Hope you enjoyed your Memorial Day weekend. Mitt Romney is on track to cinch the Republican nomination tonight. Though, no one is talking about that now. Here's a hint why: Donald Trump. Get more details at 10pm ET, along with these other stories.
- Mitt Romney playing with fire in Donald Trump association
- Team Obama releases video attacking Romney for associating with Trump
- Romney to officially cinch up Republican nomination
- Right-wing billionaires trying to buy a Romney presidency?
- Senators say Romney should pick one of their own for vice president
- Chuck Todd: What will be one of the most important TV ads of 2012
- How income inequality keeps poorer Americans away from the polls
- Florida Democrat accuses Gov. Rick Scott of purging voters from polls
- Could Latino voters turn deep-red Texas Democratic by 2020?





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Nobody is talking about Romney clinching the Republican Party nomination with his primary victories last night? Why, I guess that would be MSNBC missing the boat again, as the other cable news and network news shows are giving it coverage.
Of course, this piss pants crowd that gets so agitated over an attention seeker seeking attention in controversial statements goes off on another tangent inconsequential to the election issues before us.
Romney has made his position adequately clear on the birther thing, and he isn't having any part of it. That doesn't mean that he doesn't have agreements with the outspoken real estate and resort and gambling magnate Trump when it comes to wanting to see the American private sector economy come back to life, and curtailing of the abusive trade and currency manipulation practices of China, for example.
Only the fools of the "progressive left" desire ideological purity in their candidates, the position that they constantly try to force Obama to take on their favored issues. And the reason why no practical solution to the impending Social Security and Medicare bankruptcys in the next two dozen and dozen years, respectively, or a reduction in the deficit spending for social programs is going to be obtainable until we get a change in the White House and the Senate to match the one the voters gave us in 2010 in the House of Representatives.
BTW, those Tea Party Senatorial candidates that are winning out in those Republican Party primaries says something about the "get control of unbudgetted runaway government spending" that fuels the mounting national debt and cripples the private sector sentiment being alive and well with the voters still this year...maybe even more so than in 2010.