NOT THE LAST STRAW
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney spent an
estimated $5 million in the lead up to the Ames straw poll,
outbidding other Republican campaigns for everything from buses to
catering for the crowd.
With no other top tier candidate remotely playing in the state
GOP party fundraiser, it was expected — and his campaign had been
encouraging for months — an expectation of a win by more than 15
percent. At one point in early May, Romney advisers were predicting
the possibility of a majority (better than 50%) win if other top
tier candidates chose not to play in the straw poll.
But over the past month Romney and his advisers began lowering
the bar of expectations, and did a good job, ensuring this his
31.5% of the votes and 13% margin of victory over former Arkansas
Gov. Mike Huckabee was just good enough.
Romney sources now indicate that he set his sights on the
end-of-August Texas straw poll, one that many thought he would not
play in. “The dynamic in the race has changed a bit,” says one
Romney adviser. “We’re looking to have a victory somewhere beyond
the Midwest, to show we can win down south. Texas is the one we’re
looking at.”
The Texas straw poll, to be held in Dallas the last week of
August, is getting little attention in the media. But now that Ames
is over, it may garner more attention, particularly if Romney makes
a late play to make it a bigger event than previously expected.
BUSING ALONG
Mike Huckabee is getting credit for an excellent
showing in the Ames straw poll, and people are trying to figure out
how he got the supporters to where they needed to be. One answer
lies in the buses that were rented to bring members of the
Americans for Fair Taxation organization to their FairTax rally at
Ames.
While the Huckabee campaign bought a number of tickets to the
straw poll for its supporters, it didn’t arrange for transportation
for all of their supporters. Instead, the campaign in Iowa was
encouraging people to catch rides on the FairTax buses.
Word is the Federal Election Commission will be looking into the
situation in the coming days. Already, the FEC has been
investigating the role a homeschooling 501c3 organization played in
political activity on behalf of the Huckabee campaign. The FairTax
organization, which has been asking all Republican candidates to
support its proposal of a national retail sales tax, has not
endorsed a candidate, though Huckabee has said he supports the
plan.
“We have no idea if the Huckabee people were piggybacking on our
buses,” says a FairTax organizer in Ames. “We weren’t checking on
who was riding on the buses beyond making sure they were coming to
our rally at the event. If they voted for Huckabee, then more power
to them.”
BLUE DOG MUSCLE
The Blue Dog Democrats — those moderate to conservative House
members who have been making Speaker of the House Nancy
Pelosi’s life a bit more difficult than expected — are on
a roll. Recent FEC filings indicate that the group’s leadership PAC
has raised almost a million dollars in the first six months of
2007, more than the group raised in the previous 16 months
combined. Almost all of the funds — about $830,000 — came from
lobbying groups and corporate PACs, a sign that corporations and
others have identified the Blue Dogs as a critical voting block in
the House.
Credit for the increased influence of the group goes to
Tennessee Democrat Rep. John Tanner, who chairs
the organization, and has mobilized his group — with its increased
membership from the last election cycle — all over town. “There
isn’t a major event where you don’t see Blue Dog members there,”
says a lobbyist for a U.S. automotive manufacturer. “They come to
our policy meetings, they come to our conferences, they care about
our issues because many of them have constituents who are our
employees or prospective employees. They are much more visible than
they were a year ago.”
And more important to the process. For any given important vote,
Tanner can bring the majority totals up by 25 to 35 votes,
something Pelosi often needs for the tough votes, particularly on
appropriations.