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  • 5
    Aug
    2012
    9:32am, EDT

    Portman won't rely on VP app

    By Andrew Rafferty, NBC News

    CINCINNATI, Ohio -- Vice presidential nominee or not, Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) will not be relying on an iPhone app to find out the fate of his political future.

    Thought to be on Mitt Romney's VP shortlist, the Ohio senator told reporters on Saturday that he still has not downloaded the mobile phone application that promises to inform users of the pick "before the press and just about everyone else (except maybe Ann)." He first revealed on Thursday that he did not have the app, and that seems to have remained unchanged over the past 48 hours.

    "I haven't actually gotten the app myself.  I have an iPad all full of apps, half of which I never get time to use anyway.  But we'll see," he said. "I assume I'll hear it other ways."

    He told a local Cincinnati news station, "I imagine that's not how they probably would communicate it to me, but who knows."

    His disinterest in the app is in contrast with the Romney campaign and at least one other potential VP shortlister.  Along with campaign staffers, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) has been promoting the technology through twitter.

    It would be hard to argue that Portman has not already earned a phone call or face-to-face meeting with the Romney campaign to find out the news.  He attended volunteer appreciation events at two Romney Victory offices on Saturday as part of the "Buckeye Blitz" happening throughout the state.  It's just the latest in a long line of events he's done in his home state on behalf of the presumptive nominee.

    Asked what his responsibilities might be if chosen as Romney's No. 2, Portman said, "I would work very hard for Mitt Romney, but that's what I'm doing anyway."

    That certainly will remain true at the beginning of this week when the Cincinnati native travels to the northeast part of the state to stump for the former governor. And while Congress is on its August recess he also plans to travel out of state to campaign for Romney as well.

    217 comments

    Why doesn't Romney just pick Norquist? They both want less taxes for the rich, at the additional cost to the Middle Class and the Poor. These guys are sick. Get them out of politics. OBAMA IN 2012.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: portman, romney, vice-president
  • 28
    Jul
    2012
    8:03pm, EDT

    Sen. Marco Rubio's plane makes safe emergency landing; he misses Iowa rally

    By NBC News staff

    An aircraft carrying Sen. Marco Rubio to a rally for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney made a safe emergency landing in Albuquerque, N.M., on Saturday with an electrical problem, an aide said.

    The information office at the Albuquerque airport told NBC News that the pilots reported that a sensor had gone off indicating an electrical issue. The plane landed at 3:58 p.m. local time and taxied under its own power, the office said. Rubio was flying from Las Vegas on a private plane.

    Tweets from Rubio's Twitter account said that he was unable to make it to the Des Moines rally but still managed to speak to the crowd via cell phone. According to one tweet, this was the second plane that Rubio had been on on Saturday that had a problem: "I know how to take a hint!" 

    Rubio, a Republican from Florida, has been spoken of as a possible vice presidential choice for Romney and has made appearances on his behalf.

    134 comments

    I know at this point that Liberals are the most hate filled, venomous, mouth breathing, anal-retentive, bottom feeders the world has ever seen.......at least after Muslims. At one time, way back when, a Liberal would have said: "Live, and let live". I used to at least have respect for that, but now, …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mitt-romney, vice-president, veepstakes, marco-rubio, decision-2012
  • 1
    Jul
    2012
    2:31am, EDT

    Rubio book tour begins, but no White House campaign - yet

    By Andrew Rafferty, NBC News

    CORAL GABLES, FL -- Sen. Marco Rubio kicked off his bus tour on Saturday with an aggressive swing through southern Florida, meeting hundreds of well wishers who told him that he is the person they would most like to see in the White House.

    Sen.Marco Rubio says President Obama 'shoved immigration policy down our throats' and that it was an election-year stunt. Rep. Xavier Becerra joins Ed Schultz to discuss Sen. Rubio's comments, and the overwhelming public support for the President's action.

    No, he's not running for president -- yet.  And even though the Florida senator will spend the next two weeks in swing states like Florida, North Carolina and Virginia, it is not for any campaign, but a book tour to promote Rubio's newly released memoir, "An American Son."


    But that did not stop his fans in the Sunshine State from telling him how much they hope his political aspirations extend beyond the Senate.

     

     

    If you ask Rubio, he's not working towards any other title than, perhaps, "best selling author."  But hopping out of a bus emblazoned with his name and picture to sign books, greet potential voters and hold babies has a distinct campaign-like quality similar to what Floridians experienced just a few months earlier when then-Republican presidential candidates Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich were slugging it out ahead of the state's primary.

    It may be part of the reason why many who showed up to the four book signings throughout Saturday seemed to have dual purposes: meet the senator, then tell him how much the country, not just Florida, needs him.

    "The future president of the United States is here!" yelled a woman standing in line at the Miami Barnes & Noble waiting to get her copy signed.

    Rubio put down his black sharpie briefly to glance behind each of his shoulders.  "Where? I don't see him," he responded.

    Swatting down one of the day's many questions about the prospects of him becoming Romney's running mate, Rubio told a gaggle of reporters, "We're not here to talk about that, we're here to talk about the book."

    "Talk about 2016," yelled a supporter standing by at Books & Books in Coral Gables.

    The release of Rubio's memoir comes in the midst of Romney's search for a vice president.  Rubio is the only candidate that Romney has admitted is being vetted after the Republican nominee refuted reports that Rubio was not being considered.  After his election in 2010, the former Florida state legislator quickly rose to become a favorite amongst tea party conservatives, and this year has been frequently cited by members of the GOP as a top choice to join the ticket.

    The autobiography was originally scheduled for release in October, but was pushed up, a move that some speculate had to do with a competing Rubio biography from a Washington Post reporter and an interest in being able to take advantage of the headlines he is drawing as a heavily talked about emerging leader in the Republican party.  But the senator countered that the earlier release was more a product of convenience based on his schedule and being able to complete the work more quickly than originally anticipated.

    "When the book was ready to go, we released it.  So you release books when they're ready.  Obviously the longer I wait, the more things happen, the more I have to add to the book," Rubio said after a signing in Fort Lauderdale.

    The son of Cuban immigrants said his autobiography is not meant to be a political one, rather "a tribute to the American dream." But speaking to reporters at each of the signings, he did not shy from repeating some of his recent attacks on President Obama.

    "He wants to use immigration as a Republican vs. Democrat issue and vice versa," Rubio said of the president.  "That just makes it harder to solve.”

    On the recent Supreme Court decision regarding the Affordable Care Act, Rubio said, "If you read what the chief justice arrived at, he's basically saying that the Congress now has the power to require you to buy running shoes as long as they tax you if you fail to buy it...If Congress can you make you buy something and penalize for you and tax you for it if you don’t, what powers does Congress not have?  Is that really the country we live in?”

    But by and large, as much as both supporters and media have wanted to shift the focus from his book to his future, Rubio has tried to keep the conversation about "An American Son." He began his book tour in friendly territory around his native city of Miami.  At his final stop on Saturday in Coral Gables, he piled out of the bus with his wife Jeanette Rubio, their children and scores of cousins, nieces and nephews.  It is a family, Rubio says, that represents the best of America.

    "It's not just my story," Rubio said of his memoir.  "It's the story of my grandparents and of my father and my mother and the sacrifices they went through so they could give us the chances they never had.”

     

     

    220 comments

    I've experience the real republician politicians years ago. This dude is not a true republician. He's a tea party dude only. Koch Brothers will lose in the end on trying to buy America for their benefit , through their so call tea party dudes.

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    Explore related topics: gop, mitt-romney, republican, featured, vice-president, vp, marco-rubio, decision-2012, appfeatured

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