New POLITICO story leaves out Ron Paul!

Same thing at The Washington Post:

...Romney stuff...

That task is just starting for the six other candidates set to appear in Monday’s CNN debate: former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty; former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.); Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.); businessman Herman Cain; and former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.).

Hmm, six other candidates, eh? Let me count...

  1. former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty
  2. former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.)
  3. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.)
  4. businessman Herman Cain
  5. former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.)
Hmm, my math isn't so good, apparently, because I only came up with five. What possibly could be the error here? :rolleyes:
 
Hmm, my math isn't so good, apparently, because I only came up with five. What possibly could be the error here? :rolleyes:

Someone seems to be thinking that they can do stupid crap like this and still be considered a legitimate news outlet in the morning.
 
I love how you can't even contact the author of that cruddy piece of reporting. >=(
 
If one actually reads the article one will notice Paul is mentioned.

From the article:


Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker whose top advisers resigned last week, will be looking for political redemption. Other, less familiar faces – Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, Texas Rep. Ron Paul, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and former pizza executive Herman Cain – will simply be looking to make a good impression with viewers who have never seen them before. (See also: Gingrich vows to 'endure' challenges)
 
Same thing at The Washington Post:



Hmm, six other candidates, eh? Let me count...

  1. former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty
  2. former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.)
  3. Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.)
  4. businessman Herman Cain
  5. former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.)
Hmm, my math isn't so good, apparently, because I only came up with five. What possibly could be the error here? :rolleyes:

[email protected]

I sent:
Mr. Rucker,

"That task is just starting for the six other candidates set to appear in Monday’s CNN debate: former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty; former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.); Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.); businessman Herman Cain; and former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.)."

You mention "six others" but list only 5. Texas Rep. Ron Paul is missing from this list.

"Mistakes" like this are piling up, and pretty soon some media outlet is going to try to figure out why people like Rep. Paul seem to be on the losing end of these politically slanted errors. Washington Post is a company I no longer trust to provide even basic information, and I'm sure their advertisers would love to know that you are effectively alienating someone of my demographic.

Maybe instead of some buried "correction", you or someone on your staff would write an article analyzing the political rhetoric and slight of hand used to favor certain candidates over others. Only then would I trust authors such as yourself or those editors at the Washington Post who allow this to occur.

Thank you,

I would have sent it to the editors, but you have to be a "registered member" to report corrections.
 
[email protected]

I sent:


I would have sent it to the editors, but you have to be a "registered member" to report corrections.

Correction covertly made to Wash Post piece, the author apologized for the "oversight" to me in email, did not address other suggestion to actually investigate these obviously slanted errors across the media.
 
The N.H. debate: A viewer's guide

By Alexander Burns, Maggie Haberman | Politico – 11 hrs ago
here: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0611/56792.html

We have been calculating the Rigged Media... POLITICO and WaPo are Establishment Rag Print of the Fascist False Left.

Former POLITICO senior Managing Director, Amy Walter... left POLITICO, for another False Left Establishment Rag Media Corporation, ABC NEWS as their POLITICAL DIRECTOR. She randomly appears on ABC's THIS WEEK with Christie Amanpour. It not just coincidental that ABC's THIS WEEK has covered the GOP candidates every week, yet in the past month, all the shows have a complete BLACKOUT on Ron Paul. That is no coincidence, that's intentionally blocking by faso-corporate News media in bed with the government.

POLITICO Imagine for tonight:
110612_2012_comp_ap_328.jpg
 
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Look at the comments - I'm not the only one who noticed!!!

http://beta.news.yahoo.com/n-h-debate-viewers-guide-094200307.html
POLITICO's BURNS and HABERMAN intentionally leave Ron Paul out of their articles... unless it's a marginalization HIT PIECE.

Here's Today's article by POLITICO's ALEXANDER BURNS: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0611/57402.html

3 pages on the GOP field covering Manchurian Mitt Vs. all the candidates and those that are not running... no mention of RON PAUL or Gary Johnson.

POLITICO Alexander Burns reporting, such a Shill for Mitt Romney. Huntsman just joined as a candidate a few hours ago, Rick Perry is not even running(YET) and POLITICO have them both in the picture and covered in the article numerous times.

Mitt Romney versus the many

110620_bachmann_tpaw_mitt_huntsman_perry_ap_328.jpg

Clockwise, from top left: Michele Bachmann, Mitt Romney (center), Jon Huntsman, Rick Perry and Tim Pawlenty are shown in this composite. | AP Photos
The former Massachusetts governor has built up a solid early lead and looks as strong as ever. Close
By ALEXANDER BURNS | Updated: 6/21/11 10:56 AM EDT

The fight for the Republican presidential nomination may not be a heavyweight slugfest after all.

A primary campaign that was expected to pit an eggshell frontrunner, Mitt Romney, against one or more powerful, well established opponents has suddenly been flipped. The former Massachusetts governor has built up a solid early lead and looks as strong as ever; now, the burden of closing that gap falls to a group of relatively untested, unknown rivals who have yet to prove themselves on the national stage.

The latest would-be Romney slayer enters the race Tuesday: former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, whose personal wealth and moderate politics make him an unpredictable player in the 2012 race.

Other candidates are already off and running. Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann entered the race with a splash last week at the New Hampshire presidential debate. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty continues to grind away at the early presidential primary circuit while another contender, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, waits in the wings.

Any one of those Republicans could eventually take flight and give Romney a real challenge for the nomination. But Republicans have come to the conclusion that only a drawn-out fight will reverse Romney’s early momentum.

“He looks strong. Just like you had Gov. Bush looking strong” in 2000, said former South Carolina House Speaker David Wilkins, a prominent Republican fundraiser who has yet to back a 2012 candidate. “We always knew somebody would come out of the pack to challenge him and that ended up being Sen. McCain. There’ll be someone coming out to make a strong challenge, in addition to Gov. Romney, but the jury’s still out on who that might be.”

The absence of Govs. Haley Barbour and Mitch Daniels has left the contest without an obvious vessel for anti-Romney sentiment. And the throng of candidates hoping to challenge Romney are placing dramatically different bets on where, exactly, the anti-Romney opening in the race is.

For Bachmann and a handful of other flame-throwing conservatives – businessman Herman Cain, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich – any path to the nomination would involve capturing the hearts of tea party voters and other grassroots activists.

That’s essentially the strategy Pat Buchanan used 20 years ago in his upstart presidential campaign, when he won 37 percent of the vote in New Hampshire in a right-wing primary challenge to President George H. W. Bush.

Pawlenty and Huntsman have a different route in mind, trying to court the hard-core right while anchoring their support among mainstream Republicans primarily concerned with jobs and spending. Huntsman especially is counting on the backing of independent voters who can vote in some states’ GOP primaries.

That path is closer to the one John McCain followed in 2000, when he briefly looked like he might block the second President Bush

Former New Hampshire Republican Party Chairman Fergus Cullen suggested that either political wager could pay off this year, but it’s too early to say which way the race will break.

“I don’t think the non-Romney vote will splinter in the end. I think one candidate will succeed in consolidating most of that vote,” Cullen said. “It’s unclear to me whether that candidate will come from the mainstream of the Republican Party – that would be a Pawlenty or a Huntsman – or whether that will come from an insurgent outsider, like a Michele Bachmann.”

Carl Forti, an adviser to Romney’s 2008 campaign who’s now the political director of American Crossroads, said what Romney’s opponents have in common is that they must show they’re ready to compete at the frontrunner’s level.

“It’s up to the other candidates to knock him off the top rung, and at this point the other candidates have shown an unwillingness to even really try,” Forti said, offering that Pawlenty had “whiffed big time at the last debate when presented a great opportunity.”

Forti pointed to the focus on economic issues as a driving force behind Romney’s rise. The former governor has also been helped as a string of nationally known opponents have dropped out of the race.

In January, Romney was tied for first place in the Republican primary with Mike Huckabee, each man drawing 19 percent of the vote in an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll. That survey also included Daniels, Barbour and South Dakota Sen. John Thune as potential candidates.

But one by one, those candidates took themselves out of the running, and in a new NBC/Wall Street Journal poll published last week Romney’s support had risen to 30 percent. His nearest opponents were Sarah Palin, who is not an announced candidate, at 14 percent; and Cain, at 12 percent. Everyone else was in the single digits, with Pawlenty, Bachmann and Huntsman all below 5 percent.

To dislodge Romney, one or more of those candidates will have to grow their support many times over. That’s an achievable feat, but it’s not an easy one – and it’s possible that none of Romney’s low-profile challengers will be up to the job.

Still, with a solid majority of primary voters either undecided or favoring someone else, Republicans watching the early presidential states remain convinced there’s plenty of time and space for an anti-Romney candidate to emerge.

Former New York Gov. George Pataki, who’s considering a late entry into the race, said he doesn’t yet see anyone in the field becoming a runaway favorite. “I think there’s a broad consensus that this president has failed America,” Pataki told POLITICO in a phone interview from Iowa, where he held an event Monday with his fiscal conservative group, No American Debt. “I haven’t heard people say that this particular candidate, this particular person, has a plan, has a detailed program and is the kind of person I could get behind.”

Pataki, who said he was “disappointed Mitch Daniels decided not to run, because he has a great record on the deficit,” speculated: “Someone might emerge who captures not just that issue, but the energy and enthusiasm in the party.”

Right now, polling suggests that Romney’s most difficult challenge would likely come from a credible conservative insurgent, though it’s not clear that anyone in the race fits that bill. In last week’s NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, a half-dozen activist-friendly conservatives – Palin, Cain, Perry, Gingrich, Santorum and Bachmann – captured a combined 47 percent of the national primary vote.

A Gallup survey earlier this month showed a similar picture, though with more undecided voters. Romney claimed 24 percent of GOP primary voters, with Palin in second place at 16 percent. The six conservative candidates mentioned above added up to 42 percent of the vote.

That means almost half of Republican primary voters are gravitating toward an outspoken, ideological conservative – if only there were a candidate to unite them.

Former South Carolina Republican Party Chairman Katon Dawson, who left the Gingrich campaign earlier this month, pointed to Perry as a high-profile conservative governor who could raise enough money to “balance the race” against Romney.

“Gov. Romney’s doing what he’s supposed to be doing. He’s going to have a formidable July FEC disclosure,” Dawson said. “Being able to buy TV time in South Carolina, Alabama and Florida is going to be pretty crucial. That’s what leaves the option open for somebody like Gov. Perry – somebody from a big state who can fund a presidential campaign.”

Perry, however, hasn’t decided whether to enter the race and some Republicans are skeptical that he’ll pull the trigger.

For now, that leaves Romney’s other opponents competing for attention with him, and with each other, in a race with only a few opportunities to stand out in front of a national audience.

With two debates in the rear-view mirror, the next chance to shake up the race may not come until the Iowa straw poll on August 13, an activist-driven contest that helped propel Mike Huckabee to his 2008 caucus victory.

Predicted Cullen: “Absent someone winning a big event, like Bachmann winning the Iowa straw poll or someone going up with broadcast TV in one of the early states, the candidates are kind of going to be dancing around.”
 
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OMG!!!

You all act like you've never seen this before? If you haven't, then welcome to a Ron Paul campaign for President!!

I leave you with a bit of advice... Get used to it.
 
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