With Governor Chris Christie confirming today that he won't seek the presidency, some big-name donors are finally ready to commit themselves to Mitt Romney.
"A lot of us who normally would have been in this presidential race a long time ago, have been waiting for Christie to make a decision," said Georgette Mosbacher, a Republican uber-fund-raiser and finance co-chair of the Republican National Committee who was among a group of Republican bundlers hoping to convince Christie to enter the race. "I think tomorrow, we’ll be contacting one another and probably put something together with Romney."
"I’m going to go with Mitt Romney," said John Catsimatidis, another donor who had been intrigued with Christie, in a brief phone interview this afternoon.
"You're calling about yesterday's news," said Catsimatidis, who said he had gotten the indication Christie wouldn't run from some of the governor's advisers yesterday.
Catsimatidis said he had started pitching Romney in the last couple weeks, on the expectation the governor wouldn't seek the nomination. At a meeting with other conservatives last Monday night, Catsimatidis said, he made the pitch for Romney's electability.
"The speech I gave to my conservative friends was, if you pick somebody who makes you 100 percent happy, you only get 47 percent against Obama," said Catsimatidis. "We have to capture the middle in order to win and make a change in this country. Ninety percent of them stood up and said, 'You’re right.'"
Mosbacher conceded there was "some disappointment" at Christie's decision, but said the public flirtation with Christie wouldn't make it tougher to raise for Romney, especially with Texas governor Rick Perry suddenly slipping in the polls after a couple of disastrous debate performances.
"Look, we’ll raise the money that’s necessary to beat Obama," she said. "It’s not going to be any harder than it would have been a month ago, or two months ago, or six months ago. Now it’s pretty clear. Perry has dropped pretty quickly. And I would say that the race is now Romney and Obama. Quite frankly, the enthusiasm wasn’t there at the outset. He’s less conservative than a lot of us would like. However, our first and foremost goal is to defeat Obama. And we do believe Romney, in terms of independents, will be a strong candidate. We will coalesce behind him now."
Mosbacher said the big bundlers in her circle "do not consider a Perry factor."
martes, 4 de octubre de 2011
Una de las viudas de Mosbacher: "ahora nos unieremos en torno a Romney"
Capital New York:
Suscribirse a:
Enviar comentarios (Atom)
2 comentarios:
Hoy he soñado que Huckabee endorseaba a Cain unos días antes de Iowa y que Cain ganaba la nominación. En realidad no lo he soñado pero de pronto lo veo claro xD
Si consigue llegar en esta situación a enero, no sería descabellado porque este año no está McCain. En 2008 sin McCain y Thompson, posiblemente Huckabee hubiera ganado Carolina del Sur, y a partir de ahí no sabemos hasta dónde hubiera podido llegar.
Cain además parece que tiene potencial en Florida, donde Huckabee no lo tenía. Cain no es un pastor, es un empresario, de modo que también llega a los que votan pensando en el bolsillo. Si empieza a organizarse mejor, y a atraer más donaciones que le eprmiten aguantar una campaña larga, habrá que considerarlo un candidato de primera fila.
Publicar un comentario