Saturday, September 24, 2011

HERMAN CAIN WINS FLORIDA STRAW POLL! HE SAYS WHAT HE MEANS AND MEANS WHAT HE SAYS!!!


Herman Cain upsets Rick Perry in Florida straw poll

Herman Cain speaks to delegates during the Republican Party of Florida Presidency 5 Convention in Orlando, Fla.
Herman Cain speaks to delegates during the Republican Party of Florida Presidency 5 Convention in Orlando, Fla. (REUTERS/Phelan Ebenhack / September 23, 2011)
Reporting from Orlando, Fla. -- In a severe embarrassment for the Republican presidential frontrunner, businessmanHerman Cain tripped up Gov. Rick Perry in a straw ballot of Florida Republican activists Saturday.

The vote has no bearing on the choice of a 2012 nominee but, along with recent campaign events, is likely to increase the chances that the Republican presidential contest will tighten. It comes on the heels of a poor performance by Perry in a Florida debate Thursday night that disappointed conservatives, including delegates who came to Orlando expecting to back the Texas governor.
Cain received 37% of the vote, more than twice as many as Perry, who made by far the most extensive effort, but finished a distant second with 15%. He barely edged out Mitt Romney, who did not compete here, at 14%. He was followed by Rick Santorum, with 11%; Ron Paul, 10%; Newt Gingrich, 8% andJon Huntsman, 2%.
Michele Bachmann, who scored a high-profile straw vote victory in Iowa six weeks ago, finished last, with less than 2%. The Minnesota congresswoman also chose not to compete in the Florida ballot.
Perry may have been hurt by his decision to leave town hours before the vote.  He was represented by a surrogate, as were several other candidates.
But interviews with delegates indicated that a far more likely reason for Perry’s fall: a subpar performance in a Florida debate two days earlier—in which he fumbled answers and alienated social conservatives by calling critics of his immigration record “heartless.”
Cain, as he has done at similar activist events around the country, swept the crowd away with an impassioned speech urging the 3,000 delegates to “send Washington a message” that the nation is “ready for a problem solver, not another politician.” The Atlanta businessman was one of only three candidates to appear in person; Gingrich and Santorum were the others.
Cain’s message struck a chord with delegates like Jeff Lukens, 54, who came to the Orange County Convention Center expecting to vote for Perry but said the Texas governor gave “a disappointing performance in the debate.”
The Republican activist said he had recognized that debating “is probably not [Perry's] forte” but still was surprised when the governor regressed in Thursday night’s debate. Lukens, who also attended theGOP debate in his hometown of Tampa last week, said he gave Perry “a pass” on the immigration issue, because he's a border-state governor. But he found the Texan’s answer on a question aboutPakistan to be “incoherent.”
Going into the non-binding popularity contest, Perry invested far more money and manpower than his GOP presidential rivals.
At a lavish buffet breakfast Saturday, provided free by his campaign to convention delegates, Perry said his rivals were making “a big mistake” to skip the event.
Ronald Reagan understood how important it was in ’79, and that’s the reason I’m here today,” said the Texas governor, who left town after mingling with hundreds of breakfast guests for about an hour. The delegates who ate Perry’s scrambled eggs, bacon and bagels gave his eight-minute breakfast speech a rather perfunctory reception.
Perry’s defeat was also a significant blow to the Florida Republican Party. State GOP officials had heavily promoted what they described as their straw ballot’s predictive power.
“As Florida goes, so goes the nation, and as you go, so goes Florida,” Republican Gov. Rick Scott told the delegates, after pointing out that that the winners of earlier editions—Reagan in 1979, George H. W. Bush in 1987 and Bob Dole in 1995—went on to become the GOP nominee the next year.
Cain, who invested more time than money into the Florida convention, spent three days in and around Orlando, parked his campaign bus outside the convention center and played host to hundreds of delegates at a hotel reception the night before the vote.
However, his lightly funded campaign has virtually no infrastructure, little organization and remains far behind the leaders in the polls. Even those who voted for him Saturday said they don’t expect him to win the Florida primary next winter.
Lukens said he treated the straw-ballot like a pre-season football game, rather than an actual primary vote. “I know Cain isn't going to be nominated,” he said. “This was an opportunity to vote how you really feel.”
paul.west@latimes.com
Reporting from Orlando, Fla. -- In a severe embarrassment for the Republican presidential frontrunner, businessmanHerman Cain tripped up Gov. Rick Perry in a straw ballot of Florida Republican activists Saturday.
The vote has no bearing on the choice of a 2012 nominee but, along with recent campaign events, is likely to increase the chances that the Republican presidential contest will tighten. It comes on the heels of a poor performance by Perry in a Florida debate Thursday night that disappointed conservatives, including delegates who came to Orlando expecting to back the Texas governor.
Cain received 37% of the vote, more than twice as many as Perry, who made by far the most extensive effort, but finished a distant second with 15%. He barely edged out Mitt Romney, who did not compete here, at 14%. He was followed by Rick Santorum, with 11%; Ron Paul, 10%; Newt Gingrich, 8% andJon Huntsman, 2%.
Michele Bachmann, who scored a high-profile straw vote victory in Iowa six weeks ago, finished last, with less than 2%. The Minnesota congresswoman also chose not to compete in the Florida ballot.
Perry may have been hurt by his decision to leave town hours before the vote.  He was represented by a surrogate, as were several other candidates.
But interviews with delegates indicated that a far more likely reason for Perry’s fall: a subpar performance in a Florida debate two days earlier—in which he fumbled answers and alienated social conservatives by calling critics of his immigration record “heartless.”
Cain, as he has done at similar activist events around the country, swept the crowd away with an impassioned speech urging the 3,000 delegates to “send Washington a message” that the nation is “ready for a problem solver, not another politician.” The Atlanta businessman was one of only three candidates to appear in person; Gingrich and Santorum were the others.
Cain’s message struck a chord with delegates like Jeff Lukens, 54, who came to the Orange County Convention Center expecting to vote for Perry but said the Texas governor gave “a disappointing performance in the debate.”
The Republican activist said he had recognized that debating “is probably not [Perry's] forte” but still was surprised when the governor regressed in Thursday night’s debate. Lukens, who also attended theGOP debate in his hometown of Tampa last week, said he gave Perry “a pass” on the immigration issue, because he's a border-state governor. But he found the Texan’s answer on a question aboutPakistan to be “incoherent.”
Going into the non-binding popularity contest, Perry invested far more money and manpower than his GOP presidential rivals.
At a lavish buffet breakfast Saturday, provided free by his campaign to convention delegates, Perry said his rivals were making “a big mistake” to skip the event.
Ronald Reagan understood how important it was in ’79, and that’s the reason I’m here today,” said the Texas governor, who left town after mingling with hundreds of breakfast guests for about an hour. The delegates who ate Perry’s scrambled eggs, bacon and bagels gave his eight-minute breakfast speech a rather perfunctory reception.
Perry’s defeat was also a significant blow to the Florida Republican Party. State GOP officials had heavily promoted what they described as their straw ballot’s predictive power.
“As Florida goes, so goes the nation, and as you go, so goes Florida,” Republican Gov. Rick Scott told the delegates, after pointing out that that the winners of earlier editions—Reagan in 1979, George H. W. Bush in 1987 and Bob Dole in 1995—went on to become the GOP nominee the next year.
Cain, who invested more time than money into the Florida convention, spent three days in and around Orlando, parked his campaign bus outside the convention center and played host to hundreds of delegates at a hotel reception the night before the vote.
However, his lightly funded campaign has virtually no infrastructure, little organization and remains far behind the leaders in the polls. Even those who voted for him Saturday said they don’t expect him to win the Florida primary next winter.
Lukens said he treated the straw-ballot like a pre-season football game, rather than an actual primary vote. “I know Cain isn't going to be nominated,” he said. “This was an opportunity to vote how you really feel.”
paul.west@latimes.com

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