Super Bowl Viewers Don’t Think Madonna’s Good Choice For Halftime Show

Most Americans who plan on watching the Super Bowl this Sunday say they’ll watch the halftime show, but they aren’t thrilled about the performer.  A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that only 29% of Adults Who Will Watch the Super Bowl think Madonna is a good choice for the game’s half time show. Fifty-seven percent disagree, while 14% are undecided. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

The survey of 817 Adults Who Will Watch the Super Bowl was conducted on January 30, 2012 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.

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Mississippi Most Conservative State, D.C. Most Liberal

Mississippi, Utah, Wyoming, and Alabama are the four most conservative states in the U.S., each with 50% or more of its population identifying as conservative. The District of Columbia and Massachusetts are the most liberal states.
Go to USA Gallup

In Nevada, It’s Romney’s to Lose

After spurning Trump debate, Romney takes his endorsement

Nevada, or, as I like to call it, “Snowfall,” may be poorly named after the blizzard of ads we’ve been seeing elsewhere in Florida, South Carolina, New Hampshire, and Iowa; but beneath the calmness and lack of exposure is a well-oiled strategic machine that is methodically getting out the vote.

If the latest poll is to be believed, Mitt Romney might just strike political gold in the “Silver State.” Romney is the favorite of 50% of likely GOP caucus-goers, according to the Democratic-leaning polling firm Public Policy Polling. He’s leading his next closest rival, Newt Gingrich, by 25 points. Ron Paul is third at 15 percent, and Rick Santorum is fourth at 8 percent.

Nevada has been particularly hard hit by the economic downturn, with a high number of home foreclosures and an unemployment rate that recently soared to an all-time high of 14.9%. In other words, Nevada’s looking for a turnaround; Nevada Republicans think that the guy who turned around the Olympics next door might be able to help.

For the Mitt supporters out there, Romney is doing especially well in the state that went for Barack Obama in 2008, with 55% of the vote. I quote the PPP poll:

Romney hits the 70% favorability mark in Nevada, something we’ve seen for him in very few states. Just 25% see him unfavorably. That’s partially due to an 89/8 standing with Mormons, but he’s at a still very strong 64/30 with non-Mormons as well. One thing that’s contributing to Romney’s strength in Nevada is a strong advantage on the electability question. 56% think he would be the strongest candidate against Barack Obama this fall with no one else topping 21%.

He has several things going for him that other candidates will have a hard time matching. The first is that a caucus, unlike a primary, discourages turnout, which helps Romney, who has had some of the most predictable polling of any candidate thus far. The second is that a well-organized caucus operation can be “turned on” to win a swing state later on. These two insights were what led Barack Obama, who narrowly lost the caucus to Hilary Clinton, to capture the nomination.

The way to think about Nevada is that it is really three different cultures, all of which are nominally tied together in a distant capital. There are two urban areas—Los Vegas and Reno—and the rest is about as rural as you can. That’s part of the reason it is so hard to poll. This became evident in 2008 when Nevada went 37.4% for Romney when only 5% was predicted.

Las Vegas, Nevada’s biggest city, itself tends to have very low turnout in general. Part of this is the transient population; part of it is also that everyone works all night and sleeps during the day. But there is, at least, on the GOP side, one major exception to this rule: the Mormons. Vegas, as with much of Nevada, was first settled by Mormons as part of the Mormon corridor. Nevada’s two senators, Dean Heller and Harry Reid, are both members of the church of LDS. Reid is a convert and the atypical Mormon Democrat. But even Mormon Democrats look upon Mitt Romney favorably.

But there are two groups that are going to help determine the general election: Latinos and Labor.

If Romney can do as well among Nevada Latinos as he did among Cuban Americans, he will win Nevada in the general election. It is one of the big open questions of this race as to whether or not the son of a Mexican Mormon can defeat the first black president, Barack Obama.

As to the second group, Romney just isn’t going to get the Labor vote, but he can help to fight it by aligning with its biggest foe and his biggest foe’s backer: Sheldon Adelson. Adelson became politically active when the labor unions that wound up endorsing Barack Obama began organizing in front of his non-union hotels. He was miffed, so he began donating to the Republican Party.

Were I Romney, I would make a quiet overture to Sheldon Adelson.  Not only will this suck the oxygen out of the Gingrich campaign—Adelson will be less likely to donate to Gingrich if Romney can show him that there is no space between them on key issues—but it will also send a signal to some of the other casino moguls leery about supporting Romney.

Though Mormons personally oppose much of what Vegas stands for, much of the hotel industry in the city is run and staffed by them. Indeed, Romney’s first name, Willard, comes from J. Willard Marriott, the hotel magnate and best friend to George Romney. Romney sat on the board of the Marriott hotels between 1992 to 2001. He ought to stress that, based upon that experience, he understands the issues facing casino and hotel owners and can fight against the demonization of Las Vegas by Barack Obama.

By focusing on how President Obama’s policies have made Nevada’s recovery nonexistent, Romney can use the springboard of his probable win tomorrow when he comes back in November. As Romney has put it, the economy is “my power alley.”


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‘Uncle Omar’ amendment would send drunk driving aliens home

Grassley provision adds habitual drunk driving to list of deportable offenses.
Go to Human Events

Barbara Boxer On Komen Caving In On Planned Parenthood Funding: “Women’s Health Triumphed Over Right-Wing Politics”…

I guess if valuing the life of an unborn child classifies as “right-wing politics.” Via Newsbusters: News of the Komen Foundation’s backpedaling regarding its grants to Planned Parenthood affiliates prompted liberal journalist Andrea Mitchell to do a victory lap on her 1 p.m. Eastern Andrea Mitchell Reports program today. [...] “In looking at the wording from Komen [...]
Go to Weasel Zippers

Anonymous Hacks Conference Call Between FBI And Scotland Yard

Modern day keystone cops.

Whether this is a real hack, or merely an attempt by the FBI to pursue its own ulterior motives is unclear (especially with the broad media coverage it is getting and the fact that the YouTube recording of the call is still online), but supposedly the Anonymous hacker group managed to enter and record a 16 minutes conference call between the FBI and Scotland Yard. Per AP: “Anonymous published the roughly 15-minute-long recording of the call to the Internet early Wednesday, gloating in a Twitter message that “the FBI might be curious how we’re able to continuously read their internal comms for some time now.” The FBI said the information “was intended for law enforcement officers only and was illegally obtained” but that no FBI systems were compromised.

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Birth of Planned Parenthood

Margaret Sanger should have been aborted. Komen should be ashamed.

RNC Responds to Romney gaffes

RNC double facepalm. When ever you say “plight of the poor” in a snarky way it never ends well. See CNN replay.

CNN:

The Hill:

“When you know that the media is against you to start with, which is the case with Romney and [Newt] Gingrich, you have to be extremely careful that you don’t give them a phrase that can go on a bumper sticker,” said one Republican congressman who asked for anonymity in order to speak freely.

Rep. Trent Franks (R-Ariz.), who has endorsed Gingrich but said he liked Romney as well, said the former governor should be more careful about his choice of words going forward.

“Mr. Romney, unfortunately and through no fault of his own whatsoever, is almost the ideal caricature for the ‘divide America’ strategy of Barack Obama. It’s going to be important for him to be aware of that,” Franks said. “Mr. Obama’s strategy is an insidious one, and unfortunately historically effective. My only admonition to Mr. Romney is to be aware of it and to be cautious [that] what he says doesn’t play into that.” More>

 

Iran: Zionists and the Great Satan (America) will soon be defeated

Ron Paul supporters should think about what the Iranian leadership is saying.

“In light of the realization of the divine promise by almighty God, the Zionists and the Great Satan (America) will soon be defeated,” Ayatollah Khamenei, the Iranian supreme leader, is warning. Read More >

69% Oppose Efforts to Increase Those on Food Stamps

A record 46.2 million Americans were on food stamps by last fall, but the Obama administration is still concerned that some segments of the population are missing out on government food assistance. However, most Americans oppose trying to get more people on food stamps.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey of American Adults finds that just 11% favor new government efforts to encourage more people to receive food stamps.  Sixty-nine percent (69%) oppose such efforts, while another 21% are undecided. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

(Want a free daily e-mail update? If it’s in the news, it’s in our polls).  Rasmussen Reports updates are also available on Twitter or Facebook.  

The survey of 1,000 Adults nationwide was conducted on January 30-31, 2012 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.

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