Mitt Romney Is the Republican Nominee for President of the United States

August 28, 2012
By

Mitt Romney, Republican Nominee

Mitt Romney has been voted in as the Republican nominee for president.

The temporary disruptions caused by the Ron Paul supporters has subsided. Hopefully, Ron Paul supporters will climb aboard the Republican train and vote this statist, Obama, out of office. I hope they make it to the Democratic convention and give them the same grief.

Gov. Jan Brewer in Arizona and former Gov. Pete Wilson in California livened up the events.

Iowa cast 22 votes for Ron Paul and just six for Mitt Romney. Maine cast 14 votes for Romney, and 10 for Paul.

After New Jersey delegates pledged, Romney passed the 1,144 threshold. [Business Insider]

It is not official until Thursday when Governor Romney accepts the nomination.

Listen to Tim Scott tell Obama to hit the road:

Governor Pete Wilson sees Ronald Reagan in Mitt Romney:

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Quote of the Week

“Tornadoes form below a class of severe thunderstorms known as supercells. Supercells feature intense upward moving columns of air that rotate, as the wind near the surface is drawn into those columns it begins to rotate and forms the tornado vortex. The damage attributed to tornadoes is caused by the strong winds in the vortex and flying debris.

“Oklahoma sits within an area of the United States commonly referred to as ‘tornado alley’ – this area is amongst the most frequent locations of tornado occurrence in the world. At this time of year, the warm and moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and cool and dry air from above the Rocky Mountains come together to make tornado alley the perfect environment to spawn supercells and tornadoes.

“Preliminary reports of damage from the Oklahoma tornado suggest it was of EF-4 intensity, which is the second highest intensity rating. EF-4 tornadoes have wind gusts between about 265 and 320 kilometres per hour.”

Dr. Todd Lane, ARC Future Fellow, School of Earth Sciences, The University of Melbourne

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