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Ex-GOP Candidate Romney Endorses McCain

LIZ SIDOTI   02/14/08 11:06 PM ET   AP

Romney Endorses Mccain

BOSTON — Republican campaign dropout Mitt Romney endorsed John McCain for the party's presidential nomination and asked his national convention delegates to swing behind the likely nominee.

"Even when the contest was close and our disagreements were debated, the caliber of the man was apparent," the former Massachusetts governor said, standing alongside his one-time rival at his now-defunct campaign's headquarters. "This is a man capable of leading our country at a dangerous hour."

"Primaries are tough," said McCain, referring to their earlier rancor. "We know it was a hard campaign and now we move forward, we move forward together for the good of our party and the nation."

The two met privately before appearing together at a news conference. McCain had campaigned in Vermont and Rhode Island but added a flight to Boston to accept the endorsement.

McCain effectively sealed the nomination last week when Romney withdrew from the race; only former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and libertarian-leaning Texas Rep. Ron Paul remain. But neither has a chance to catch McCain in the convention delegate hunt.

In early primaries and caucuses, Romney collected 280 delegates. The number is enough to move McCain close to the total of 1,191 needed to clinch the nomination a full nine months before the November general election.

Huckabee was not ready to bow out.

"Right now there's a great big 'me, too' crowd coming together (for McCain)," Huckabee said in LaCrosse, Wis. "There's a lot of folks, sort of, in the establishment of the party that is not now wanting to be left out." He added, "I'm just not willing to be part of the coronation yet."

Romney's nod of support capped a bitter yearlong rivalry between the two men over the party's nomination. Romney criticized McCain in television ads in New Hampshire, and both candidates mixed it up almost daily during campaign events and debates. Neither is especially fond of the other.

Over the past year, Romney cast McCain as outside of the GOP's conservative mainstream and a Washington insider who contributed to the problems plaguing a broken system. McCain, in turn, argued that Romney's equivocations and reversals on several issues indicated a willingness to change his positions to fit his political goals.

The clash effectively ended on Feb. 5, when McCain won a string of big-state primaries from coast to coast.

Officials said the former Massachusetts governor made his decision to back McCain earlier in the day, citing a desire to help the Arizona senator wrap up the nomination before too much more time passed and while Democrats still did not have a nominee.

McCain is on a steady march toward amassing the 1,191 delegates he needs, but Huckabee has proven an unexpectedly durable challenger. With a strong appeal to evangelical conservatives, Huckabee defeated McCain in two out of three states that chose delegates last weekend, and ran a far stronger race than expected before losing the Virginia primary on Tuesday.

After Romney's announcement, McCain picked up endorsements from eight members of the Republican National Committee who will attend the convention and can support whomever they choose. That gave McCain 851 delegates, to 242 for Huckabee. It left Romney with 277 delegates.

While Romney can ask his delegates to support McCain, he won't be able to simply hand over all of them. Many are from caucus states that won't select the actual delegates until state conventions this spring. Those delegates will be selected by people who supported Romney in the initial caucuses; the direction they go depends on whether they follow Romney's lead in endorsing McCain.

In other states, the delegates are bound to Romney, and their fate is governed by state party rules. In states like Montana, where Romney has 25 delegates, they would be free to support whomever they choose after Romney releases them.

Romney had support from six RNC delegates who continued to endorse him even after he dropped out of the race. Three of them switched to McCain, but some weren't ready.

"I will support our nominee," RNC member Diane Adams of Indiana said simply.

Other Romney supporters like Stewart Iverson in Iowa said they will work to rally others behind McCain.

"My main focus is to try to bring Republicans together and say, he may not have been our choice in the caucuses but he is where we are today," Iverson said Wednesday.

In the next round of voting, Louisiana holds a state convention Saturday in which caucus-goers will help decide how 44 of the state's 47 national convention delegates are split. At stake Tuesday in Wisconsin's primary are 40 GOP delegates.

Romney suspended his candidacy last week after it became apparent that toppling McCain would be near impossible to gain the delegates needed to defeat McCain.

He was the only one of McCain's main primary opponents who had resisted lining up behind the nominee in waiting; Rudy Giuliani and Fred Thompson both have endorsed him.

___

Associated Press writers Mike Glover in Iowa, Todd Richmond in LaCrosse, Wis., and Deanna Martin in Indiana contributed to this report.

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BOSTON — Republican campaign dropout Mitt Romney endorsed John McCain for the party's presidential nomination and asked his national convention delegates to swing behind the likely nominee. "Ev...
BOSTON — Republican campaign dropout Mitt Romney endorsed John McCain for the party's presidential nomination and asked his national convention delegates to swing behind the likely nominee. "Ev...
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04:24 PM on 02/15/2008
We really need to see McCain's medical records. What the hell is that in his left cheek? Does he have a tumor the size of a grapefruit in his mouth? I really think this guy has a serious medical condition that he is keeping from the public.
12:15 AM on 02/15/2008
What ever happened to Karl Rove’s grand scheme that ensured Conservative rule till the end of time?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NotWaldo
06:21 AM on 02/15/2008
It went : KAPUT!
10:48 PM on 02/14/2008
I see this and a tear comes to my eye.

I think of Ross Perot and his famous quote: "giant sucking sound"

Ironic, huh?
07:41 PM on 02/14/2008
McCain is a traitor.
Google it
Media is corrupt
Goggle it
McCain fought to stop our efforts to find and return our POWs from Vietnam.
Google it
What does Wikipedia say?
Or do u prefer corrupt media?
Ron Paul received more money that all the other 20 candidates combined.
Google it
07:28 PM on 02/14/2008
That gift makes it official. There will be a McCain / (Huckaby?) ticket against two real losers from the DNC that have no change in the world of reaching middle Americans. That will be a landslide for McCain.
What the ultra liberal socialists (masked as progressives) do not realize is that fantasy dreams do not work and believing is loop de loop delusions will not make a constructive world. There are More than enough realistic down to earth pragmatists to keep the Democratic idealistic hopefuls from reaching the oval office.

No amount of HuffinPuffin propagandist spin and O-bomb-a-nation rear kissing is going to put him any where near the reins of power. We do not need another MLK styled martyr for the cause of extended affirmative action and other associated garbage.
BalancedEgg
Over easy
10:23 AM on 02/15/2008
WWW,
You forgot the part about how middle America will vote for McCan't because it wants more conservative judges on the Supreme Court so we can bring back limits on women's rights and continue the underming of civil liberties. I like that part of the right wing fantasy the most. Nite, nite.
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07:19 PM on 02/14/2008
Gee, a KKK clansman endorsing a presidential candidate, big surprise. Anyone who thinks this isn't satan and his puppet redoing the cheney/bush thing, need only look at the Romney/Mccain endorsement. Is there any doubt in what we are seeing is a redo of the past? Disgusting, and any respect I ever had for McCain, just went south.
06:10 PM on 02/14/2008
lmao, the clinton campaign is gonna just bleed out.

Even as Sen. Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign was blasting Sen. Barack Obama for his ties to the Exelon Corporation, the firm of Mark Penn, Clinton's chief strategist, was earning hundreds of thousands of dollars from the very same nuclear energy giant.

This past week, Burson Marsteller, Penn's powerhouse consulting agency, was paid more than $230,000 by Exelon to help renew a nuclear energy license in New Jersey, the Huffington Post has learned. The payment was for work that took place over several months, and Burson is still employed by the company.

"They did some work for us in New Jersey between June and November," said Craig Nesbit, vice president of communications for Exelon Generation, a subsidiary. "That bill was invoiced on December 12 and it just took that long to pay these things... We still are paying them a little bit but it is ramping down
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hu.man
transformation through communication
06:02 PM on 02/14/2008
If I had a magic wand I would put:

McCain in charge of military so he can fix up Iraq.

Romney in charge of the economy so he can give it a much-needed boost.

Clinton in charge of government so she can get all the broken programs up and running again.

Obama in charge of the country so he can inspire it and make the people aspire to a greater and brighter vision of ourselves.

Alas, sadly we must choose. When are we going to see that one person simply does not have all it takes to run this great nation of ours.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
06:31 PM on 02/14/2008
And . . .

Turn the calendar back to 2000

Turn GWB into a toady frog

. . . so I guess the best we can do is turn Republicans into Unemployed . . .
07:14 PM on 02/14/2008
McBomb ain't gonna fix shit. I hope you don't vote.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NotWaldo
06:01 PM on 02/14/2008
I hear he hired all the illegal immigrants who had been taking care of his lawn. Good for them.
05:55 PM on 02/14/2008
FISA UPDATE!

You could knock me over with a feather, but it is looking like the House Dems are going to give Bush and the Telecos the finger.

Please continue to petition the House to stand firm on this.
06:06 PM on 02/14/2008
You mean the finger they've had up their ass since 06.
06:10 PM on 02/14/2008
Another round jeffy?
06:27 PM on 02/14/2008
If you like. Have you made any calls or written any letters?
06:14 PM on 02/14/2008
Good. Keep nagging them.
05:54 PM on 02/14/2008
As an Independent I can't wait until McCain and Obama play the who loves the troops more game to get my vote.
06:05 PM on 02/14/2008
I think you should step away from the Buds.
07:17 PM on 02/14/2008
McBomb is going to have to do a pretty big flop on his war stance to have a snowball's chance in hell of keeping it even close in November.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NotWaldo
05:48 PM on 02/14/2008
Now that he's really out of the race, I guess Mitt Romney won't go ahead with his promise of marrying all the soccer moms from New Hampshire.
06:10 PM on 02/14/2008
LOL
05:44 PM on 02/14/2008
I apologize for my "cold hearted people" comment.... Mindless killing affects me that way.... It is just so, so sad...........

*sniff*
05:46 PM on 02/14/2008
No worries, Noch. I know how you feel.
05:49 PM on 02/14/2008
Thanks sir.... I really know you do....
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05:50 PM on 02/14/2008
Nonchoi, what "cold hearted people" comment?

BTW, looks like it could have been much worse. No one killed except the shooter.
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05:51 PM on 02/14/2008
Nonchoi=Nochnoi. Sorry.
05:42 PM on 02/14/2008
Hooray! The conservatives' FOE is endorsed by the FAUX conservative.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NotWaldo
05:45 PM on 02/14/2008
I'm not sure but maybe it's a FAUX PAS.
05:40 PM on 02/14/2008
Page 15- Last Paragraph
Then Page 32 and 33 have some answers; but I encourage you to read it or have some of your research personal to do so.
The question then is why it was removed on the 1795 Act?; What took place on Congress that moved them to remove such a clear definition as stated on the 1790 Act?
06:00 PM on 02/14/2008
And this all has what to do with Romney or McCrazy?