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Romney Internal Memo: We're Almost There...

27 Sep 2007 03:31 pm

These days, Mitt Romney's campaign is producing internal memos as fast as Chris Matthews produces boxing references.

The latest one to wend its way to the inbox is from senior strategist Alexander Gage. You can read the whole thing here, if you'd like, to avoid any filtering.)

Gage writes that the campaign is "entering the last leg of the final stretch of the race." And on that leg, there's a caution flag up. Mitt Romney, Gage writes, is not running a national campaign because there _is_ no national campaign.

[It] is important to remember that even then, we will not be measuring ourselves through the lens of national polls and we do not expect to be competitive in them.

More from Gage:

Looking at historical Gallup polls from previous election cycles, relatively-unknown candidates who succeed in the early states gain 16-40 points in national polls.

He also tries to set expectations for other candidates, pointing out that no Republican has won the nomination without winning either Iowa or New Hampshire. That's true, but the reference set is so small, it's hard to make any real argument from history.

Gov. Romney’s early state strategy has paid dividends thus far, but we should expect a tumultuous road ahead as the campaign accelerates.

The bottom line: Don't fret about Rudy's standing. Keep your focus on the early state polls. We'll get momentum when we win Iowa.

Comments (12)

hey Mittster, how many more millions are you going to self donate to your campaign? Its sounding like a dismal quarter and bleak future for you.

And all those zillions are not becoming effective in erasing all of Romney's flipflops. Plastic Mitt will get more desparate in coming weeks.

Probably Romney will raise 10 millions this quarter out of which 5 millions will be from personal fortune.

I appreciate that Mitt has decided to run for public office rather than make himself a billion dollars. So far he has done a very good job against three or more rivals who have more than a decade of national exposure.

It seems strange to allow Mitt to carry a double digit lead in Iowa where with the other states combined he has run more 5 or 6 hundred townhall meetings.

http://www.strategicvision.biz/political/iowa_poll_082307.htm

And as hard as Mitt has worked this election cycle and as polished as his Strong America platform is he definitely would make a very good president.

Romney is in a good position indeed. He is holding his own more than well in the crucial state of Iowa (see today's poll) and he remains at worse tied with Giuliani in NH (whcih would mean a victory if Romney gets the win in Iowa). Full analysis on CampaignDiaries.com

You green-with-envy detractors love to denigrate the man because he CAN fund his own campaign. Y'all forget so easily that he has still raised more cash than any other repub, including Rudy, before he put in any of his own. So what is the prob?

Romney's "master plan" really seems to be working -- as long as he wins Iowa, he's doing well enough in New Hampshire that even if he falls behind now, he can still win it. And with polls showing him leading in Nevada and Michigan, two of the other four early primaries, it looks like he's doing pretty well.

Can't wait for January.

I am beginning to like romney more and more. He has proven he can succeed at whatever he touches. His Business record proves that, the olympics, gov., and now his campaign. Someone who goes from %3 in the polls to where he is now being unknown compaired to the others, has incredible skill. Mitt is the best man for the job. (ps. stop whining about his change on the issues. reagan was once a democrat and pro-abortion. reagan also proved that you can make a genuine change and back it up) romney is the most like reagen in modern politics.

The last few posters were correct. Mitt has done very well with the best strategy he could choose.

Once Fred flops, Mitt will rise in the polls again.

http://nyformitt.blogspot.com/

Speaking of flipflops, anyone else notice the Dems are now committed to Iraq until atleast the end of their first term?

Wow, the nutroots must be going, well, nuts.

Been in Military 30+ years. Mitt's a strategic thinker and has a unique way of making great decisions. Success is attractive in a candidate. Valedictorian in everything he attempts, Harvard graduate with two advanced degrees, top of his class. Lived in Europe for 2.5 years and speaks two languages...that would help with influencing the French.

Now look at McCain. Barely graduated from Annapolis, makes questionable choices in Immigration, Savings and Loan debacle, and doesn't have the foreign experience he thinks. Yes, he's served, so have alot of us, but "good decisions" are important when it comes to where our country is headed.

Rudy, not good choices at home, so will be distracted...great talk circuit speaker, but "we really need a visionary" with the problems we have in competition from Asia and India, as well as the Middle East situation. Don't think Rudy has the depth.

Fred....too old and it shows. Need energy.
Ralph

Mitt just needs more exposure in the media outside of Iowa and New Hampshire. Name recognition is the only issue. I have read a lot about his organizational strength in Illinois and Michigan.
This guy is for real not a Ron Paul who can only make noise, because I have tons of internet use. After hearing Ron Paul speak I became very aware that this guy is not a true presidential candidate. He is just a person with mild support from a few who hate the war. Doesn't seem to have his act together. Thank goodness Mitt has come around for a better candidate to chose from.