Monday, January 23, 2012

Businessweek mitt romney

  • Bloomberg Businessweek produced a cover featuring a photo illustration of bloodied, battered Mitt Romney for a story in its Jan. 13 issue, but chose not to run it.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Warren Buffett, the billionaire calling for more taxes on the rich, said Mitt Romney's U.S. rate of about 15 percent reflects poor laws rather than failings by the candidate for the Republican presidential nomination.
  • (Businessweek)
  • With Mitt Romneys big lead in South Carolina ahead of its Saturday While the former senator from Pennsylvania has evangelical support, according to Businessweek, he is not a good complement for Romney.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • Mitt Romney cruised to victory in New Hampshire on Tuesday night who supported Obama in 2008 and backed Huntsman in New Hampshire, according to BusinessWeek. Some Republicans say the intensified debate could help Romney, now and later.
  • (Pravda)
  • Jan. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase Co. are among Wall Street firms likely to rally if Mitt Romney is elected president, giving U.S.
  • (BusinessWeek)
  • But actually another private equity firm was running it by then, Bloomberg Businessweek points out, with the firm blaming weak sales from the sinking economy for KBs demise, not debt.
  • (Washington Examiner)
  • depicts Mitt Romney and Barack Obama, photoshopped to look bloody and beaten Also circulating online today was a recent Bloomberg Businessweek cover that never made it to the printer. POLITICO turns five.
  • (Politico.com)
  • If leading Republic contender Mitt Romney wraps up the nomination in January, there will be a clash coming soon between his consultants skills to bear on the federal budget, as Bloomberg Businessweek terms it, and the record budget deficits of Barrack Obama.
  • (NASDAQ)
  • Mitt Romney's path to the Republican presidential nomination grew rougher today when Rick Perry dropped out of the party's contest to throw his support behind Newt Gingrich, and Rick Santorum was certified as first-place finisher in the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses.
  • (Businessweek)

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