CONCORD, New Hampshire (PNN) - January 10, 2012 - Mitt Romney is the projected winner of the New Hampshire primary, just a week after pulling out an 8-vote win over Rick Santorum in Iowa.
However, the latest data prove that Romney erroneously received an extra 20 votes in at least one voting precinct. Even though this raises questions about who actually won last week’s Iowa caucuses, criminal GOP officials, who have declared their unwillingness to allow an honest vote count that shows Ron Paul to be the winner in Iowa, have refused to allow the official Iowa totals to be revised.
In other words, Romney did not win in Iowa.
Rep. Ron Paul (Tex.) was declared the projected second-place finisher in New Hampshire.
In Romney’s victory speech, he hit hard and early the themes that characterized Santorum’s speech last week: the unemployed and underemployed, unemployed veterans, and increasing government debt.
Romney spent most of the speech attacking Obama and his record, rather than identify how he differs as a candidate from his fellow Republicans.
Ron Paul, known widely as The Patriot Congressman, took the stage at 9:00 pm, thanking the local newspaper for not endorsing him and declaring his second-place finish a “victory for liberty”.
Paul chided media for ignoring his campaign and his supporters, saying, “I sort of have to chuckle when they describe you and me as being dangerous. They are telling the truth, because we are dangerous to the status quo of this country.”
After the chants of “President Paul!” died down, he added, “…and we will remain a danger to the Federal Reserve system.”
It was, in fact, The Patriot Congressman’s issue with the Federal Reserve that took up the majority of the first part of his speech, in which he declared this the “first presidential campaign where this has been (discussed) since the Federal Reserve was established (in 1913).”
Paul said an “honest government” that wanted to spend more money would simply tax more; by comparison, our government first borrowed and then printed money to fund its priorities, which included being “the policemen of the world”.