McCain and Romney are kindred spirits. Only serfs can immediately name the number of houses they own without having to take their shoes off, and surfs are not worthy of such consideration.Since Romney released ten years of returns to John McCain (who subsequently did NOT pick the Mittster as his running mate), how can he justify not releasing those returns to the rest of us? He can't claim he doesn't have them. His only response is that he just doesn't think he ought to have to do what all the other candidates have done.
McCain and Romney are kindred spirits. Only serfs can immediately name the number of houses they own without having to take their shoes off, and surfs are not worthy of such consideration.
Daredelvis
If Romney has actually announced as a campaign promise that he would block government funding of Planned Parenthood, after the Komen fiasco, wouldn't that hurt him with everyone who's not a fringe pro-lifer?
Romney is going down hard right now.
Wow. This race keeps surprising me.
Santorum won Missouri and Minnesota, and is leading in Colorado too.
Romney actually came in third after Ron Paul in Minnesota.
Between a statement like that and Santorum surging again, I'm off to laugh myself silly.Romney is going down hard right now.
Wow. This race keeps surprising me.
Santorum won Missouri and Minnesota, and is leading in Colorado too.
Romney actually came in third after Ron Paul in Minnesota.

We have repeatedly noted the pattern in which Mr. Romney's stronger states and counties have been associated with lower Republican turnout.
So far, it was not clear that this had lost Mr. Romney a state -- save perhaps Iowa, when virtually anything might have altered the result.
But in Colorado, where the demographics were reasonably favorable to Mr. Romney -- he won 60 percent of the vote there in 2008 -- it may have made the difference. Mr. Romney's stronger areas in the state were associated with turnout declines of about 20 percent. But turnout was steady or slightly up in places where Rick Santorum did well.
Among other problems for Mr. Romney, this suggests that suggests that the caucus states could be problematic rather than advantageous to Mr. Romney, with his superior organization being outmatched by very conservative voters who have low levels of enthusiasm for him.
hard-core libertarian nutjob college people
Seems to be true, WildCat. So why do the party insiders - who must recognize this fact - choose caucuses over primary voting? They must know that creating a primary process that encourages the extremes of their party (left or right) does them no good in November.Caucuses bring out the true wingnuts.