• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Obama challenges Naval Academy graduates to help restore trust in institutions
  • Recommended: Groups look for next step in delicate immigration reform dance
  • Recommended: IRS official Lerner placed on leave
  • Recommended: Heckler repeatedly interrupts Obama speech

The latest political headlines powered by NBC News

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • Updated
    7
    May
    2013
    3:34pm, EDT

    Cuccinelli takes page from Romney playbook with new tax plan

    By Michael O'Brien, Political Reporter, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    Ken Cuccinelli, Republicans’ candidate for governor in Virginia, unveiled a major new tax plan on Tuesday, and it very much resembles proposals by GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney and congressional Republicans from over the past year.

    Cuccinelli debuted a new plan that would cut about $1.4 billion in taxes, namely by making major reductions to the state’s personal income and corporate tax rates. The Virginia attorney general’s plan would cut the personal income tax rate to 5 percent (down from 5.75 percent) and reduce the corporate tax rate to 4 percent (from 6 percent).

    Cuccinelli sold his “Economic Growth and Virginia Jobs Plan” as a way to not only cap government spending in Virginia, but to also ease the burden on Virginia taxpayers and encourage new business investment.

    Of course, it’s hardly unusual to hear a high-profile Republican candidate for office call for a regimen of tax cuts during the height of campaigns. But Cuccinelli’s similarities to many contemporary Republicans extends to the way in which he would finance the cost of the tax cuts, as well.

    Per the website for Cuccinelli’s plan, the attorney general would help offset the $1.4 billion price tag for his tax cuts by indentifying and eliminating “outdated exemptions and loopholes that promote crony capitalism.”

    Steve Helber / Steve Helber / AP file photo

    Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli gestures as he talks about the Supreme Court decision on the Health Care law during a press conference Thursday, June 28, 2012 in Richmond, Va.

    That’s an approach remarkably similar to the kind preferred by Romney during his presidential campaign last year, and subsequently by congressional Republicans during their negotiations with President Barack Obama over the automatic tax hikes that almost took effect this year as part of the “fiscal cliff.”

    Romney and the GOP lawmakers each largely declined to specify the exact loopholes and deductions they would target as part of their reforms. Because of the few details about the specifics of their plans, it made it difficult for analysts to account for the exact price tag of their tax proposals. Moreover, in the case of Romney, he was left vulnerable to charges that his plan would actually result in higher taxes for many middle class Americans, since if some of the costliest tax deductions – for instance, the home mortgage interest deduction – were eliminated, it would disproportionately affect middle class households.

    A spokeswoman for Cuccinelli said that a task force called for by the plan would be put in charge of adding greater detail about which exemptions the gubernatorial candidate would eliminate to meet his target.

    But in a campaign against Democrat Terry McAuliffe that has already become a murky battle of volleying characterizations about the other candidate and his proposals, it’s not hard to imagine the Cuccinelli plan becoming a ripe target for McAuliffe, unless more meat is added to the plan’s bones.

    This story was originally published on Tue May 7, 2013 3:27 PM EDT

    312 comments

    Mitt Robme's plan? Karma works, Cuccinelli decides to rob Mitt Robme, stealing his plan. . Every time a president is elected, the other party wins Virginia governor's race, I hope this time is different. And McAuliffe should win.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: taxes, va, featured, updated, ken-cuccinelli
  • Updated
    30
    Apr
    2013
    5:05pm, EDT

    McDonnell denies wrongdoing as ethics dominates governor's race

    By Michael O’Brien , Political Reporter, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    Republican Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell denied any wrongdoing in his business dealings with a family friend and donor, saying Tuesday that an FBI probe into that relationship does not impair his ability to serve as governor.

    McDonnell largely dismissed a Washington Post report on Monday, which said that federal investigators were exploring the relationship between the McDonnell family and a major donor: Star Scientific CEO Jonnie Williams. Williams paid the $15,000 catering bill at the wedding of McDonnell’s daughter.

    “I think it’s important for the people of Virginia to know nothing has been done with regard to my relationship with Mr. Williams or his company, Star Scientific, to give any kind of special benefits to him or his company or, frankly, any other person or any other company during the time that I’ve been governor,” McDonnell said on Washington’s WTOP radio.

    The Virginia governor acknowledged the gift from Williams to his daughter, but said that it wasn’t previously disclosed because under state law, gifts given to family members don’t have to be reported by officeholders.

    Joshua Roberts / Reuters

    Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) during their annual meeting in Washington in this file photo taken February 19, 2010.

    “I made the determination -- and I believe it was correct -- that it was a gift to my daughter, and therefore under the current laws it did not need to be disclosed,” McDonnell said, adding that the controversy has caused “a fair amount of pain” for him personally.

    McDonnell denied giving any preferential treatment to Star Scientific, which has come under scrutiny for its production of a nutritional supplement. Additionally, a former chef at the governor’s mansion, who faces a separate trial on embezzlement charges, has alleged in court filings that there was an improper relationship between the McDonnell family and Williams.

    McDonnell, a possible contender for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016, said that while he could not comment about an ongoing trial or investigation, there was no reason to doubt his ability to serve.

    “I’ve had a remarkable opportunity to serve these last three and a half years, and there’s nothing going on at all that impairs my ability to do a good job and to serve the people of Virginia,” he said.

    The controversy involving Star Scientific could end up making significant waves, though, in the race this year to succeed McDonnell as governor of Virginia, a position that can serve as a launching pad for further political ambitions.

    Terry McAuliffe, Virginia Democrats’ nominee for governor, has seized on Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli’s ties to Star Scientific -- partly to ding the GOP gubernatorial candidate, and partly to deflect Cuccinelli’s own attacks on McAuliffe for his ties to the environmentally friendly automaker, GreenTech.

    At issue are gifts disclosed by Cuccinelli given to him by Williams, the Star Scientific CEO. The attorney general had previously acknowledged receiving several thousand dollars’ worth of gifts from Williams, including travel and lodging. He amended his disclosure forms on Friday, the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported, to include additional gifts from Williams and other undisclosed gifts.

    (A spokeswoman for Cuccinelli said Friday that the attorney general had “voluntarily and personally undertook a thorough review of all travel records and scheduling information to determine if there were any instances not reported in his financial disclosures,” which prompted the amended disclosure. Cuccinelli has also recused his office from prosecuting the case against the former executive chef at the governor’s mansion.)

    The flap over Star Scientific has all at once made ethics and transparency a central issue in Virginia’s high-profile governor’s race, while also inviting additional mudslinging between the two candidates on those very issues.

    The McAuliffe campaign, for instance, called on Tuesday for Virginia to establish an independent ethics commission to investigate and enforce ethics standards. The Democrat also voiced support last week for a ban on gifts over $100 for Virginia’s governor and first family.

    The Cuccinelli campaign, meanwhile, has focused on trying to pressure McAuliffe to release more detailed personal income tax information beyond three years’ worth of summaries. The conservative attorney general’s campaign has also circulated a report from NBC’s affiliate in Richmond raising questions about McAuliffe’s Greentech project based in Mississippi.

    This story was originally published on Tue Apr 30, 2013 5:02 PM EDT

    231 comments

    Of course he is going to say he did nothing wrong. He's a republican.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: va, featured, updated, bob-mcdonnell
  • Updated
    22
    Apr
    2013
    12:44pm, EDT

    Cuccinelli's run for governor of Va. tests core elements of GOP makeover

    By Michael O'Brien, Political Reporter, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    WAKEFIELD, Va. — Ken Cuccinelli, the Republican candidate for governor in Virginia, is no Mitt Romney – and that’s one trait that his most ardently conservative supporters appreciate.

    "The thing I think that's cool about Ken is you know where he comes from, he's going to be direct and honest, and he's not going to tell you what you want to hear — he's going to tell you what he honestly believes," said Connie Meyer, one of the hundreds of Cuccinelli supporters who attended last week's "Shad Planking" — a rite of political passage in rural Virginia featuring cold beer and smoked fish.

    "I might not agree on everything with him, but I know who he is," Meyer said.

    Cuccinelli, the Old Dominion's attorney general and an outspoken conservative, will have to hope that independent and moderate voters agree with Meyer if he's to have any hope of beating his Democratic opponent, Terry McAuliffe, in November.

    The high-profile campaign will test whether a dyed-in-the-wool conservative like Cuccinelli can remain palatable in a state like Virginia, which has undergone steady changes that have transformed it from a cornerstone of the Old South into a 21st Century swing state.

    Patrick Kane / AP

    Shad fish nailed to planks slow-cook over coals during the 65th Annual Shad Planking on Wednesday, April 17, 2013 at the Wakefield Sportsmen's Club in Wakefield, Va.

    "I think I have a lot broader record than what is widely known," Cuccinelli told NBC News following his speech at the 2013 Shad Planking. "I talk to groups, one at a time. I've put a lot of miles on cars, talking to Virginians in their communities and doing it pretty regularly."

    A former state senator from suburban Washington, D.C., Cuccinelli distinguished himself on the state and national level as a reliable conservative. He led the charge against President Barack Obama's health care law in court, and broke more recently with Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, a Republican he's hoping to succeed, over a landmark transportation law that raised some taxes.

    Many of Cuccinelli’s supporters at last Wednesday’s event said his conservative credentials are beyond reproach, and suggested that Cuccinelli would not moderate his views in pursuit of higher office.

    But the gubernatorial nominee's ideology could be his undoing. Democrats have become more reliable contenders in statewide races in Virginia; Obama won it in both of his presidential campaigns, and the state boasts two Democrats in the U.S. Senate. The growth of D.C.'s suburbs in northern Virginia — fueled in part by government spending — has transformed Virginia into a more prosperous and diverse state.

    Cuccinelli's campaign will test conservatives' hypothesis that a forceful conservative message, if articulated well, is the path to GOP resurgence (rather than a gradual moderation of the party).  And the outcome of his campaign could have reverberations throughout the Republican Party nationally, as the party establishment works to broaden its appeal  by adopting a more inviting tone toward those who disagree with it.

    Even supporters worry that Cuccinelli is too forthright about his views.

    "I don't support gay rights, and I'm against abortion — but he has to tone down his rhetoric," said Ray Hughes, a retired food production executive who resides in Norfolk.

    Patrick Kane / AP

    Ken Cuccinelli speaks during the 65th Annual Shad Planking Wednesday, April 17, 2013 at the Wakefield Sportsmen's Club in Wakefield, Va.

    Indeed, much of Cuccinelli's speech before several hundred attendees of this year's Shad Planking focused not on social issues, but bread-and-butter issues like job and the economy. He sought to humanize himself by talking about his service work earlier in his life, and his work as attorney general to free some wrongfully convicted inmates. (His campaign has been eager to publicize instances of the latter.)

    And McAuliffe found himself as much of a target of the attorney general's comments at the Shad Planking as anything else. Cuccinelli repeatedly made reference to Greentech Automotive, the environmentally-friendly auto company that McAuliffe helped found (and from which he subsequently resigned). Cuccinelli reeled off jokes about Greentech, referencing the fact that its production was based in Mississippi, not Virginia.

    Those jokes sat well with the crowd at Shad Planking, a group that tended older, whiter and Republican. (In the past, Democrats were more of a presence at this fundraiser for the Wakefield Ruritan Club; this year, the event was dominated with tents for GOP candidates, and groups like Americans for Prosperity and Heritage Action.)

    But the voters at this year's Shad Planking aren't the ones Cuccinelli will have to convince. The Virginia election, held in Washington's backyard during an off-year, and combined with the relative brashness of McAuliffe and Cuccinelli, have all the makings of a "squeaker," said Don Woodsmall, a former attorney who's supporting the attorney general.

    "I don't think you'll find two candidates more extreme — their style, their ideology, everything about them," he said. "I think Cuccinelli's going to be swinging for the fences. It always has the potential to backfire, but I think you win people over to your principles."

    This story was originally published on Mon Apr 22, 2013 12:42 PM EDT

    243 comments

    I don't care how much lipstick you slather on a pig - at the end of the day, it's still a PIG! So much for the re-branding effort... lol

    Show more
    Explore related topics: capitol-hill, featured, first-read, va, updated, ken-cuccinelli
  • 22
    Mar
    2013
    4:31am, EDT

    GOP path to reinvention riddled with potholes

    By Michael O'Brien, Political Reporter, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    There’s been plenty of talk among Washington Republicans about the need to recruit better candidates, the kind who will avoid cringe-worthy campaign moments that did in several GOP candidates last fall, and weighed down the party nationwide.

    But there are already several conservatives gearing up for high-profile races over the next two years who threaten to stop that effort in its tracks.

    Following the missteps of candidates like Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock – the Senate candidates in Missouri and Indiana, respectively, who lost winnable Senate races after making roundly criticized comments about rape – establishment Republicans have been far more vocal about the need to rein in primary processes that produced such nominees.

    Former Gov. Christie Todd Whitman, R-N.J., who was the former EPA administrator, joins Daily Rundown guest host Chris Cillizza to talk about women in the Republican party, the role of nuclear energy and the GOP's thoughts on nuclear energy and climate change.

    The fact that 2012’s mistakes were not an aberration compounded Republicans’ worries. The same Tea Party fervor that produced rock stars like Rand Paul and Marco Rubio yielded Republican Senate nominees like Christine O’Donnell, Ken Buck and Sharron Angle – GOP candidates regarded as having squandered good pickup opportunities in Delaware, Colorado and Nevada.

    This week’s Republican National Committee report recommending ways to strengthen the party came out and said it bluntly: “Groupthink is an issue.”

    But in races like this fall’s gubernatorial campaign in Virginia – along with several high-profile state races next fall – will offer direct tests of whether the GOP can finally navigate the narrow strait between conservative allegiance and electability in the general election.

    The most immediate test will come this fall in Virginia, where Ken Cuccinelli is the candidate looking to keep the governor’s mansion in Republican hands for two consecutive terms for the first time since the mid-1990s.

    Cuccinelli has long been a favorite of conservatives, having used his current office as state attorney general to launch court challenges to President Barack Obama’s health-care law. His reservoir of support on the right helped push Virginia’s relatively more moderate lieutenant governor, Bill Bolling, out of the race. (Bolling subsequently weighed running as an independent candidate, but decided against it.)

    And already, Cuccinelli has run his race in swing-state Virginia as an unabashed conservative. (His campaign-year manifesto, appropriately, is entitled “No Apologies.”) Whether that tack will work in a state that’s drifted toward the political middle – represented best by Obama’s wins there in 2008 and 2012 – is very much an open question, one which will be answered this fall.

    Already, likely Democratic nominee Terry McAuliffe’s campaign has revived a familiar playbook against Cuccinelli, seizing every opportunity to cast him as out-of-step with Virginia voters. The latest example came this week when a Democratic tracker released a video of Cuccinelli appearing to compare slavery to abortion during a speech last summer.

    "Over time, the truth demonstrates its own rightness, and its own righteousness," Cuccinelli says in the clip. "Our experience as a country has demonstrated that on one issue after another. Start right at the beginning -- slavery. Today, abortion."

    The McAuliffe campaign pounced.

    “His comments reflect a career-long focus on an extreme ideological agenda that has nothing to do with Virginians’ top concern: the economy,” the Democratic candidate said. “Politicians who constantly create controversy on divisive social issues harm Virginia’s standing as one of the best states for business.”

    And, looking ahead to some of next year’s campaigns, there are other GOP candidates who could follow in Cuccinelli’s steps and pose a challenge to Republicans’ efforts to seek out pitch-perfect nominees to wage successful campaigns in swing states.

    Steve Helber / AP file photo

    Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli gestures as he talks about the Supreme Court decision on the health-care law during a press conference Thursday, June 28, 2012 in Richmond, Va.

    In Iowa, Rep. Steve King has an inside track to the Republican nomination in next year’s Senate race, where he’ll be looking to pick up a seat for the GOP following the retirement of Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin. He survived a competitive re-election campaign last fall, an experience which he said hadn’t caused him to back off of his brand of unflinching conservatism. 

    “I went through the toughest election of my life last fall. I had tracking cameras around me from St. Patrick’s Day through Nov. 6 … always focused on me, trying to get a second or a minute that they could use against me in an ad,” King said in his speech last week before CPAC, the gathering of conservative activists. “They’re in the business of trying to undermine and weaken us, and I didn’t back up on any principle.” 

    Republicans are also nervously watching Michigan, where they’re trying to avoid the missteps of 2012, when Senate nominee Pete Hoekstra doomed his campaign early on with a racially-charged ad targeting Democratic Sen. Debbie Stabenow. 

    Already, several Republicans have bowed out from the race, easing the path for the libertarian-minded Rep. Justin Amash, should he decide to seek the nomination. Though his conservatism isn’t necessarily in the mold of Cuccinelli or King, Amash would almost certainly face the same efforts from Democrats looking to cast him as too conservative for the Great Lakes State. 

    Just in his second term, Amash has exhibited a repeated willingness to ruffle fellow Republicans’ feathers, so much that he ended up being one of the four House Republicans stripped of their committee assignments by the GOP leadership this year. He told National Review in December that House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, would not be welcome in his district. And Amash was one of the lawmakers Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., last week called “wacko birds” for their opposition to the Obama administration’s drone policy.

    Amash was one of 10 Republicans who, on Thursday, voted against Rep. Paul Ryan’s 2014 budget because it didn’t go far enough in cutting spending. Another was Georgia Rep. Paul Broun, a deeply conservative Republican who’s the only officially announced GOP candidate in the state’s Senate race. 

    He said in an interview earlier this month that his fellow Republicans aren’t doing enough to repeal Obamacare, despite the repeated votes to repeal part or all of the law. (It inevitably dies in the Senate, or would face a veto from Obama.) 

    “There are a lot of Republicans who call themselves conservatives, who, in fact, are not,” Broun said. “We need to continue to, every few weeks, have a bill on the floor to repeal pieces of Obamacare as well as votes to repeal the whole law. President Obama will not sign a bill, but that’s the point.”

    Related:

    GOP report calls for sweeping reforms to compete in 2016

    Three days, two breakout stars and one Big Gulp: Eight takeaways from CPAC

    'We have to compete': GOP assesses path back to power

    1312 comments

    This week’s Republican National Committee report recommending ways to strengthen the party came out and said it bluntly: “Groupthink is an issue.”

    Show more
    Explore related topics: capitol-hill, gop, congress, house, senate, va, appfeatured
  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    2:00pm, EST

    Top Republican tries to usher GOP past dollars and cents

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    House Majority Leader Eric Cantor sought to lead Republicans past their dollars-and-cents fights of the last two years, arguing Tuesday for a more expansive agenda that resonates with a broader scope of Americans.

    As the GOP works to redefine itself in the wake of an electoral drubbing last fall, Cantor outlined a series of policies he said Republicans would pursue over the next two years. The agenda includes staples of Republican politics — tax and entitlement reforms, for instance — but also education, immigration and research and development, particularly in the sciences.

    Recommended: Obama calls for at least short-term fix with cuts, revenue to avoid sequester

    "In Washington, over the past few weeks and months, our attention has been on cliffs, debt ceilings and budgets, on deadlines and negotiations," Cantor said at a speech at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think-tank in Washington. "But today, I'd like to focus our attention on what lies beyond these fiscal debates. Over the next two years, the House majority will pursue an agenda based on a shared vision of creating the conditions for health, happiness and prosperity for more Americans and their families."

    Mandel Ngan / AFP - Getty Images

    House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., speaks to the media following a Republican Conference meeting on Feb. 5, 2013 at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.

    The speech fits squarely within the rubric of reinvention sought by the GOP at the advent of President Barack Obama's second term. The Virginia congressman offered generally familiar proposals, couched in the rhetoric of middle class advancement. This "softer" approach to policy-making squares with an emerging Republican consensus that the party does not necessarily need to change its policies so much as frame them in a way that is more relevant to middle class, minority, and women voters.

    To that extent, Cantor was flanked at moments during his speech by students from schools in inner-city Washington, a master's student from China looking to stay in America, a nurse from Baltimore looking for a more flexible work schedule, and a former intern of Cantor's who benefited from improved medical technology.

    Cantor sought with his speech to put a newer, more accessible face on the Republican Party; whether he'll succeed is a question that might not be answered for two or four more years.

    Republican Eric Cantor calls for legal residence and citizenship for children brought here illegally by their parents and a guest-worker program, at the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington conservative think tank.

    First Read: Cantor's shift on immigration

    One policy shift Cantor did announce was in regard to immigration. The No. 2 House Republican embraced the thrust of the so-called DREAM Act, a piece of immigration legislation looking to undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children a pathway to citizenship.

    "It is time to provide an opportunity for legal residence and citizenship for those who were brought to this country as children and who know no other home," he said.

    Other points of emphasis were familiar to any observers of the contemporary GOP.

    On education, Cantor called for increased access to vouchers, more efficient spending per student, cost transparency in college tuition and fuller disclosure to students about the career prospects associated with different degrees.

    On immigration, Cantor endorsed easier access to green cards to immigrants with high-level degrees, a reformed guest worker program and stronger employee verification tools.

    And in an appeal to middle class workers, Cantor endorsed giving all employees greater flex-time at work and simpler simpler ways to file taxes.

    Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., is set to make a speech on Tuesday, February 5, 2013 at the American Enterprise Institute on "Making Life Work."

    On top of this, Cantor appealed to Republican staples: comprehensive tax reform and reforms to Medicare (including streamlined provider networks, and increased leeway for states to administer their own programs).

    The recurring theme, though, for Cantor involved an appeal directed intently toward middle class voters.

    "Government policy should aim to strike a balance between what is needed to advance the next generation, what we can afford, what is a federal responsibility and what is necessary to ensure our children are safe, healthy and able to reach their dreams," Cantor said.

    224 comments

    That's fun, just by luck to be FRIST (First!) Cantor just doesn't get it. He thinks he can somehow get out of the blame for all of the crap that's been going on these part few years by making a little speech. He's the reason for the Sequester in the first place.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: capitol-hill, featured, house, taxes, va, appfeatured, eric-cantor
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    5:15pm, EST

    Romney meets raucous crowd at final Virginia stop

    By NBC's Garrett Haake
    Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

    FAIRFAX, VA -- Mitt Romney barnstormed the Old Dominion on this final full day of campaigning, cramming two stops, separated by hundreds of miles, in this hotly-contested swing state over the course of just a few hours.

    Here on the campus of George Mason University, Romney was greeted by his best crowd of the day for a boisterous rally that seemed to overwhelm the GOP nominee, prompting him to joke that the attendees must have been expecting someone else to take the stage.

    Republican Presidential hopeful Mitt Romney speaks in Virginia. Watch his speech.

    "That is really something special. I am looking around to see if we have the Beatles here or something to have brought you but it looks like you came just for the campaign and I appreciate it," Romney said to 8,000 supporters here. "Your voices and your energy and your passion are being heard all over the nation."

    Romney's rally here was a rare foray into Fairfax County, which broke heavily Democratic in 2008 and where he must cut into President Barack Obama's margins to carry the state.

    Charles Dharapak / AP

    Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann Romney wave to the crowd at a Virginia campaign rally at The Patriot Center at George Mason University, in Fairfax, Va., Monday, Nov. 5, 2012.

    Romney touched down in Lynchburg, Virginia earlier in the afternoon for a lunchtime rally on the tarmac before a smaller crowd of a few thousand supporters. This was safer territory for the Republican nominee, since Arizona Sen. John McCain carried all of the surrounding counties in 2008 and are expected to remain in the GOP column this fall.

    To carry Virginia on Tuesday, Republicans will likely need to run up wide margins in these central and western counties, and Romney opened his remarks in Lynchburg by thanking the volunteers in crowd, and urging them to do yet more in the race's final hours.

    Telling crowds in Florida that 'this nation is going to change for the better tomorrow,' GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney rallied voters by saying he would break the gridlock in Washington. NBC's Peter Alexander reports from Columbus, Ohio.

    "Your voices are being heard all over the nation loud and clear, thank you. I also want to thank many of you in this crowd that have been out there working on the campaign. Making calls from the victory centers, and by putting up a yard sign, in your neighbor's yard," Romney joked.

    "This is a campaign about America and about the future we’re going to leave to our children. And we ask that you stay at this all the way until victory on Tuesday night," he continued.

    Romney did add a tinge of conservatism to his usual "closing argument" speech, blaming Obama for being overattentive to a "liberal agenda" at the expense of minding the economy. Romney also warned of the specter of "card check," a union organizing reform law detested by conservatives.

    270 comments

    Hey, FR ... is "barnstorm" the word of the day? If so, you're winning! Obama/Biden 2012

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, decision-2012, mitt-romney, first-read, va, appfeatured, commentid-appfeatured, commentid-mitt-romney
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    3:19pm, EST

    Biden: 'It's all over but the shoutin''

    By NBC's Carrie Dann
    Follow @CarrieNBCNews

     

    STERLING, Va. -- For a second time in two days, Vice President Joe Biden on Monday predicted a strong electoral showing for Democrats, saying "it's all over but the shoutin.'"

    "I'm feeling good," the vice president told reporters at Mimi's Cafe during an unscheduled stop. "I really am but you know, as an old expression goes it's all over but the shoutin'."

    The day before Election Day, Vice President Joe Biden attacks rivals former Gov. Mitt Romney and Rep. Paul Ryan on women's issues, the economy and foreign policy during a final campaign stop in Sterling, Va.

    Biden predicted - as he did yesterday in an interview with MSNBC's Chris Matthews - that the Obama-Biden ticket will prevail in "firewall" states, but he acknowledged that swing states of Virginia and Florida could be squeakers.

    "I'll take a one-vote majority, but I think we have a clear shot at doing well and the so-called firewall," he said, envisioning victory in Ohio, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nevada and New Hampshire.

    "I think Florida will be close but I think we have a real shot of winning," he added. "And this state, we got a clear shot of winning it."

    Biden's last full day of pre-election campaigning in virginia marks his ninth trip to the state this year.

    He is barnstorming today with Senate candidate Tim Kaine, Virginia Sen. Mark Warner and retiring Sen. Jim Webb.

    117 comments

    And the Romney campaign? It's all over but the crying!"

    Show more
    Explore related topics: decision-2012, first-read, joe-biden, va, oh, wi, ia
  • 4
    Nov
    2012
    7:40pm, EST

    Will Election Day be a 'perfect storm?' Four nightmare scenarios for what could go wrong

    By 2 p.m. on Monday all of Ohio's early voters had cast their ballots, with some people showing up in below-freezing temperatures to secure their place in line. NBC's John Yang reports from Cincinnati, Ohio.

    By Michael Isikoff, NBC News

    With more than 90 million Americans expected to cast their ballots on Tuesday, election officials across the country are bracing for what some  fear will be a “perfect storm” of Election Day problems that could result in tense confrontations at polling stations and a rush to the courthouse to file legal challenges. 

    The list of actual and potential problems is unusually long this year, ranging from concerns about machine failures to confusion over new rules governing voter ID and provisional ballots.

    Another big wild card: the impact of groups such as “True the Vote,” a Tea Party off-shoot, that is vowing to swarm polling places with an army of hundreds of thousands of  “citizen” poll watchers to look for fraud and challenge ineligible voters.


    It’s a threat that civil rights groups are vowing to fight with their own rival armies of poll watchers -- to “monitor the monitors,” says one activist.

    In Florida, voters cried out in frustration as polling stations became overwhelmed, and the Democratic Party had sued to extend early voting after some people were stuck on lines for hours trying to meet Saturday's deadline. NBC's Michael Isikoff reports.

    “Our election system has probably never been under as much strain as it is right now -- anything that can go wrong, probably will go wrong,” said Victoria Bassetti, a former Senate Judiciary Committee counsel and the author of the new book, “Electoral Dysfunction: A Survival Manual for American Voters.”

    Bassetti notes that the camps backing both President Barack Obama and Republican nominee Mitt Romney have “pre-positioned their legal assets” by deploying thousands of volunteer lawyers to battleground states in order to challenge decisions by election supervisors, in court if necessary.

    In Florida, the litigation is already heating up. On Sunday, the Florida Democratic Party filed emergency lawsuits to extend early voting -- challenging  GOP governor Rick Scott’s refusal to do so -- after some voters were stuck in lines for up to six hours trying to meet Saturday’s deadline for early ballots. When the Miami Dade election office reopened to allow in-person absentee balloting, and then temporarily shut it down, frustrated voters started shouting, “Let Us Vote! Let Us Vote!”--  stirred up by a man wearing an Obama campaign tee shirt.

    It could be a preview of what happens Tuesday. “We can expect lots of yelling and screaming- and lawsuits,” said Bassetti.

    The upshot is that, if the voting is as close as some (but not all) polls suggest, the winner of the presidential election may not be known for days, if not weeks, after Election Day. “We’re going to be  in sudden death overtime,” predicts John Fund, a former Wall Street Journal editorial writer and the co-author of “Who’s Counting: How Fraudsters and Bureaucrats Put Your Vote at Risk.”

    To be sure, disputes about voting are hardly new -- and some of the potential problems most frequently cited by advocates on both sides of the political fence could prove to be overblown.

    But experts interviewed by NBC News identified a number of so-called “nightmare scenarios” that could complicate the counting of returns on Tuesday.

    Here’s a look at four of those scenarios:

    1) The national vote count for president is thrown into doubt because of the impact of Hurricane Sandy.

    The devastation wrought by Hurricane Sandy in the Northeast appears likely to hold down vote totals in the region. In New Jersey, hundreds of polling stations may be without power -- late last week nearly half of the 240 locations in Hudson County were out of commission and officials are scrambling to find alternatives.

    On Saturday, Gov. Chris Christie’s administration announced that it will allow voters to download ballots off a state Website and return them by e-mail -- a system that some experts have warned could lead to tampering by hackers. (A voting group called the Verified Voting Foundation has repeatedly warned about the security risks from Internet voting.) 

    On Thursday, the state’s lieutenant governor, Kim Guardagno, said the state will deploy Defense Department trucks with “Vote Here” signs, protected by National Guard members. But that plan prompted concerns among some Democrats that military trucks could intimidate voters, especially in minority neighborhoods, and there were signs over the weekend that officials may be backing away from it.  

    “Obviously, this is uncharted water for us -- getting hit with this at this late date just before a huge election,” said Michael Harper, the clerk of elections in New Jersey’s Hudson County, during a tour of damaged and flooded polling stations on Saturday.

    While the hardest hit states like New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut are all considered reliably Democratic and safely in the Obama column, the aftermath of the hurricane could affect the president’s total national vote counts -- and raise questions about his mandate or even legitimacy if he loses the popular vote but wins the Electoral College (just as some Democrats questioned President George W. Bush’s legitimacy after he lost the popular vote in 2000.)

    2) A large number of provisional ballots makes the Electoral College winner impossible to determine on election night.

    The situation appears most acute in Ohio, a crucial battleground, where some experts have warned about a counting disaster stemming from what are expected to be as many as 200,000 provisional ballots.

    The background: in an effort to impose uniformity, GOP Secretary  of State Jon Husted over the summer directed that absentee ballot applications be mailed out to all of the state’s 6.9 million registered voters -- regardless of whether they had asked for them or not.

    About 1.3 million voters filled out those applications and received absentee ballots in the mail. But as of this weekend, 238,678 voters who got absentee ballots had not returned them. If those voters don’t return their ballots by mail by tomorrow and try to go to the polls on Tuesday instead, they along with others whose eligibility could be questioned or who show up at the wrong polling station, will have to cast provisional ballots to make sure they haven’t vote twice.  And under Ohio law, those ballots can’t even be counted until Nov. 16, ten days after Election Day.

    “There’s a realistic chance that we will not know which candidate won the presidential election in Ohio because of the existence of provisional ballots, that we will be in overtime,” said Edward Foley, an election law expert and professor of law at Ohio State University.

    The issue intensified on Friday when Husted issued a new directive that puts the burden on voters, rather than poll workers, to properly fill out a form recording what ID was presented for provisional ballots -- and instructing election boards to throw out provisional ballots if the forms are incomplete or contain any mistakes. The directive has triggered a last minute law suit by voting rights groups, increasing the likelihood of disputes over the counting of provisional ballots in a pivotal battleground state.

    3) Disputes over ballot printing errors, machine errors and a lack of paper trail could bog down the counting in other battleground states.

    This problem has already arisen in Florida. About 27,000 absentee ballots in Palm Beach County, Florida -- famous for its “butterfly” ballots and hanging chads during the 2000 Florida recount -- can’t be read by voting machines because of a printing error. This forced election officials last week to begin the arduous process of hand-copying those ballots in order to feed them into the machines -- while lawyers from both sides looked on, raising challenges.

    An exasperated Susan Bucher, the county’s election supervisor, was caught on camera admonishing lawyers over what she termed “frivolous” objections and threatening to eject them.

    But questions about machine failures are far broader than that. Last week, lawyers for the Republican National Committee wrote letters to attorneys general in six states asking for investigations after receiving reports that some voters had complained that machines had recorded their votes for Mitt Romney as being for Obama.

    Moreover, sixteen states -- including Virginia and Pennsylvania -- rely to some extent on touch screen voting machines that leave no paper trail that can be verified during a recount.

    Two voting experts warned on Saturday “we risk catastrophe” if recounts are required in Virginia and Pennsylvania “because most of their votes will be cast on paperless voting machines that are impossible to recount.” 

    4) Legions of citizen poll watchers on both sides create confusion and even chaos at some polling stations.

    “True the Vote,” the Texas-based Tea Party inspired group, has launched an aggressive national effort to root out vote fraud, providing  training videos and  computer software (that contain data on property records and death indexes) to help volunteers identify ineligible voters who show up at the polls on Tuesday.

    Hans Von Spakovsky, a former Federal Election Commissioner who serves as one of the group’s advisers, defends the effort, telling NBC News that in a close election “any bogus vote” needs to be stopped. “Anytime you have a close election, a small amount of fraud could make the difference.”

    But voting rights groups say “True the Vote” and its affiliates threaten to intimidate legitimate voters -- a prospect they aim to combat with their own battalions of citizen poll watchers on Tuesday.

    Judith Browne Dianas, co-director of the “Advancement Project,” a civil rights group, says her organization has lined up thousands of lawyers and poll watchers in 20 key states to look for “suspicious activity” by True the Vote and its affiliates. “We will also be watching the poll watchers making sure they aren’t acting as bullies,” she says.

    2745 comments

    tell anybody that tries to obstruct to get out of your face you are here to vote

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, featured, decision-2012, mitt-romney, fl, va, oh, voting-problems
  • 3
    Nov
    2012
    11:15pm, EDT

    Clinton joins Obama for rally wrapping whirlwind day of campaigning

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    Wrapping a whirlwind day of campaigning, President Barack Obama joined Bill Clinton — the last Democratic president, and vocal advocate for Obama — at a massive rally Saturday evening in northern Virginia. 

    Before a crowd estimated at 24,000, Obama both literally and figuratively embraced Clinton, who has emerged as one of the most dogged advocates for the president's re-election campaign this fall. 

    "He has been traveling all across the country for this campaign. He's been laying out the stakes so well that our team basically calls him the 'Secretary of Explaining Stuff,'" Obama said. "He was a great president; he has been a great friend."

    As the final weekend of the 2012 campaign raised the question of which candidate, Obama or Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, would best move Washington past its intractable problems, Clinton, a president who has only grown more popular since leaving office, offered Obama his imprimatur. 

    "As you see, I have given my voice in the service of my president," the hoarse former president said, following some local favorites, the Dave Matthews Band, at the rally in suburban Washington. 

    NBC Politics coverage of the 2012 campaign:

    • Uncertain finale looms amid weekend campaign blitz
    • Romney implores Colorado for 'one last push'
    • Biden zings Romney in Colorado
    • Ryan travels to Pennsylvania, trying to put state in play
    • Obama plays up 'trust' in battleground Ohio
    • Obama aide explains 'voting is best revenge' comment
    • Ryan: 'We believe in change and hope'
    • Romney strikes optimistic tone as final weekend opens
    • Polls: Obama stays ahead in Ohio, deadlocked with Romney in Fla.
    • GOP's chances at Senate imperiled by self-inflicted wounds

    Both Obama and Romney spent the day criss-crossing the United States to make a firmly centrist appeal, each of them trying to sound upbeat as the clock counts down on Election 2012. Each candidate drew thousands — sometimes tens of thousands — of supporters to rallies in Iowa, Wisconsin, Colorado, Iowa, Virginia, Ohio and beyond. And each candidate argued he was the one who could break through the gridlock in a Congress beset for the past two years by bitter partisan fights.

    "You know that if the president is re-elected, he'll still be unable to work with the people in Congress," Romney told a sprawling crowd in Colorado. "He's ignored them. He's blamed them. He's attacked them."

    Romney spent much of the campaign's final weekend arguing he was the candidate of "change," co-opting Obama's 2008 message to use four years later against the president. 

    Whether the Republican candidate's claim to to the mantle of change would resonate with a handful of remaining swing voters in just a few battleground states was unclear. Obama seemed to enjoy an edge in states like Iowa, leading Romney by five points among likely voters, according to the Des Moines Register's final poll. But a WMUR poll of New Hampshire also found the president and Romney tied, at 47 percent, in another battleground state: New Hampshire. 

    That neither Obama or Romney had managed to open a solid advantage over the other in the final hours of the campaign only raised the stakes for the final series of events on Sunday and Monday. Both Obama and Romney — along with Vice President Biden and Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan — were set to hit the road for another robust schedule tomorrow. Obama was set to travel to Colorado, Florida, and New Hampshire; Romney's schedule would take him to Iowa, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

    1236 comments

    Me first, no way!!! I am looking forward to 11/6/2012 being over! with Romney retired

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, decision-2012, mitt-romney, bill-clinton, co, va, oh
  • 31
    Oct
    2012
    12:53pm, EDT

    Independents' day: Romney looks to swing voters for salvation

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    The pre-election battle for perceived momentum extended Wednesday into a public dispute over whether President Barack Obama or Republican nominee Mitt Romney could claim an advantage with prized independent voters.

    As a new series of battleground state polls emerged this morning -- showing Romney leading Obama among likely voters who identify as independents by 5 points in Florida, 6 points in Ohio and a whopping 21 points in Virginia -- Republicans argued the president's political arithmetic wasn't as sound as the Obama team contends.

    At a campaign event in Tampa Bay, Florida, presidential hopeful Mitt Romney promotes a five-point plan for growing the economy.

    Republicans on Wednesday morning circulated emails pointing out Obama's disadvantage among independents to call into question Obama's strength in several battleground states.

    "We think that across the battleground state, we have a lead among independent voters," Obama senior adviser David Axelrod said on a conference call Wednesday with reporters in response. But, he added: "That's not true across every battleground state."

    The Obama strategist did say, though, that the campaign believes the president is winning enough of the share of the independent vote to emerge victorious on Nov. 6.

    Slideshow: On the campaign trail

    Reuters, Getty Images

    In the final push in the 2012 presidential election, candidates Mitt Romney and Barack Obama make their last appeals to voters.

    Launch slideshow

    What follows is a look at the breakdown of the independent vote in 2004 and 2008 exit polls in arguably the three biggest battleground states, along with the share of the electorate made up by self-described independent voters. Sometimes the winner of these state won the independent and sometimes they didn’t.

    OHIO

    2004 (independents were 25 percent of the electorate)

    Kerry 59, Bush 40

    2008 (30 percent of electorate)

    Obama 52, McCain 44

    2012

    Quinnipiac/CBS/NYT (independents 30 percent of sample, conducted 10/23-28)

    • Romney 49, Obama 43

    CNN/ORC (33 percent of sample, conducted 10/23-25)

    • Obama 49, Romney 44)

    FLORIDA

    2004 (23 percent of electorate)

    Kerry 57, Bush 41

    2008 (29 percent of electorate)

    Obama 52, McCain 45

    2012

    Quinnipiac/CBS/NYT (29 percent of sample, conducted 10/23-28)

    • Romney 49, Obama 44

    CNN/ORC (35 percent of sample, conducted 10/25-28)

    • Obama 49, Romney 44

    VIRGINIA

    2004 (26 percent of electorate)

    Bush 54, Kerry 44

    2008 (27 percent of electorate)

    Obama 49, McCain 48

    2012

    Quinnipiac/CBS/NYT (35 percent of sample, conducted 10/23-28)

    • Romney 57, Obama 36

    Washington Post (35 percent of sample, conducted 10/22-26)

    • Romney 53, Obama 45

    213 comments

    I GUARANTEE! Both sides will confidently predict victory until one of them actually loses...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, decision-2012, mitt-romney, first-read, fl, va, oh
  • 30
    Oct
    2012
    10:51am, EDT

    Romney set to return to hurricane-stricken Va. on Thursday

    By NBC's Michael O'Brien and Garrett Haake
    Follow @mpoindc Follow @GarrettNBCNews

     

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney will be the first candidate to campaign in hurricane-stricken Virginia with a rally on Thursday in the Richmond area. 

    The Virginia Republican Party released an invitation Tuesday morning to a Romney event in Doswell, Va. later this week, the GOP candidate's first trip to the state since preceding Hurricane Sandy.

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney walks off of his campaign bus at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport on Oct. 29, 2012 in Cleveland, Ohio.

    The afternoon event was promoted by the Virginia GOP as a makeup for the rallies in Virginia the Romney campaign had scheduled for last Sunday. The Republican's campaign canceled those events so as to not distract resources from preparing for the hurricane, and subsequent relief efforts. 

    Recommended: Storm aftermath not likely to delay election

    Northern Virginia — one of the state's population centers and a firm chunk of battleground territory — was more heavily affected by the storm; power outages and storm damages are thought to be less severe in central and southern Virginia, which includes Richmond and was not as severely struck by the hurricane. Moreover, Romney called Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) on Monday to consult about emergency preparedness.

    MSNBC Political analyst and former RNC Chairman Michael Steele, Former Democratic Senator from Arkansas Blanche Lincoln and USA Today's Susan Page talk about where President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney are Tuesday and how Hurricane Sandy could impact the last week before the election.

    But the decision to return to Virginia for the first time carries a degree of sensitivity. President Barack Obama was set to resume campaigning later this week, though his schedule doesn't call for any stops in states most acutely affected by Sandy, including the battleground states of Virginia, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania. 

    But with the election just a week away, it's not clear that Romney could afford to stay out of Virginia much longer. His last visit to the state was on Oct. 17, for a rally in Leesburg.

    187 comments

    This is exactly what the people of VA need right now! Siphon off the resources needed to assist in the clean up in order to cover Willard's sorry ass! Will he be tossing cans of Starkist tuna to the masses upon arrival in his Government issued bus? On another note, Governor Christy can't say enough  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, decision-2012, mitt-romney, va, appfeatured
  • 29
    Oct
    2012
    11:53am, EDT

    Hurricane throws campaign schedule in flux as candidates cancel events

    Although the candidates' schedules were thrown off by the storm, neither campaign wanted to focus on politics. In a briefing at the White House Monday, President Obama said he's not worried about what impact Sandy could have on the election. And in Ohio, Mitt Romney emphasized the need for America to come together during times of difficulty. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    Updated 12:58 p.m. ET — President Barack Obama urged Americans to heed local officials' warnings about Hurricane Sandy on Monday as his re-election said it would determine the president's campaign schedule on a "day-to-day basis."

    The president appeared at the White House and said he was "confident" states and local governments were prepared to weather the megastorm barreling toward the East Coast of the United States, though he cautioned that it could take time to restore transportation and electricity in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy.

    Obama said Sandy would be "a slow-moving storm through a wide swath of the country."

    "We're confident that the assets are pre-positioned for an effective response in the aftermath of this storm," he added.

    In an NBC News special report, President Obama stresses the importance of abiding by evacuation orders from local officials, warning that Sandy is a "serious storm" that could have "fatal consequences" if people don't act accordingly.

    The hurricane forced Obama to cut short a trip to Florida and canceled events scheduled for Tuesday. Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney followed suit, as he and running mate Paul Ryan canceled most of their events on Monday afternoon and Tuesday.

    The storm reshuffled the race for the presidency, just eight days before voters head to the polls. Surrogates for Obama — like former President Bill Clinton — stepped forward in place of the president at campaign events as Obama remained in Washington to handle the storm. In addition to canceling stops in Colorado and Virginia, the White House said Monday that Obama would no longer travel to Wisconsin tomorrow, either. The next campaign events on Obama's schedule are on Wednesday, in Ohio.

    Romney canceled an afternoon event in Wisconsin and Ryan would no longer appear in Florida. 

    The Washington Post's Dan Balz, The Chicago Tribune's Clarence Page, former Clinton White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, and Republican ad-maker Kim Alfano join The Daily Rundown to talk about President  Barack Obama and Mitt Romney's campaign strategy over the next few days as Hurricane Sandy touches down.

    "Governor Romney believes this is a time for the nation and its leaders to come together to focus on those Americans who are in harms way," said Gail Gitcho, Romney's communications director. "We will provide additional details regarding Governor Romney's and Congressman Ryan's schedule when they are available." 

    Obama met in the White House situation room in order to be “updated on the latest forecast for Hurricane Sandy and the extensive federal effort underway to support the state and local response to this historic storm," according to press secretary Jay Carney. Multiple cabinet secretaries, many members of the president’s White House staff and the heads of FEMA and the National Hurricane Center will participate in this meeting.

    But the president's official duties put his campaign schedule in flux, just as the presidential campaign enters its final phase.

    "The president's focus is on the storm and governing the country and making sure our people are safe," Obama campaign manager Jim Messina said on a conference call with reporters. He said the president's campaign would take scheduling on a day-by-day basis. 

    "We're obviously going to lose a bunch of campaign time, but that's obviously how it has to be, and we'll try to make it up on the back end," added David Axelrod, a senior adviser to the Obama campaign. 

    There are eight days before election day, but there may be even fewer campaign days left as Hurricane Sandy causes problems with campaign travel. NBC's Chuck Todd reports on the changes to both candidates' plans.

    Speaking Monday afternoon at the White House, the president said he wasn't concerned about the potential impact of the storm on voting. 

    "I am not worried at this point on the impact on the election," he said. "I'm worried about the impact on families and our first responders."

    Clinton took Obama's place at a rally this morning in Wisconsin and was set to join Vice President Joe Biden in Ohio later this afternoon. 

    Romney pushed forward with his campaign schedule on Monday, which took him to Ohio early in the day and to Wisconsin later in the day. The Republican's campaign put a hold on its fundraising pitches to voters in states in Hurricane Sandy's path, and urged supporters to remove lawn signs for fear that they might become debris. 

    Romney campaign offices also collected donations to the Red Cross, items which its bus was supposed to deliver to storm victims.

    "Sandy is another devastating hurricane by all accounts, and a lot of people are going to be facing some real tough times as a result of Sandy's fury. And so if you have the capacity to make a donation to the American Red Cross, you can go online and do that," the former Massachusetts governor told an overflow crowd in Avon Lake, Ohio. "If there are other ways that you can help, please take advantage of them because there will be a lot of people that are going to be looking for help and the people in Ohio have big hearts, so we're expecting you to follow through and help out."

    NBC's Shawna Thomas contributed reporting.

    Slideshow: On the campaign trail

    Reuters, Getty Images

    In the final push in the 2012 presidential election, candidates Mitt Romney and Barack Obama make their last appeals to voters.

    Launch slideshow

    419 comments

    Glad to see the Pres. in the WH, doing his job. Perhaps he learned something from Benghazi?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: barack-obama, decision-2012, mitt-romney, fl, va, appfeatured, oh, wi, commentid-appfeatured
Older posts

Browse

  • decision-2012,
  • featured,
  • barack-obama,
  • mitt-romney,
  • first-read,
  • appfeatured,
  • capitol-hill,
  • white-house,
  • economy,
  • first-thoughts,
  • congress,
  • updated,
  • senate,
  • paul-ryan,
  • newt-gingrich,
  • rick-santorum,
  • meet-the-press,
  • joe-biden,
  • foreign-policy,
  • immigration,
  • romney-embed,
  • daily-rundown,
  • supreme-court,
  • commentid-appfeatured,
  • politics,
  • health-care,
  • house,
  • fl,
  • oh,
  • today,
  • veepstakes,
  • michael-obrien,
  • taxes
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (98)
    • April (147)
    • March (156)
    • February (149)
    • January (179)
  • 2012
    • December (169)
    • November (194)
    • October (306)
    • September (262)
    • August (335)
    • July (267)
    • June (288)
    • May (349)
    • April (207)
    • March (190)
    • February (142)
    • January (217)
  • 2011
    • December (184)
    • November (108)

Most Commented

  • Lawmakers grill IRS officials, Lerner denies wrongdoing (4766)
  • White House defends IRS handling, McConnell asserts 'culture of intimidation' (5639)
  • White House aides learned of IRS details in April, but didn't tell Obama (2788)
  • IRS official to invoke Fifth Amendment at hearing (2163)
  • Heckler repeatedly interrupts Obama speech (1503)
  • Holder says drone strikes since 2009 have killed four U.S. citizens (1551)
  • First Thoughts: Scandal or bureaucratic incompetency? (2149)

Other blogs

  • The Body Odd
  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • US News
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • Politics on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise