Sunday, September 28, 2014

Cruz/Carson

September 27, 2014, 03:07 pm
Cruz clinches straw poll gold again

By Julian Hattem

Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz won the Value Voters Summit presidential straw poll on Saturday.

The crowd burst onto applause on Saturday, as Family Research Council President Tony Perkins announced that Cruz won 25 percent of votes at the annual Washington conference. 

The victory is a big victory to the Republican firebrand and Tea Party icon, coming just a day after he drewstanding ovations with a religious and emotional speech that blasted ObamaCare, congressional Democrats and called for Republicans to take over the White House in 2016. 

Cruz also won the straw poll in 2013. 

Coming in second was neurosurgeon Ben Carson, a political novice who has a large following in conservative circles but said earlier this week that there is a “strong” likelihood that he would run for president. He won 20 percent of the votes.

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) came in third, with 12 percent of the vote.

As a signal of Carson’s popularity at the summit, the former Johns Hopkins University neurosurgeon came in first in the polling for vice president, winning 22 percent of the votes.

Cruz was the runner up in that contest, with 14 percent. Third was Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) — who earned surprising admiration in his Friday evening address, despite his low showing in recent polls of potential 2016 contenders — with 11 percent of the vote.

The annual Washington summit is considered a right of passage for prospective Republican presidential candidates, and served as an opportunity for aspirants to make some of their most direct pitches to social conservatives before announcing their ambitions next year. 

The notable absence from the winners' list of Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) — another senator who is considered to be strongly eyeing a presidential run — is a sign of pervasive skepticism from the religious right.

Paul’s libertarian leanings have won him supporters among the young and tech-savvy, but he has yet to make inroads among Christian conservatives. The poor showing comes despite his attempts on Friday to appeal to the summit’s religious leanings. 

The summit also asks participants which issues they care about most deeply.

“Protecting religious liberty” easily won that contest with 39 percent of the vote, fo

2 comments:

  1. What a bunch of fucking shit. #1 nobody....NOBODY is infringing on your religious freedom. You have the right to worship however you choose same as I have the right not to listen to it. You have to get this stuff of being a Christian country outta your head. We have no state mandated religion so we are not a Christian country. We are a country of Christians with many other religions. Better put your money on Huck. He is the only one who can successfully challenge Hilary Clinton. Don't believe me look at the polls under the thread "Why Benghazi will never end". Cruz is a joke. He has no experience not even enough foreign policy savvy to know that Arab Christians would boo him, not support him, on Israel. He doesn't know it's an Arab/Jew problem not a Muslim /Jew problem. That one event right there shows how green he is in world affairs. Besides he doesn't have enough experience. 4 years as a senator not enough to know what to do about the world or the countries problems. Ben Carson? He is not well known enough to win dog catcher.
    Why your people turning on Rand Paul all the sudden? This is what makes it all so comical. Yesterday's darling/ today goat. You hold these guys way to close to this principles shit. Nobody can make that grade with you guys. Your candidates are not allowed to grow, nor can they leave the rhetorical path not even for an instant.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Cruz would never win a national election. He would serve the TEAs much better in the Senate.

    ReplyDelete