Saturday, 12:30 p.m.: Speech highlights
The candidates have spoken. Now its up to the delegates. Here's a look at what some of the contenders said.
"Right now, Texas, the eyes of the United States are on you," he said. "Do you want to send a message to politiicans, to Americans ... that we are so fed up that we want to send a guy who wants to work for a living there to Washington?"
"We can bring real ideas...back to the Republican Party," he said. "We want solutins, no celebrities. We want results, not rhetoric ... So I'm asking for your support today."
"I'm a strong defender of individual liberty," Paul said. "Personal choices means tolerance against other people as long as theyre not hurting us.
"I am a strong defender of the right to life of all living human beings," he said, adding that a vote for him is a "vote for the constitution, a vote for limited government."
"Until 9/11, I was just a happy psychiatrist and when 9/11 happened, it horrified me and all of us," Cort said.
Citing different sources, Cort said with certainty that Osama Bin Laden has snuck "suitcase nukes" into the U.S.
"He wants to blow up ten American cities with nuclear devices like we blew up Hiroshima," Cort said.
Cort received a mix of cheers and boos when he called for bombing Iran but made it up to the crowd when he promised his first acts as president would be to ban abortion and homosexual marriage.
He said he wants U.S. troops to leave Iraq the "right way" and he promised to build the entire 864-mile border fence in his first six months in office.
Hunter told the crowd that his grandson, also named Duncan, is even helping him campaign, telling people "my grandpa is going to be president. Now, can I count on your vote?"
-- Anna M. Tinsley and Aman
9:08 a.m.: Monkeys for Ron Paul
With two police escorts on bicycles, Ron Paul's supporters finished their march to the Convention Center and are now rallying outside the delegates' entrance. Several buses and RVs passed by covered in Ron Paul signs.
According to one of our correspondents, a live monkey could clearly be seen in the window of one of the Ron Paul RVs.
No comment.
-- Aman Batheja
Thanks for the report.
I am not convinced I’d be in favor of a psychologist for president. Jimmy Carter’s fireside chat was about as close as I ever want to get.
Only one monkey? I guess it was better than a dead monkey. Texas heat can't be too good for an animal locked up in an RV with no A/C running.