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Mica Moshbacher on Fox News speaking on Rubio’s decision to run for the senate.

June 24, 2016 Comments Off on Mica Moshbacher on Fox News speaking on Rubio’s decision to run for the senate. By admin

Trump immigration policy

June 16, 2016 Comments Off on Trump immigration policy By admin

Donald Trump Promises to Supporters Proud

June 8, 2016 Comments Off on Donald Trump Promises to Supporters Proud By admin

donaldtrumpThe Illinois senator has rescinded his support for the presumed GOP nominee over his remarks about Judge Gonzalo Curiel. Will others follow?

“I have concluded that Donald Trump has not demonstrated the temperament necessary to assume the greatest office in the world,” Sen. Mark Kirk of Illinois, who is in a competitive re-election race, said in a statement.

Trump’s comments about the judge’s ethnicity, “in context with past attacks on Hispanics, women and the disabled like me,” prompted Kirk to withdraw his support for his party’s nominee, he said, though he also added he does not support Clinton.

Kirk suffered a stroke in 2012 and often uses a wheelchair. His disavowal in the wake of Trump’s comments about the judge — the first of any leading Republican — followed the debut of a hard-hitting, multimillion-dollar television ad from Clinton allies. It reminded voters in battleground states that Trump had mocked a disabled reporter.

Ron Weiser, one of the recently named top fundraisers for Trump and the Republican Party, said the nominee’s attacks on Curiel are “obviously making it more difficult” to raise money for Trump, whose opponent could have $1 billion at her disposal.

Stanley Hubbard, a Minnesota broadcast company billionaire who recently gave $100,000 to a pro-Trump group, put it this way: “It’s ridiculous. He’s out of line. You don’t attack a federal judge, and you certainly don’t attack him on the heritage of his parents. It’s totally off the wall, and I don’t even have words to explain it.”

Only his fear of Clinton picking Supreme Court justices is enough to keep him giving money to Trump, Hubbard said.

The desire to win in the fall served as a way for even those denouncing Trump to explain their continued backing of him.
Republican presidential candidate businessman Donald Trump gestures during the Republican Presidential Debate, hosted by CNN, at The Venetian Las Vegas on December 15, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., the only black Republican senator, called Trump’s comments on the judge “racially toxic” yet said, “He needs to get on to the general election and we need to win.” Ryan, too, said he would still support Trump.

Democrats questioned how Republicans could condemn Trump’s comments while seeking to put him in the White House.

“If Republicans believe that a man who believes in religious and ethnic tests for federal judges is fit to be president of the United States, they must explain why this is an acceptable position,” said Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

Clinton, in her Tuesday speech, called Trump “temperamentally unfit to be president and commander in chief.” Later, she said, “He wants to win by stoking fear and rubbing salt in wounds and reminding us daily just how great he is.”

Mica Mosbacher, a Texas and New York fundraiser who backed Trump as soon as her preferred candidate Ted Cruz left the race, said her email has been “blowing up over the past few days” with notes from Republicans concerned about Trump’s comments. “It’s giving some of the donors heartburn, for sure,” she said.

She said she has been pushing back, arguing that while she — and many others — “would personally not bring up a person’s origin, that’s just Trump’s style. He’s his own hatchet man. What you see is what you get. His way is to throw bombs and spark a discussion.”

Trump gave a similar assessment of himself in his speech Tuesday.

While he said his “preference always is peace,” he pledged that he would not shrink from a fight.

“I have not backed down, and I will never, ever back down,” he said. “And I’m not a politician fighting. I’m me.”

 

http://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2016-06-08/trump-promises-not-to-let-gop-down-as-leaders-grow-worried

 

Mica Mosbacher is fundraising for Trump

June 8, 2016 Comments Off on Mica Mosbacher is fundraising for Trump By admin

Trump turns to the general election – and away from some of his past positions

May 11, 2016 Comments Off on Trump turns to the general election – and away from some of his past positions By admin

trump-positions-1stld-writethru-d267b912-13e0-11e6-93ae-50921721165dJust days into his new role as the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump is walking away from key positions that have defined his anti-establishment bid – including his pledge to keep wealthy donors at bay.

The New York real estate tycoon, who frequently boasted throughout the primary race that he was financing his campaign, is setting up a national fundraising operation and taking a hands-off posture toward super PACs.

He is expressing openness to raising the minimum wage, a move he previously opposed, saying on CNN this week, “I mean, you have to have something that you can live on.”

And Trump is backing away from a tax plan he rolled out last fall that would have given major cuts to the rich. “I am not necessarily a huge fan of that,” he told CNBC. “I am so much more into the middle class, who have just been absolutely forgotten in our country.”

The billionaire’s tendency to change his mind on policy matters is a hallmark of his unconventional campaign – a quality he casts as an asset, saying it shows he is open to new ideas. Even so, his latest reversals are striking, particularly when it comes to the financing of his presidential bid, a central part of his pitch to voters.

They also come amid an escalating battle between Trump and many Republican establishment figures, who blanch at his combative tone and controversial policy positions. House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (Wisconsin), the country’s highest-ranking elected Republican, said Thursday that he was not ready to endorse Trump as the nominee; Trump responded that he would not endorse Ryan’s proposed policies.

Throughout the primary contest, the Manhattan mogul bragged that he was the only contender unencumbered by alliances to rich backers. Even though he has been accepting donations ($12 million worth through the end of March), Trump’s proclamation of financial independence fed a sense among his supporters that he alone was standing outside a corrupt process.

The candidate furthered that impression by regularly denouncing his opponents for leaning on super PACs, which can take unlimited contributions, and by disavowing groups that cropped up to support him.

But Trump expressed little concern this week that a super PAC called Great America PAC was emerging as the vehicle of choice for wealthy Trump supporters, and he praised one of the group’s advisers, longtime Republican consultant Ed Rollins.

“I know that people maybe like me and they form a super PAC, but I have nothing to do with it,” the candidate said Wednesday on “NBC Nightly News,” adding, “So we’ll see what happens.”

He also acknowledged that he cannot personally cover the cost of a general-election campaign for the next six months, unless he is willing to “sell a couple of buildings,” as he said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.”

On Thursday, Trump tapped hedge-fund manager and film investor Steven Mnuchin to assemble a national fundraising operation, tasked with raising at least $1 billion for the general election. That will probably require the creation of a traditional bundling effort, in which rich supporters are offered perks for collecting checks from their friends and family members.

Although the campaign said that Trump still plans to put “substantial money” into his bid, the first-time candidate will be seeking support from the very donor class he has vilified.

If Trump “makes it clear he wants to change the rules but he’s stuck playing under them, I don’t think there will be a big turn-off,” said conservative political consultant John Pudner, whose group Take Back Our Republic seeks to reduce the influence of the wealthy in politics. “But if it looks like he’s just abandoning the one thing that got him here, I think there’ll be trouble.”

Selecting Mnuchin to lead the effort is a particularly jarring choice for a candidate who has lambasted hedge-fund managers on the trail. The chief executive of Dune Capital spent 17 years at Goldman Sachs, including a stint as head of the bank’s mortgage department, according to Bloomberg News.

When asked if Trump was undercutting his pledge to be independent of big donors, spokeswoman Hope Hicks responded in an email: “Mr. Trump is not raising money for his own campaign. He is raising money for the party.”

She did not respond to an inquiry about whether any of the money Mnuchin will help raise will go into Trump’s campaign coffers.

The Republican National Committee has been counting on getting robust fundraising assistance from its nominee to finance its quadrennial get-out-the-vote efforts – massive operations that lift not only the White House nominee but down-ballot candidates across the country.

In 2012, Republican nominee Mitt Romney and the RNC together raised $493 million through a joint committee. The effort was primarily driven by the expansive donor network that the former Massachusetts governor had cultivated over the years – so much so that RNC finance staffers relocated to Romney’s Boston headquarters to work with his fundraising team.

It remains to be seen whether the Trump campaign’s prospective donor list will prove valuable.

“The Trump campaign has made it very clear they intend to do everything they can to help the team,” said RNC communications director Sean Spicer, who added that the campaign plans to provide a list of supporters “who have been very active in their campaign, and a vast network of business people and others who could be very helpful to us.”

Already, some fundraisers who had backed other candidates have signed on. Mica Mosbacher, a former RNC finance co-chairman who helped Sen. Ted Cruz (Tex.) tap donors across the country, said she plans to assist the party effort.

“I plan to support Donald Trump as our nominee and help the RNC fundraise and am calling on conservatives to unite,” she wrote in an email.

But even wealthy contributors who said they were supportive of Trump expressed surprise that he was going to begin soliciting donations.

“I thought he was self-funding,” said Dallas investor Doug Deason, whose father, billionaire technology entrepreneur Darwin Deason, financed super PACs supporting Cruz and former Texas governor Rick Perry.

And there is still substantial resistance to Trump among key segments of the party’s major donor base.

“It’s going to be hard to ask people for money for someone who says he’s so rich he doesn’t need people’s money,” said Republican fundraiser Lisa Spies, who led Romney’s finance outreach to women and the Jewish community and helped raise money this cycle for former Florida governor Jeb Bush.

Trump’s hiring of a finance chairman was a good first step, she said, but she added that “he’s going to spend his time mending fences with donors. I think he’s got a very tough job in front of him.”

The key for many bundlers, said Fred Malek, who served as Sen. John McCain’s national finance chairman in 2008 and was a major fundraiser for Romney in 2012, will be whether Trump alters his provocative approach.

“It really is going to depend on the tone he and his campaign takes,” Malek said. “If he is able to be more welcoming and inclusive and bring more people in his orbit, that will go a long way.”

Washington Post staff writer Jose A. DelReal contributed to this report.

Q&A with May WCA@Lunch Speaker: Mica Mosbacher

May 11, 2016 Comments Off on Q&A with May WCA@Lunch Speaker: Mica Mosbacher By admin

Mica_Mosbacher-768x512Mica Mosbacher, Honorary Consul General of Iceland, philanthropist, journalist, author, and news commentator, will join WCA on May 18 to share stories about her life, steering us to understand that “God Can’t Steer a Parked Car: My self-made career as a journalist, achieved while juggling life as a single mother.” Mica will tell us about turning surviving into thriving as she continues to build a successful career as a media contributor and surrogate speaker. We sat down with Mica this week to get a sneak peek for next Wednesday’s WCA@Lunch:

WCA: Tell us about the phrase: “God can’t steer a parked car.”

I first heard the expression at a University of Texas Campus Crusade for Christ Bible Study. The premise is that you need to pray and have faith but you also need to keep your wheels in motion while listening to your inner voice that comes from God. God, or the Universe (regardless of your religion), can guide your steps but you cannot remain paralyzed if you are to find your place in the world.  I believe in serendipity and that there are no coincidences in life.

WCA: Would please share about how your career in communications started/evolved?

I began my career in communications early on as I wrote short stories and plays at an early age. As a 10-year-old girl in Memphis, Tenn., I started a neighborhood newsletter using the old fashioned mimeograph’s purple ink. No one under the age of 50 will know what that is. I also helped the local precinct chair put out yard signs and handed out flyers for Howard Baker, who was running for the Senate.

Later, I went to Hollins University and spent a semester interning at the NBC-TV affiliate in Houston under legendary news director, Ray Miller. I said in an interview that I would sweep floors.  I ended up doing on camera reporting and radio broadcasts. I transferred to UT Austin and ended up working at The Daily Texan and later at the state capital. I ultimately ended up in corporate communications working for two energy companies, Houston Natural Gas (Enron) and Mitchell Energy for their in-house publications. They provided a generous travel budget and freedom to write on a variety of subjects.

Later, I would work for Southern Political Consulting as a press secretary. After I married and had a child, I went to work as a volunteer for George H. W.  Bush (then VP) and later as a press secretary when he ran for President in 1987. I suppose politics and writing are two ongoing themes in my life. Following my divorce, I worked in retail while continuing to launch a freelance writing career after hours.

For the last 20-plus years, I have helped fundraise for many statewide and national candidates including roles in five presidential campaigns.

WCA: What is the biggest lessons you have learned?

We all endure many losses in life that involve change. Change is our only constant.  Personally, I have gone through kidnapping, parents’ divorce, my divorce, loss of a spouse, layoff of a job and losing of parents. I know that you have to play the hand you are dealt and stay in motion. Through loss of a job at Oppenheimer and Co., I met my late husband Robert, Sr.  He was a wildcatter, world champion sailor, US Secretary of Commerce and an amazing husband.

God never closes a door without opening a window. The key is to persevere and soldier on.  Believe!

WCA: How did racing cars inspire you to move forward?

While my husband was in hospice care at MD Anderson Cancer Center in 2010, my brother John McCutcheon was scheduled to race at the Rolex 24 Endurance Motorsports race in Daytona.  He knew I needed a reason to go on. I went after Bob died. I was sad and depressed but while in the pits, I heard those engines start and my heart skipped a beat.  And that led to a new passion.  One must always have a purpose to go on and so we put together Godstone Ranch MS race for charity.

WCA: Who/what inspires you?

Those whom I admire most stretch their heads out of their comfort zone and make a difference by speaking up for those without a voice.  Susan B. Anthony, who started the Temperance Movement also started the anti-slavery society and circulated a petition that got 400,000 signatures to abolish slavery.  She also got the women’s vote.

Any woman can light a candle in a dark room and I challenge all of you to bring light into your corner of the world.

Noemi Ortiz is a copywriter and editor with more than five years of experience in various industries, including fashion.

Women Communicators of Austin

Mica Mosbacher on Fox Business News

May 9, 2016 Comments Off on Mica Mosbacher on Fox Business News By admin

NYT: Rival Factions of Top Donors Get Behind Rubio, Cruz

April 24, 2016 Comments Off on NYT: Rival Factions of Top Donors Get Behind Rubio, Cruz By admin

Reports filed with the Federal Election Commission on Sunday showed that wealthy donors who according to The New York Times have built a powerful shadow Republican Party of outside groups, are splitting into two mutually hostile and deep-pocketed factions in support of Sens. Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.
The report shows that many of the Wall Street financiers who have been the backbones of Republican super PACs in the last six years believe that Sen. Marco Rubio is the best GOP candidate to win a general election battle against front-runner Hillary Clinton. In the last six months, a super PAC for Rubio has raised $14.3 million, including $2.5 million each from the hedge fund founders Paul Singer and Ken Griffin.

And while the super PAC successfully attracted significant support from donors who previously backed Jeb Bush — Chris Cline, a coal executive, and Brian Ballard, a prominent Florida lobbyist — they weren’t successful in avoiding the release of a new counter-establishment of conservative donors whose favorite candidate is Sen. Ted Cruz.
The New York Times reports the counter-establishment includes some donors who are outside “the universe of traditional Republican giving” and include “wealthy evangelicals, libertarian businessmen, Israel hawks and others disenchanted by the party’s past nominees, and are drawn to Mr. Cruz’s uncompromising social conservatism and his promise to disrupt the party’s traditional power brokers in Washington.”

New Cruz backers include:

Wilks family of Texas, noticeable donors to anti-abortion groups;

Edward Czuker, a Los Angeles real estate developer and board member of the Republican Jewish Coalition;

Richard Uihlein, Illinois businessman who gave $1 million to a pro-Cruz super PAC in January.

“I think we’re rewriting history,” said Mica Mosbacher, a longtime Republican fundraiser who decided to back Cruz because she was tired of the party nominating “moderates and career politicians,” The New York Times reports
“We’ve got a civil war within the party,” Mosbacher added. “And people want someone who is strong.”

http://www.newsmax.com/t/newsmax/article/712101

Ted Cruz and the GOP establishment: The New York Times’ take

April 24, 2016 Comments Off on Ted Cruz and the GOP establishment: The New York Times’ take By admin

Yesterday, I linked to and discussed an article in the Washington Post that found Ted Cruz struggling to win over the Republican establishment. But the New York Times, in an article by Nicholas Confessore and Matt Flegenheimer, contends that GOP donors are “learning to love Ted Cruz.”

The two articles aren’t as inconsistent as one might suppose. The Post focused to a considerable extent on establishment politicians; the Times looks at big donors. In addition, the body of the Times article suggests that big donors are a mixed bag when it comes to Cruz, with few actually learning to love the Texas Senator.

According to the Times, many previously anti-Cruz donors now are taking Cruz’s calls. They are well-advised to do so, since the odds that Cruz will be the Republican nominee have improved considerably.

But taking the Senator’s calls and making large contributions are two different things. The Times makes it clear that, as to the latter act, Cruz still is not having an easy ride.

For one thing, and to state the obvious, there is a serious ideological disconnect between Cruz and many big Republican donors. As the Times puts it, “a wider embrace by donors has. . .been hampered in some quarters by genuine political disagreement between more middle-of-the-road potential donors and Mr. Cruz, a professed conservative purist on economic and social issues.” (Emphasis added)

The Times saw fit to call Cruz a “professed” purist. But its reporting suggests that Cruz is the real thing. For example, one donor was poised to make a big contribution if only Cruz would accept that the earth has warmed. Cruz didn’t bite.

As one would expect, Cruz is faring better with donors whose focus is on Israel, according to the Times. Fred Zeidman — a board member of the Republican Jewish Coalition who previously backed Lindsey Graham and Jeb Bush — is now supporting Cruz. He explained, “there is no more staunch and vocal supporter of the state of Israel than Ted Cruz has been, and it is the primary reason I felt I had to support him.”

The Times says that some big donors are put off by Cruz’s personality. They complain that even in private, he comes of as sanctimonious and unable to present a persona that’s appreciably warmer than what one sees on television.

I’ve heard the latter point raised by in Washington who are no less conservative than Cruz. It may be a valid insight. But at this juncture, it’s not a good reason to withhold support from the man who stands between the abominable Donald Trump and the Republican nomination.

As Mica Mosbacher, a Cruz fund-raiser and wife of the late Robert Mosbacher, Secretary of Commerce under George H.W. Bush, puts it, “[Cruz] might not be the most fun to have a drink at the bar with, but America needs a designated driver.”

Ted Cruz and the GOP establishment: The New York Times’ take

 

Mica Mosbacher on Fox News Business

April 24, 2016 Comments Off on Mica Mosbacher on Fox News Business By admin

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