use the "Truth Team" announcement to bracket Mitt Romney's visit to the 2012 swing state -- where Team Obama is expected to open its fourth field office soon. 

    Those teams will be augmented by local leaders, voters, and labor and interest group voices, the campaign says. The effort is designed to deploy a multi-tiered supporter network that can counter GOP criticisms of the president from statehouses to neighborhoods. 

    In an email to supporters, deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter called it "the grassroots communications team of the Obama 2012 campaign."

    "Communicating about the president's record -- and that of our opponents -- is what I do full-time," Cutter writes. "But people don't just want to hear from campaign statements or ads -- they want to hear from the family and friends they trust."

    1259 comments

    Outstanding idea & pro-active to boot! While the righties are still yammering on about 57 states, teleprompters & birth certificates, they President once again has zoomed right by them! lol I for one, have already 'book-marked' the site - it will save time slaying the smears! If the GNOP d …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: white-house, barack-obama, decision-2012, carrie-dann
  • 9
    Feb
    2012
    5:59pm, EST

    Cain: 'I chose to put family first'

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    WASHINGTON, DC -- Wild applause for talk of "gutter politics," flat taxes, and "stupid people who are ruining America."

    Time to party like it's 9-9-9.

    Former presidential candidate and current rock-star-reception recipient Herman Cain addressed a packed hotel ballroom at the conservative CPAC conference Thursday, encouraging the audience to back his famed 9-9-9 plan and explaining his rationale for exiting the 2012 contest.

    "There were two reasons I dropped out of the race," Cain said. "Gutter politics. And, No. 2, I chose to put family first."

    Invoking the biblical tale of the underdog, Cain added: "And in making that decision, I knew that we together could change Washington, DC from the outside and from the bottom up, even if your David didn't make it to the White House."

    Cain later said that he did not regret his decision, one that came after weeks of scrutiny for accusations of sexual harassment from numerous alleged victims, because "there is more than one way to skin a cat."

    The onetime pizza executive mainly used his remarks to plug his 9-9-9 tax plan, urging conservatives to get federal candidates to "adopt" the idea before winning office.

    And he touted his support for one such candidate, "Joe the Plumber," who is running for Congress in Ohio this cycle.

    Cain, like earlier CPAC speaker Rick Perry, did not mention Newt Gingrich, the candidate whom both former candidates endorsed after exiting the race.

    But he did repeat one of his most popular refrains from his brief tenure as a presidential front-runner.

    "We need another revolution in this country! It won't be bombs and bullets, not this time. It will be brains and balance at the ballot box."

    "We must outsmart the liberals! We must outsmart the stupid people who are trying to ruin America!" Cain said to raucous cheers. "We outnumber the stupid people. Trust me. I counted em!"

    And he promised to stay in the spotlight.

    "A lot of people thought that after the character assassination that was launched against me, that Herman was going to shut up and sit down and go away," he said. "Ain't gonna happen."

    53 comments

    And, No. 2, I chose to put family first." Well it's about time Hermie! After years of playing hide the salami with any women who had a pulse, it was going to catch up with you sooner or later! PS: Your pizza still SUX - Mr. Shucky Ducky!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, herman-cain, carrie-dann
Older posts

Browse

  • featured,
  • politics,
  • 2012,
  • decision-2012,
  • congress,
  • obama,
  • white-house,
  • republicans,
  • mitt-romney,
  • first-thoughts,
  • 2010,
  • barack-obama,
  • first-read,
  • newt-gingrich,
  • democrats,
  • romney-embed,
  • romney,
  • rick-santorum,
  • appfeatured,
  • economy,
  • capitol-hill,
  • gingrich-embed,
  • alex-moe,
  • perry,
  • security,
  • boiler-room,
  • courts,
  • video,
  • garrett-haake,
  • santorum-embed,
  • pete-williams,
  • ads,
  • week-ahead,
  • carrie-dann,
  • bachmann,
  • santorum,
  • gingrich
Also

Top msnbc.com headlines

3147,10
Advertise | AdChoices

Chuck Todd

Chuck Todd became NBC News’ political director in March 2007. He also serves as NBC News' on-air political analyst for "NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams," "Today," "Meet the Press and MSNBC, including "Hardball with Chris Matthews."

Mark Murray

Mark Murray is NBC News' Senior Political Editor. Since joining the network in 2003, he has reported on and written about political races, trends, and issues -- including the 2003 California recall, the 2004 Bush-Kerry presidential race, the 2006 midterm elections, the 2008 presidential contest, the 2010 midterms, and the 2012 presidential race.

Domenico Montanaro

Domenico Montanaro is NBC News' Deputy Political Editor. He writes, reports and edits for First Read, the network's political blog, provides editorial guidance for NBC's campaign embeds, correspondents and producers working on NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams, the Today show, Meet the Press, MSNBC and affiliates, and occasionally appears on-air on MSNBC, writes feature-length pieces for msnbc.com, and has reported from Capitol Hill and field  …

Ali Weinberg

Will Springer

Natalie Cucchiara

Archives

  • 2012
    • May (281)
    • April (291)
    • March (387)
    • February (329)
    • January (446)
  • 2011
    • December (383)
    • November (371)
    • October (341)
    • September (258)
    • August (303)
    • July (232)
    • June (293)
    • May (262)
    • April (277)
    • March (295)
    • February (239)
    • January (277)
  • 2010
    • December (261)
    • November (297)
    • October (267)
    • September (244)
    • August (262)
    • July (285)
    • June (296)
    • May (262)
    • April (300)
    • March (315)
    • February (256)
    • January (242)
  • 2009
    • December (234)
    • November (277)
    • October (312)
    • September (277)
    • August (209)
    • July (325)
    • June (343)
    • May (302)
    • April (316)
    • March (283)
    • February (285)
    • January (362)
  • 2008
    • December (285)
    • November (313)
    • October (514)
    • September (476)
    • August (385)
    • July (372)
    • June (408)
    • May (482)
    • April (510)
    • March (446)
    • February (543)
    • January (946)
  • 2007
    • December (578)
    • November (519)
    • October (607)
    • September (419)
    • August (423)
    • July (387)
    • June (467)
    • May (343)
    • April (254)
    • March (179)
    • February (163)
    • January (203)
  • 2006
    • December (110)
    • November (256)
    • October (224)
    • September (199)
    • August (9)

Most Commented

  • Romney's 'Day One': What do we know about his plan? (2231)
  • NBC polls: Obama edges Romney in three key battleground states (2009)
  • Marco Rubio calls Obama most 'divisive figure' in US politics (2126)
  • NBC/WSJ poll: Obama, Romney locked in tight contest (2081)
  • Catholic heavyweights challenge Obama rule on contraception (1258)
  • First Thoughts: Is Bain fair game? (1774)
  • Obama leads big with Latinos (928)
  • First Thoughts: Economic pessimism is back (1213)

Other blogs

  • Daily Nightly
  • The Maddow Blog
  • The Last Word
  • Hardblogger
  • World Blog
  • Field Notes
  • Inside Dateline
  • Behind the Wall
  • The Ed Show
  • Morning Joe
  • Daily Rundown

msnbc.com top stories

3147,10
© 2012 msnbc.com
  • Politics on msnbc.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Terms & Conditions
  • MSN Privacy
  • Legal
  • Advertise
Advertise | AdChoices