Viagra And Lisinopril
I agree with Steven Muscatello that it would be good for the party:
Viagra and lisinopril, That's the question on the tip of my tongue after tonight's results. I think Rudy has done the honorable thing in dropping out now that it has become clear that he isn't going to be the nominee. In so doing, Rudy has shown class, and a concern for the future of the party, viagra and lisinopril. He understands that after Florida he would be reduced to a non-candidate candidate who could merely siphon votes (largely from Sen. Viagra and lisinopril, McCain) without any chance of actually winning. This wouldn't be good for the country, nevermind the party.Now consider Huckabee, viagra and lisinopril. He's siphoning votes from somebody, and I believe that person is Gov. Viagra and lisinopril, Romney. After his dismal performances in New Hampshire and Michigan and his underwhelming performances in South Carolina and Florida, it's clear that the Huckster has lost his groove.
Now let me say this: I believe Mike Huckabee is a good and decent man, viagra and lisinopril. But I also believe his campaign has been far more about him than it has been about what's good for our party, for our movement. Viagra and lisinopril, From the "Christian leader" commercials to the odd one-liners, Gov. Huckabee's campaign has always seemed to me more of a novelty act than a serious performance. But these are serious times with serious issues. There's the war, the economy, the multiple judges that the next president will appoint to the Supreme Court. The time has come for Republicans to pick among the two candidates who can actually win the nomination and the presidency: Sen. McCain and Gov. Romney. They need to decide, in particular, whether Gov. Romney or Sen. McCain is the better advocate for the social issues that they—and Gov. Huckabee, to his credit—care so much about. To continue to support Gov. Huckabee despite the impossibility of him winning the nomination is to ensure that the social issues that we care about are put on the backburner (in the best case) for the next four to eight years.
Now the skeptic might say, what makes you think Huckabee’s folks will go to Gov. Romney. Well, just a hunch really. But even if all of Huck’s support goes to Sen. McCain, and that leads to a landslide victory for the Senator next Tuesday, I think the party and the country will still be better off having made a choice between the two candidates who can win. Fred has done the right thing, and now so has Rudy. Meanwhile, Gov. Huckabee has made his name by talking about the importance of the voice of the people on Main Street. Will he take his chance to let them be heard?
Huck may be a good and decent man, but is he honorable.
Does he really want Dole '96.
Or does he really think McCain can take down Obama.
If this fall is all about the economy, Obama will clean McCain's clock.
UPDATE:
Hugh Hewitt discusses a Two Man Race:
The combination of his win in Florida and Rudy's expected endorsement make John McCain the front-runner, but not the nominee. The exit polls that show Romney winning by significant margins among conservative and very conservative voters set up next Tuesday's races as the moment when the GOP will chose to stop the Arizona maverick or concede that it is his turn. The shadow of the '96 Dole campaign will fall on McCain now, and the prospect of an Obama-McCain fall campaign will be the key consideration for Huckabee voters over the next seven days. Huck's voters are conservative or very conservative, and if they stay with Huck because they like him better than Romney, they hand the nomination to McCain.If an ABM Treaty emerges --anybody but McCain-- the smoke will clear a week from now on a delegate hunt that will continue through the Pennsylvania primary in late April, seven contests in May, and the June 3rd elections in New Mexico and South Dakota. McCain could conceivably seal the deal next week by running the table, but if Romney can rally enough of the conservatives, he can force the race into the final innings.
Until tonight, Romney was up by 27 delegates. Tonight he is behind by 30 delegates.
Until tonight Romney was up by a few thousand votes of all the votes cast. Tonight he is behind by a few thousand votes of all the votes cast.
Romney's speech tonight was exactly the sort of speech he needs to give again and again for the next week. The conservatives aren't going to throw in the towel which means Romney has the chance to go from underdog to the last man standing opposite McCain next week.
UPDATE II:
Patrick Ruffini: From Rudy to Romney:
With Mayor Giuliani now all but out of the race, I have no qualms about supporting his fellow chief executive Mitt Romney for the Republican nomination..Despite the outcome in Florida, Republicans across the nation should spend the next week thinking long and hard about the demoralizing prospect of a McCain nomination.
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