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3 Days, 4000 People, $25

February 7th, 2007 justinhart Comments off
This is pretty simple and pretty powerful.

It takes 2 minutes to give $25 to support Mitt Romney for President.

How long will it take for this email to make it
across the nation and back and raise $100,000?

That’s only 4000 people each giving $25?

Can we do it before Friday, Feb 9th?

If you like Mitt Pass this on to all your friends

Click here to donate and for a special video from Mitt


LOOK AT THIS!

Categories: Fundraising

Make it happen this week!

February 5th, 2007 justinhart Comments off

On February 9th, the Mitt Romney Exploratory Committee will be 30 days old. By that time the campaign will be filing it’s first FEC reports.

You might recall the jaws that dropped on January 8th when many of you helped bring in over $6.5 million in donations and pledges.

Imagine the jaws dropping over 30 days of fundraising! But we can’t do it without you.

Any amount you donate will go towards the larger goal!

Donate to Mitt:

$25 | $50 | $100 | $250 | $500 | $1000 | $2300

Help us make it happen today!

Categories: Fundraising

Romney Forms Arizona Finance Team

January 31st, 2007 jasonbonham Comments off
mccain, john mccain, election 2008, romney mccain(Drats!! Me pockets are empty! Can ye lone me 6.5 pennies!)

From the Chicago Tribunes Swamp:

Romney raids McCain piggy bank
Posted by Mark Silva at 7:11 am CST

In that money primary, the one where a realistic candidate for president hopes to have $50 million banked by the start of January’s primary elections and caucuses, Republican Mitt Romney is conceding nothing to Arizona Sen. John McCain on the senator’s home turf.

Romney, former governor of Massachusetts, has assembled an Arizona fundraising team.

Romney’s “Finance Steering Committee” in Arizona, which held its first meeting last week, will help him “raise the resources need to campaign in Arizona and across the nation,” his campaign says today.

“The team we have put together in Arizona is a collection of some of the state’s best, most energetic and most committed leaders,” Romney says in a prepared statement. “With their help, I know our vision for the future will be heard loudly in Arizona.”

Next comes a round of endorsements from Arizonans, promises Romney, who probably will face McCain, a heavily organized and popular longtime senator from Arizona who waged a strong campaign for the Republican Party’s nomination for president in 2000, in the ’08 primaries.

For now, this is Team Romney-Arizona:

Co-chairs, Paul And Susan Gilbert:. He is co-founder of the Beus Gilbert Law Firm in Scottsdale.. They recently helped Romney make a $6.5 million fundraising “National Call Day” in Boston.

Co-chair, Lee Hanley, chairman of Vestar, a developer and manager of large scale retail shopping centers. Hanley has served on a wide variety of civic and charitable boards in the Phoenix area.

Co-chair, Kevin DeMenna, who served as finance chairman for Arizona’s 2002 Republican gubernatorial nominee. Last Friday, the Arizona State Republican Party gave him its Harry Rosenzweig Award for being the state’s top Republican fundraiser.

Co-chair, Harry Cavanagh, founder of the O’Connor Cavanagh Law Firm.

Co-chair, Wil Cardon, president & CEO of The Cardon Group, a real estate company.

State Finance Director, Corinne Lovas, a political fundraiser in Arizona and the Southwest who has seved Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) and President Bush’s 2004 re-election campaign.

The MittCast – Mitt Romney and Savvy Fundraising

January 31st, 2007 justinhart Comments off

The Wall Street Journal tries a hit piece on Romney but ends up instead highlighting the campaign’s unique and legal approaches to savvy fundraising.

SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST CLICK BELOW:

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Categories: Fundraising

WSJ Accusation: Romney is a Savvy Fundraiser!

January 30th, 2007 justinhart Comments off

The Wall Street Journal today highlighted the unique and savvy approach that the Romney camp utilized to start early fundraising before Mitt launched his committee. I put this forward unabashedly because I consider political donations to be a form of free speech.

I’m not alone in this belief. Indeed, one of the great sources of angst that I and many other conservatives have with Senator McCain is the McCain-Feingold disaster.

Back to Romney. The article begins:

Federal law limits how much money individuals can give to presidential candidates — $2,300 per election. But what about Compuware Inc. founder Peter Karmanos? Last year, he gave $250,000 to presidential aspirant and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. Since 2004, 15 other Romney backers have sunk at least $100,000 each into the Republican’s coffers, sometimes with a series of checks issued on a single day.

Shocker! People donated money legally, efficiently and to the maximum amount allowed. How did they do this?

Because he doesn’t hold federal office, Mr. Romney became subject to the federal rules only after he set up a presidential exploratory committee earlier this month. Until then, his team took advantage of a little-noticed gap between federal and state law. While most states limit political donations, about a dozen don’t. Mr. Romney’s political team set up fund-raising committees in three of those: Michigan, Iowa and Alabama. During that time, his political action committees raised $7 million.

As a result, Mr. Romney was able to hit the ground running, a big advantage in what has already become a feverish race. A week after announcing his possible bid, having already taken care of basic campaign logistics such as hiring and office space, the former governor held a Boston fund-raiser that netted $6.5 million in pledges. Mr. Romney also used the cash to build a broad network of financial backers and grass-roots allies.

Again, put yourself in the shoes of any campaign leader and ask: “what should I do to best the competition?” Oh, I know, raise legal funds among my grassroots state supporters and organizations to ramp up efforts moving into the 2007 political season. Here’s a quick graphic they provided:

But wait, is this illegal. No, and it isn’t even that new:

Like Mr. Romney, former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack has a nonfederal committee, which collected more than $500,000 from labor unions before he became a Democratic presidential candidate. The 2002 campaign-finance law forbids such contributions to federal politicians or anyone who has officially opened a committee exploring a run for federal office. Mr. Vilsack, like Mr. Romney, isn’t a federal office holder.

Ditto former New York Gov. George Pataki, who has a $100,000 backer, Patrick E. Malloy III, a Sag Harbor developer. Mr. Malloy’s September donation to the Iowa arm of Mr. Pataki’s 21st Century Freedom PAC makes up nearly half the contributions to the state account, according to the latest reports filed just before the November elections.

So, let me get this straight, Romney’s experienced team of advisers developed a way to raise funds legally to support potential efforts by raising money at the state level bypassing arcane and incumbent-focused federal laws that were put in place by his competitor, Senator McCain.

This is not only smart campaigning but also a well-deserved shot across McCain’s bow. Once again, to cite Hugh Hewitt, he’s a great American, a lousy Senator and a terrible Republican. Vote Romney IMHO.

As Newt Gingrich pointed out: “The McCain-Feingold campaign-finance law enacted in 2002 is an equally dangerous modern-day assault on the First Amendment. It could more accurately be called the McCain-Feingold censorship law because it stifles political speech, protects incumbent politicians and consolidates power in Washington. This law is of the Congress, by the Congress, and for the Congress, because it protects members of Congress by silencing opposing points of view…. McCain-Feingold explicitly rejects James Madison’s warning in Federalist 10 that the destruction of liberty in pursuit of “curing the mischief of factions” is worse than the disease itself.”

You can access the whole article here

The MittCast: Behind the Scenes in Boston

January 17th, 2007 justinhart Comments off

PART 1: Event preparations and a special message from Mitt.
Behind the scenes in Boston. $6.5 million is nothing to scoff at! Get the inside baseball scoop on the event from last week:


PART 2: Fundraising begins. I break a sweat.


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Categories: Fundraising

MittCast 1-17-07: Behind the scenes in Boston – Part 2

January 17th, 2007 justinhart Comments off

Listen online: click play below




OR
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Categories: Fundraising

MittCast 1-16-07: Behind the scenes in Boston – Part 1

January 16th, 2007 justinhart Comments off

Behind the scenes in Boston. $6.5 million is nothing to scoff at! Get the inside baseball scoop on the event from last week:

SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST CLICK BELOW:

iTunes

Categories: Fundraising

Introducing: The MittCast

January 15th, 2007 justinhart Comments off

That’s right. MyManMitt is throwing its weight even further into new media and has put together its own podcast, the MittCast. You can subscribe via iTunes by clicking below. Alternately, for non-iTunes users you can click here or listen right online!:

iTunes


Subscribe using the above iTunes button or you can listen to it here right on the webpage:

Categories: Fundraising

Is Mitt Romney "Yogi the Bear"?

January 12th, 2007 mymanmitt Comments off

According to Dean Barnett of Townhall.com, the answer is Yes!

The only remaining question is how Mitt Romney will feel about my repeated likening of him to the endearing cartoon character, Yogi the Bear. I got to know Romney pretty well when I volunteered for him on his ’94 Senate campaign; the Yogi the Bear comparison definitely shortchanges him in the gravitas department.

But in the political world, as he was in the business world, Mitt Romney is most definitely smarter than the average bear. While it’s conceivable that Romney’s rivals may be able to close the ground in the fundraising game, the Yogi factor will be Romney’s consistent advantage.

But wait, here’s my favorite part:

Disclosure: Dean Barnett volunteered for Mitt Romney’s 1994 Senate campaign.If Team Romney will take him, he will also volunteer for Romney’s run for president.

Read the full story at Townhall.com!

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Categories: Fundraising