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AMES: Setting the Scene

11 Aug 2007 11:29 am

Untitled.jpg John Cox has a giant inflatable balloon. Ron Paul's campaign sign is hoisted up by a forklift. His volunteers wear teeshirts emblazoned with the slogan "Every generation needs a new Revolution" The "evol" is transposed to spell "Love." (not war.) The Fair Tax folks have cooling fans. The Mike Huckabee camp has branded water and realistic expectations, courtesy of Sarah Huckabee, his daughter. I asked her, "How many people do you expect to show up?" "Well, I didn't ask so I could say I wouldn't know," she said.

"But you've bought tickets for people, right?"

"Yes, and we'll buy more if we need too."

As she chatted with some reporters, her mother Janet was on a photographic expedition of the rest of the ISU athletic complexes. I caught her snapping a picture of Sam Brownback's RV. (Truth be told, Huckabee's RV is pretty sweet too."

The former Arkansas governor himself was tuning up a subwoofer on stage. His band, Capitol Offense, would start momentarily. Three camera crews -- two from foreign countries and one from Arkansas waited at the apron of the stage.

Mitt Romney's -- well, you've have to call it a fair -- has the best location. It's equidistant between all three straw poll voting locations. It's divided into three areas. One, for kids, features six carnival rides. Then there's a snazzy stage adorned with Romney banners and scrims. His campaign has rented what must be the largest tent in all of Iowa. They're expecting thousands... although stubborn Tim Albrecht, Romney's Iowa press director, just won't give us the number of buses the Romney team has rented -- it exceeds 150 -- but we don't really need that. (Matt Rhoades, Romney's national communications director, did offer up a competing nugget: Romney has 250 volunteers on premises.

Oh, and if geography is destiny, Romney, Sam Brownback and Ron Paul are in peachy shape. Romney's tents occupy the George W. Bush space from 1999; Brownback is located where Steve Forbes's riches bought him a second place finish that year, and Paul's tent is closest to the site where Phil Gramm (helped by a younger John Weaver) surprised the 1995 field to tie with Bob Dole.

Comments (8)

Romney's 150 buses are turning up mostly empty say reports on the ground. Romney's 250 workers? Ron Paul's campaign has quadruple that (and they aren't even being paid).

The first thing you notice when you pull into Ames are all the Ron Paul signs on the freeway. His people are mobbing the place. This should be very interesting.

Well, I guess Paul will have at least 250 votes, then.

"At least 250"? Quadruple means four times....

They should do a deadliest catch episode of Romney buses. Thats immediately what I thought of when I read "buses coming up half empty". lol.

I love that show.

Dang, I was trying to be pithy--did all of Paul's volunteers vote for him?

Many of Ron Paul's volunteer's were from out of state, so no voting for them. Paul placed 5th at 9% and Romney came in first at 32%. The real big shocker was Tancredo, who came in 4th.

But, Romney spent a million dollars and a lot of time on the ground in Iowa for his 4500 votes, Ron Paul spent 4 days and around $200,000 (no buses) and picked up 1300 votes. Iowans are a fairly tough crowd for anti-war and cutting federal spending positions.

At least, it can be said 9% = not just the internet.

My understanding was that Romney spent $5 million in Iowa, and someone figured that worked out to be $22,000 per vote, as compared to Ron Paul's $200 per vote!

Matt Rhoades, Romney's national communications director, did offer up a competing nugget: Romney has 250 volunteers on premises.

I was there; those were very well paid "volunteers".

In fairness though, Romney's buses were packed in the morning. It wasn't until the second round (noon) that they started coming in under capacity.