Mitt Romney The Romney Plan For A Stronger Middle Class Bus Tour Events In Virginia On Saturday, August 11, 2012 *Updated
Mitt Romney The Romney Plan For A Stronger Middle Class Bus Tour Events In Virginia On Saturday, August 11, 2012
Boston, MA On Saturday, Mitt Romney will begin his The Romney Plan For A Stronger Middle Class bus tour in Virginia. He will tour the USS Wisconsin and attend a Victory event at the Nauticus Museum in Norfolk, Virginia. He will then drop by Homemades by Suzanne in Ashland, Virginia, and attend Victory rallies at the Crenshaw Gymnasium in Ashland, Virginia, and at the Harris Pavilion in Manassas, Virginia.
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Event: Governor Romney Tours USS Wisconsin
Location:
USS Wisconsin
1 Waterside Drive
Norfolk, Virginia
Program Time: 8:45 AM EDT
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Event: Governor Romney Attends Norfolk Victory Event
Location:
The Back Patio
Nauticus Museum
1 Waterside Drive
Norfolk, Virginia
Doors Open: 7:00 AM EDT
Invite Time: 8:45 AM EDT
Program Time: 9:05 AM EDT
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Considering the more somber and governing impact of the VP choice of someone who could slide right into the POTUS spot if God forbid anything happened to #1, it leads me to considering an appraisal of McDonnell, and he certainly has maturity and life experience. Ryan could always go into the cabinet, creating, streamlining, monitoring economic policies, taxes, etc.
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71st Governor of Virginia
Robert F. McDonnell
Excerpt:
Governor McDonnell went to St. Louis Catholic School for third through fifth grades, Woodley Hills Elementary School for 6th grade, and Walt Whitman Junior High School for grades 7 and 8. For high school McDonnell went to Bishop Ireton in Alexandria.
It was while attending Bishop Ireton that he has his first, and only, brush with gridiron greatness, scoring a touchdown and a two-point conversion against the famed 1971 T.C. Williams Titans of Remember the Titans. You can read the Alexandria Gazette article about the game by clicking here.
After high school McDonnell was off to South Bend, Indiana to live his dream of attending the University of Notre Dame. He could only afford college through a full Army ROTC scholarship. For Governor McDonnell a higher education came with a commitment to serve his country. Like his father before him, McDonnell would wear the uniform as a military officer. McDonnell graduated in 1976 with a BBA degree in management.
McDonnell went on active duty in the U.S. Army in October 1976, heading to basic training in San Antonio, Texas and then being assigned to Grafenwohr, Germany. He didnt go alone. Earlier that year Governor McDonnell married Maureen Gardner, of McLean, Virginia. The two have been married for 36 years and have five children.
In Germany, McDonnell was a platoon leader with the 2nd Armored Division, and also ran a medical clinic for the post. In December of 1979 he left Germany, heading to Fort Eustis in Newport News, Virginia. But he left Germany having gained a helpful tool for his future endeavors: a Masters of Science in Business Administration earned by taking night classes for three years from Boston University.
At Fort Eustis in Newport News McDonnell worked at McDonald Army Hospital as the Medical Supply Officer. And in April 1981 he left active duty. But he didnt leave the service. All told Governor McDonnell would serve 21 years in the U.S. Army, both active duty and reserves, retiring as a Lt. Colonel in 1997.
Governor McDonnell took the family, including his oldest daughter Jeanine who had just been born, to Atlanta to put his business degrees and military experience to use with American Hospital Supply Corporation, a Fortune 500 company. It would begin a period of quick promotions and several moves. After a year McDonnell was promoted to the companys headquarters in suburban Chicago.
A year later the company placed McDonnell in charge of their multi-million dollar custom products regional division, managing the Minneapolis, St. Louis, and Kansas City offices. Based in Kansas City, McDonnell was moving rapidly up the corporate ladder. But something was missing.
Governor McDonnell was still eligible for the Vietnam-era GI Bill, but those benefits would disappear after 1989. McDonnell realized that he wasnt finished with his education, so he used the GI Bill benefits to get back to Virginia and enrolled at Regent University in Virginia Beach to seek a Masters Degree in Public Policy.
A few months after enrolling in 1985, this young university announced the creation of a law school, and McDonnell applied for admittance. It began, as he calls it, the years without sleep.
McDonnell simultaneously attended law school, continued his work for a Masters Degree in public policy, raised his young family, worked as a sales manager for The Virginian-Pilot newspaper, and served in the active reserves of the Army with the 18th Field Hospital in Norfolk.
It was during those law school years that McDonnell did an internship on Capitol Hill with the House Republican Policy Committee. Serving the committee, spending some time with its Chair, Congressman Jerry Lewis of California, and others, McDonnell realized that he wanted to be more involved in public policy, and the way to do it was through elected office. He wouldnt wait long to pursue that direction.
McDonnell graduated from Regent in 1989 and took a job as a prosecutor in the Virginia Beach Commonwealths Attorneys Office. Serving on the front lines of the criminal justice system he worked cases that brought home to him the need for greater victims rights and policies that put criminals behind bars longer, and kept citizens safer in their homes. He now sought a greater role in making Virginia a safer and stronger place.
McDonnell had plenty of experience with public service, as a soldier and a prosecutor. But running for public office is like nothing he had ever tried before. Deciding to run for the Virginia House of Delegates meant taking on an entrenched twenty-year incumbent.
McDonnell hit the streets and he talked to thousands of voters at their doors, ruining several pairs of shoes in the process, and when the votes were counted that November evening in 1991, McDonnell was elected by a six-point margin to the House of Delegates. Hes never lost an election since.
McDonnell went to Richmond to represent the 84th District in Virginia Beach. In the House of Delegates, he rose to the position of Assistant Majority Leader and Chairman of the House Courts of Justice Committee.
He was Chief Patron of numerous bills during his career, including Governor Allens Juvenile Justice Reform Initiative, Virginias historic Welfare Reform legislation, the reform of Virginias drunk driving laws and a crack down on sex predators and gangs, legislation to abolish the death tax, and legislation to rewrite and improve Virginias Public Private Partnership Transportation Act. He also authored legislation and secured funding for the creation of Virginias Judicial Performance Evaluation Program to guide the General Assembly in reappointing judges.
His performance stood out. He was named the Network of Victims of Crime Legislator of the Year in 1996, The National Child Support Enforcement Association National Legislator of the Year in 1998, The Family Foundation of Virginias Legislator of the Year in 1998 and 2001 and the Virginia Sheriffs Association Legislator of the Year in 2005.
An article in The Virginian-Pilot noted, His fingerprints are all over major pieces of legislation from welfare reform, to judicial performance evaluations, to juvenile justice and parole reform, to tort revisions. Few legislators can duplicate his track record of involvement and success. (Virginian-Pilot article, Beach delegate stakes claim to states No. 3 slot, Warren Fiske, October 19, 2005)
As Attorney General, McDonnell focused on policies to keep Virginia safe, strong, and prosperous. He kept his promises from the campaign trail, and fulfilled all 7 of his campaign pledges. He enacted a 25-year mandatory minimum sentence for violent child sex predators, increased penalties for drug dealers, protected Virginians from terrorist threats, safeguarded private property rights, reduced frivolous lawsuits and made Virginia a national leader in combating internet crimes and identity theft.
During his three years in office, 92 of his 105 legislative proposals as Attorney General became law, most with overwhelming bipartisan support.
He has been commended for his work as Attorney General to strengthen Virginias mental health laws, establish a Senior Alert to assist in locating missing seniors with mental deficiencies, create a state of the art Sex Offender Registry, and provide new tools for law enforcement involved in online investigations of identity theft, sexual predators, and other 21st Century criminals.
McDonnell created and led Virginias Youth Internet Safety Task Force, which received widespread attention for its significant recommendations to improve online safety, and established the ongoing Attorney Generals Task Force on Regulatory and Government Reform.
The task force made over 300 recommendations to streamline Virginias Administrative Code, and reduce burdensome government regulations.
http://www.governor.virginia.gov/AboutTheGovernor/mcdonnell-bio.cfm
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Very impressive. And there’s definitely a gap in all the prospects of any solid foreign relations expertise.
ON DRUDGE NOW
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