Mitt Romney campaign quietly raises $3 million in Georgia

The Associated Press has cobbled together a report from the closed-press event at the Cobb Energy Centre:

ATLANTA — Mitt Romney says he hopes the Supreme Court does “the right thing” and strikes down President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul.

The presumptive Republican presidential nominee [told] donors at a fundraising reception in Atlanta that the health care law hurts small businesses and costs too much.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule on the law’s constitutionality later this month.
Romney said Monday that he hopes the justices, in his words, “do the right thing and turn this thing down.”

As Massachusetts governor, Romney signed into law a measure that forces state residents to purchase health insurance. The so-called individual mandate is at the heart of the Supreme Court case.

The Romney campaign says it raised more than $3 million Monday night in Georgia.

Interestingly, the report includes no mention of Newt Gingrich, who was to give a “special introduction” of the man who has clinched the Republican nomination.

Gingrich has scheduled a press availability for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in Atlanta.

Romney’s very quiet doings in Atlanta also fits well into this AP piece by Kasie Hunt:

BOSTON — Keeping his secrets, Mitt Romney tends to lift the veil on his finances and campaign only if the law says he must.

The Republican presidential candidate refuses to identify his biggest donors who “bundle” money for his campaign. He often declines to say who’s meeting with him or what he’s doing for hours at a time. He puts limits on media access to his fundraisers. And he resists releasing all of his tax returns, making just a single year public after facing pressure to do so.

“We’ve released all the information required by law and then some,” Romney said last month about his tax returns.

He’s indicated that part of the reason for his secrecy is to avoid political problems in his race against President Barack Obama.

He has said of his election foe: “He’s going to try and make this campaign about the fact that I’ve been successful, that I’ve made a lot of money. So he wants to be able to get all the details on each year and how much money I made this year and that year. I’m not going to get into that.”

Not that Obama has been totally open, either.

For example, the Democrat also limits media access to some parts of his fundraisers, though he allows cameras into larger events and will bring a small contingent of reporters into private residences. Reporters are promptly ushered out ahead of question-and-answer sessions with donors. Some fundraisers are closed entirely because the campaign says Obama is not making any formal remarks.

But Romney, whose views have been shaped both by his years in politics and his nearly three decades in private business, has made a keep-it-under-wraps approach a hallmark of his campaign. He’s often broken precedent set by presidential candidates of both parties.

“He is reluctant to disclose information that is standard for disclosure and has become the norm,” said Angela Canterbury, policy director for the Project on Government Oversight. And she and others say there’s no reason to think that style would change if Romney becomes president.

There’s a short-term political benefit, to be sure, in keeping a lid on everything from campaign appearances to the names of big donors. It means Romney can more easily control his campaign message, rather than getting knocked off course by Democratic hecklers at events or by unflattering media stories. And it can prevent providing fodder for political rivals to use against him.

But there also are risks, not the least of which is that Romney could appear to be hiding something, further irking voters already suspicious of politicians.

Romney has had the Republican nomination locked up for months, but he has yet to start traveling daily with the journalists who are assigned to cover him. He hasn’t agreed to what’s called a “protective pool” of reporters, who go wherever a candidate goes. Romney aides fear the arrangement would push the candidate off the message of the day, so they are loath to agree to it until they absolutely must.

Obama’s traveling press corps was with him virtually at all times starting in June 2008, just three weeks after he triumphed over Hillary Rodham Clinton to become the presumptive Democratic nominee. Republican nominee John McCain didn’t officially have a “protective pool” until August but he had a familiar relationship with his traveling press corps, and journalists almost always traveled on his campaign plane in the months after he clinched the nomination in March 2008. News organizations pay the cost of reporters who travel with presidential campaigns.

On the campaign trail this year, Romney’s aides have at times tried to limit reporters from approaching him when he shakes hands with voters at events. And his aides often don’t allow a camera and microphone on stage to record those interactions — though that’s been customary in past campaigns.

Also, Romney’s schedule is closely held — and his campaign typically won’t say what he’s doing when he’s not at one of the few public events he holds each week. Even public appearances often are announced less than a day in advance — or not at all.

Recently he rode to the site of the failed energy company Solyndra on the unmarked press bus, leaving the logo-plastered Romney for President bus behind at his hotel.

Aides said the campaign was concerned the Obama administration would work with local officials to prevent Romney from holding an event there.

Romney’s campaign also usually won’t disclose with whom the candidate meets — regardless of whether they are high-ranking officials or simply voters. He kept reporters away from a private meeting with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell last month, and says he regularly holds “off the record” meetings with middle class families, though he won’t say who they are.

Obama’s public schedule tends to list more Oval Office meetings than President George W. Bush did, but many of his sessions are not divulged. The White House does release Obama’s visitor logs, and they are open on the White House website.

On his possible policies as president, Romney has been more upfront with audiences behind closed doors than he has been when the media are present.

At fundraising events not witnessed by reporters, donors are sometimes given access to policy roundtables with top staff, and Romney himself gave donors in West Palm Beach, Fla., a more detailed outline of which federal departments he plans to cut than is part of his normal campaign speech. That address was overheard by reporters who stood outside on a sidewalk.

Romney has suggested he’s purposefully vague when he talks to the media — and, therefore, the general public — about his policy plans. Asked recently why he hasn’t released more specifics, he compared his approach to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

“The media kept saying to Chris, ‘Come on, give us the details, give us the details,’” Romney said. “‘We want to hang you with them.’”

In the aftermath of the Florida event, Romney agreed to allow a handful of reporters to attend just a few of the many finance events he holds each week. Still, his campaign refuses to say how much money each event raises, and doesn’t regularly release a full schedule of the events from which reporters are barred. Romney’s campaign expanded the number of people allowed into the fundraisers beginning this week, allowing three news service reporters instead of one and also allowing a TV network representative in, though without a camera. Reporters are still barred from covering fundraisers at private homes.

Romney’s secrecy goes beyond the details of his campaign schedule or his policy proposals.

He has been selective at best in providing public records from his 2003-2007 term as Massachusetts governor.

Late last year, he acknowledged that just before he left office he authorized a sweeping purge of electronic data from his executive office, allowing top aides to purchase and remove their computer hard drives. He also benefited from a law that widely exempted the governor’s office from state public records disclosure requirements. His campaign aides point to more than 600 boxes of materials that were sent from his office to the Massachusetts archives, but a week-long examination of the Romney records now in those archives by The Associated Press did not turn up a single email or internal document either authored by or sent to Romney. Some such emails have since surfaced in connection with public records requests.

Obama, Romney’s rival, entered office pledging to create the most transparent administration in American history. But while some open- government groups give him credit for trying, aspects of his administration remain closed or inaccessible to the public eye. A review this year by the AP found that federal agencies had improved their response to requests under the Freedom of Information Act but still had had sizable backlogs.

In his campaign, Romney has limited the release of documents and information that in the past often have become part of the public record.

He is the first winning candidate of either party in more than a decade to refuse to give the public a list of the people who tap their business and social networks to raise tens of thousands of dollars for him. In 2008, Obama and McCain both released lists of bundlers. Bush released his in 2000 and 2004.

The names Romney has released so far are those required by law. Campaigns have to disclose anyone who bundles money if they have also registered as a federal lobbyist.

Federal laws also require Romney to release a broad portrait of his personal finances — disclosures that showed he was worth up to $250 million in 2011.

Candidates aren’t required by law to release their personal tax returns, despite longstanding precedent for doing so — set by Romney’s father, George Romney, who ran for the Republican nomination in 1968. In 2008, Obama released seven years’ worth of returns. McCain released two years’ worth.

In January, Romney released his 2010 return under pressure from Republicans. That forced him to amend the personal financial disclosures he had filed earlier in the year because those documents didn’t mention a Swiss bank account or a series of funds that were set up in foreign countries. Romney has yet to release his 2011 tax returns; he filed for an extension. His advisers say he’ll release them before the Nov. 6 election.

- By Jim Galloway, Political Insider
For instant updates, follow me on Twitter, or connect with me on Facebook.

86 comments Add your comment

Kris (derail the gop clown circus)

June 11th, 2012
10:39 pm

$3 million dollars would go a long way to feed the poor and homeless. mitty should give that money to charity

To Romney and his GOP clown circus
I will work to ensure you and your fellow Republicans reap unprecedented losses in November

Reelect President OBAMA 2012

Old timer

June 11th, 2012
10:47 pm

And how much of the money raised should the demos give to the poor?…

DeKalb Dem

June 11th, 2012
10:50 pm

Kris, The $13 million dollars that Obama received at May fund raising events in Atlanta also would help to provide charity to the needy. Obama should give that money to the poor and homeless. Traffic on the connector that day was horrendous from his motorcade

Redunkulous

June 11th, 2012
10:53 pm

I thought the rich were supposed to invest all that money in jobs. These millionaires and billionaires keep forming super PAC’s and wasting money on television ads. They would have done themselves and the country a service had all those tens of millions gone into creating jobs, investing in development, etc. All this money only to watch some failed stiff flip flopper fail yet again. What a shame.

Kris (derail the gop clown circus)

June 11th, 2012
11:00 pm

Paddle faster the banjo music is getting louder….

td

June 11th, 2012
11:09 pm

Come on Georgia, we need to give Romney more money then this to be able to go out and defeat the evil of the Democratic party. We are already paying for the poors food, housing and medical needs and they want us to pay for their birth control. Can you imagine what we will be paying for if Obama is re elected. Car payments? Illegal drugs? Air Jordans?

TT

June 11th, 2012
11:17 pm

Kris – get a life and become responsible, stop asking others to pay for your meal ticket. If you cannot afford it, them maybe you do not need it. How about you and your kind taking care of yourselves for once and stop the blame and entitlement game.

GA Democrat

June 11th, 2012
11:34 pm

Mitty defends his Massachusetts law that served as a prototype for Obama’s.”
Yep, that’s how they work. Maybe if we changed the name from ObamaCare to RomneyCare, he’d be all for it…again. Sheesh.
Just a reminder both the Democrats and the Clown Party voted for this.
Stop the (goop) clown circus.
OBAMA 2012

Alabama Communist

June 11th, 2012
11:44 pm

lol……..1% Obama has been toss under the Bus while Romney is the 1% Dude who will walk on water in a Republican Paradise that does not exist…Get ready America, you are toast since both corporate poltical parties are totaly corrupt and beyond repair………

td

June 11th, 2012
11:44 pm

GA Democrat

June 11th, 2012
11:34 pm

“Mitty defends his Massachusetts law that served as a prototype for Obama’s”

You do understand that this is because the states have the right to do such things where the Constitution prohibits the Federal government doing the same. If you like Obamacare then move to Mass and live under it.

True

June 11th, 2012
11:50 pm

When you find out how much Romney has given to the needy over his lifetime, you will be speechless.

Will in Roswell

June 11th, 2012
11:53 pm

Looks like Steven Janiszewski has been brain washed.

True

June 11th, 2012
11:56 pm

“All things Utah???”

True

June 12th, 2012
12:04 am

If you ever drive by a Mormon church, you will notice that the sign says, “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Visitors Welcome.” We’re not scared of you; are you scared of us? I wonder when it will become unacceptable to say things like “madness and Mormonism and all things Utah”? Hopefully it won’t take a Holocaust.

True

June 12th, 2012
12:07 am

FYI, practicing Mormons give a monthly donation to the needy proportional to their income. It adds up, my friends.

A Democrat

June 12th, 2012
12:32 am

I think its clear we have seen where the Republicans want to drive this country, and it is ugly.

In need of a clown car

June 12th, 2012
12:40 am

What were Romney’s job creation numbers when he was governor of Massachusettes? Didn’t they rank just above the two states that had hurricanes, like number 47?
Sure, let us believe what he says not what he has done. Of course, as a businessman, he managed to put more people out of work than ever creating jobs.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
2:16 am

Well, sure enough….

Looks like those new rules didn’t last very long.

But that’s typical….Republicans whine and act psycho and its all fair and open but when you start to dish it back to them, suddenly we need ‘civility’….

Credibility, thy name is not Jim.

Buckhead Boy

June 12th, 2012
2:24 am

td, there is a distinction between prohibiting and not expressly authorizing, which I thought wouldn’t be lost on someone who suggests ignoring the prefatory clause of the Second Amendment. I suppose that the Constitution means just what it says only when convenient?.

P.S. Before you respond with any of that individual mandate nonsense, take a look at the individual mandates to purchase commercially enacted by the Congress in 1790, 1792 and 1798, when many of those men who actually wrote the Constitution and its original Amendments were still alive and kicking.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
2:26 am

@Buckhead Boy – The constitution only matters to them when they want it to.

Its a piece of paper, and it will be even more worthless when the Supreme Court over turns 60 years worth of Stare Decisis….

[...] purge of voter rollsState of Florida, Feds throw down in court over purge of county voter rollsMitt Romney Quietly Raises $3 Million In Georgia Related: Campaign practicing good operational securityPutin 2.0: Repeating The Soviet Union’s [...]

Weetamoe

June 12th, 2012
6:20 am

The prefatory clause of the second amendment guarantees individuals self-defense against an out of control militia.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
6:33 am

The mormon monthly donation goes to help rich congregations only. Try asking for help in a poor congregation and they’ll raise their hands and say, “Sorry, can’t help you.”

The disaster relief the mormon church issues on a regular basis and trumpets about goes to help mormons or is used as missionary work, rather than an attempt at compassion. When you go on one of these ‘disaster relief missions’ you carry papers saying how awesome the church is and that they were there to help but very little effort at helping non mormons actually takes place.

If you are rich, white and conservative, the LDS church is good to you in time of ‘need’ so long as you’ve payed your tithing.

Otherwise, don’t hold your breath.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
6:37 am

As was recently spoken to me, “You cannot be against the LDS leadership without being against the LDS church.”

Well, the LDS leadership believes it can and must impose its morality on all other states by forming questionable political alliances and then pretending it never happened, demanding money from its members and then pretending it never happened, saying and doing anything to get what they want, and then bribe and deny deny deny deny until the problem goes away.

“Etch a Sketch” is not something Mitt Romney, closely related to the leadership clans of the LDS church, learned on his own…he LEARNED it from them.

So yes, you may be assured that many of the people in a congregation of the LDS church DO in fact fear you, believe to the core of their being that prophesy indicates that one day you and anyone not a mormon will turn against them and torture and harm them for their beliefs.

Be assured…the sugar coated outside that you see is a well constructed lie so oft repeated that even most members believe it 90% of the time, but the curriculum of abhorrent, violent and dangerous LDS teachings are all there, just beneath the surface as soon as it is safe to drag them out.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
6:42 am

Oh, and only a mormon would say, “Hopefully it won’t take a holocaust” because only a mormon is insensitive enough to use such a phrase even though Jewish names are still being Babtized for the Dead despite numerous promises that they won’t be, which is anathema to anyone of the Jewish faith.

If you need any proof that my words are “True” about the deep fear, loathing and paranoia most LDS members, especially active Utah or Utah descended members have, look no farther than his own fruedian slip.

“Holocaust” indeed.

Like electing Mitt Romney, and the contards are dumb enough to have done just that. Elected a man who secretly reviles each and every single one of them and will turn on them at the drop of a hat if he thinks it will advance his agenda, which is the agenda of the LDS church.

the cat

June 12th, 2012
7:19 am

What is Romney hiding?

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
7:43 am

@The Cat – Anything and Everything he possibly can. He would hide what he had for breakfast if he could..with good reason given the cookie incident.

Mitt Romney at this point would run as nothing more than a cardboard cut out with an R under his name if he could…in fact, watch for him to do almost ANYTHING he can to weasel out of the debates.

the cat

June 12th, 2012
7:48 am

Aaron-I have said from the start the debates are going to be Romney’s downfall. I’m not sure how he can avoid them but will be fun watching him try.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
8:00 am

Libertarians are not ‘producers’. In fact if anything they are a net drag on society by repeatedly trying to foist their insane ideas on the rest of us and refusing to believe that government can be a solution.

Big Business is not the solution. Big Business is Goldman Sachs.

But try telling a Rontard that, and they’ll just tie it back to the government using Rube Goldberg Logic that only they can understand.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
8:05 am

@The Cat – You over estimate the intelligence of this once great nation of ours.

Massachusetts in 2010 and Wisconsin just now prove that America is as stupid as it ever was. And I, for one, intend to get out as soon as I possibly can. You can BET Mitt Romney is going to win in 2012, and when he does, it won’t be pretty to be in America.

Speaking of “Holocaust” one can only imagine how Willard will use the DHS.

If the man will erase his own past and say it never happened, what’s to stop him from erasing YOU and saying YOU never happened.

[...] Romney raised $3 million in Atlanta last [...]

the cat

June 12th, 2012
8:18 am

Romney will self destruct before November, he will not be elected.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
8:21 am

Romney is a total idiot and a coward and has more skeletons in his closet than the Army of Darkness, but this is a nation of easily distractable idiots combined with vicious sociopaths who together constitute a ‘center right’ nation just like ‘centrist’ seems to indicate.

When Wisconsin of all places, REELECTS the most abominable and corrupt man to hold the governor’s chair since Huey Long, I think we can safely say that Mitt Romney could stand on Fox News live and declare his soul to Satan while crushing a puppy’s head live with the holy bible and then five minutes later blame it on Obama generated CGI, that he didn’t do it, and that anyone who disagrees is a communist socialist.

Lost.

honested

June 12th, 2012
8:24 am

Proof that nothing has changed about ‘a fool and his money’.

kewl

June 12th, 2012
8:30 am

mormons are just catholics without the drinking problem. Both institutions are built upon greed and control.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
8:31 am

Given the proper faculties, they would fall into the same ideological biological spectrum of most societies; moderate, conservative and liberal.

Of course, biological trends only match with cultural ‘framing’ which would mean that one third of them would be wimps, one third of them would be sociopaths and one third of them would be special snowflakes who think that only things that affect them matter.

Humans are amazing. Humanity is a rather disgusting species that clearly wasn’t given enough time in the design phase.

honested

June 12th, 2012
8:37 am

Aaron B,

I had intended to be entirely sarcastic.

But we humans do seem to all have been dropped on our heads during the design phase.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
8:38 am

It is probably punishment from the Engineers or something…

WOW

June 12th, 2012
8:43 am

@ The cat you are correct the debates will be his downfall. If my math is correct over the last 18 years Romney has been running for offices and one exactly ONE general election. The more people get to know him, the less they like him.

Bernie

June 12th, 2012
8:45 am

I wonder what Jesus would think about that one…? cannot wait until the conversion of Southern Baptist to Mormonism….the process has been set into motion.

Jon

June 12th, 2012
8:47 am

Aaron Burr you are very misinformed. I am not going to waste much time on you since you obviously have some venom and anger for evrything Mormon. If you think Mormons only help Mormons, get in your car and drive to North Georgia or Alabama where the tornados came though last year and ask them if they were helped and about whether they are members of the Mormon faith. I was there with hundreds who worked from dawn to dusk helpign our fellow man, not fellow members. You are very wrong and with all of the venom that you have, I wonder when was the last time you did anything to help your fellow man. When was the last time you helped at a hurricane or tornado relief. I am just guessing never, so I would stop cursing about those that do since one day you may find yourself in need!

kewl

June 12th, 2012
8:59 am

I’m rooting for the buddhist’s to be right. They bug me the least.

hiram

June 12th, 2012
8:59 am

honested
June 12th, 2012
8:37 am
“But we humans do seem to all have been dropped on our heads during the design phase.”

The problem with humans is the mindset that religion produces -

“The planet and everything that lives on it is disposable – it was created by god as a stop over for humans on their way to paradise. God created the earth just for us(humans), and all of the other live forms on the planet aren’t important, and exist at our discretion. Since we are bound for those pearly gates, what happens here(on earth), doesn’t matter – the sooner we destroy it, the better.”

Conclusion: All religions are a form of mental illness. The more religious, the more mentally ill. It should be a factor to be considered in any election – especially presidential elections.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
9:00 am

@Jon – I know more about LDS theology than you, your sunday school teacher and your bishop combined. And I was *THERE* Jon, and I’ve heard plenty of other stories. I know exactly EXACTLY what goes on in these little trips.

As for what I do to help my fellow man, be assured, I do more than you do.

And as for the ‘may find yourself in need’ comment, yes, I am, in fact, aware that it is also the secret hope of many in the LDS church that we have a massive famine so the LDS church, largest private land owner in the US, filled to the brim with food storage in warehouses and member homes, can come swooping in as ’savior’ ‘as foretold by prophesy’…

I would never be so prideful as to accept help from a fellow human being when I needed it, or to refuse help to someone who did, but I would NEVER NEVER trumpet it to the skies as a missionary opportunity, and I would NEVER accept help that was being kept around in the secret hope of doomsday.

After all, one must wonder how tempted one might be to ‘help’ prophesy along by say….owning a large private equity firm and conveniently betting on commodities to cause price fluctuations that might cause hunger to occur.

But surely no one doing ‘charitable work’ would do that right? Just like they wouldn’t imitate a cop? Tie their dog to the roof of their car? Act like a bully as a kid? Act as a total out of touch robot as an adult? Say they like firing people?

Republicans are dumb. And America deserves EXACTLY what it will get when they elect Willard.

Big Hat

June 12th, 2012
9:01 am

Which one of Mitt’s wives will be First Lady?

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
9:04 am

He only has one, for now.

In heaven, as part of the elect of the LDS leadership, he’ll have many.

Whether they want to be married to him or not. For refusal would be to displease God and therefore be denied access to the part of heaven where you get to see your family again.

IE, in LDS theology, the only part that matters. All the rest of it is just hell with pretty wall paper.

td

June 12th, 2012
9:07 am

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
9:00 am

I will take a person of the LDS faith any day over a person who professes to be part of Liberation theology at best and more the likely if the truth be known a Muslim.

hiram

June 12th, 2012
9:08 am

It’s no diffent that the 99 virgins,or the white buffalo. The human imagination is boundless.

hiram

June 12th, 2012
9:09 am

All religions are nonsense.

Aaron Burr V Mexico

June 12th, 2012
9:10 am

@Bill – I left. And members of the LDS church always dismiss anyone who has left, because only ex members know what hell the LDS church wants to impose on the rest of us.

@TD – Secret muslims huh? Wow. And “liberation theology” do you mean liberalism? I’m primarily a liberal because it is what is the least conservative thing there is, because is there really anything LESS christian than a Republican?

Particularly you. If I didn’t have a personal witness of Jesus Christ I think your behavior might cause me to cease Christianity as well.