GOP mega-donor Foster Friess: voters in ‘center cities’ don’t count

In the 2012 race for the Republican presidential nomination, several candidates enjoyed the backing of their very own rich guy to help bankroll their campaigns. For Rick Santorum, it was Foster Friess, who made quite a public impression.

It was Friess, you’ll recall, who told MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell, “Back in my days, they used Bayer Aspirin for contraceptives. The gals put it between their knees and it wasn’t that costly.” Soon after, he proclaimed, “Now that [Republicans] have trained their barrels on President Obama, I hope his teleprompters are bullet-proof.”

Friess has not, however, gone away. Indeed, he spoke with reporters late last week, arguing that despite President Obama’s decisive victory, the expanded Senate Democratic majority, and House Democrats getting more votes than their GOP counterparts, “the American people gave the Republicans a mandate in this last election.” The political world would recognize this GOP mandate were it not for the fact it “got masked” by the actual election results.

And how is it, exactly, that Friess sees a Republican mandate? As he sees it, votes from “center cities” don’t really count when considering who has genuine public support. Robert Schlesinger reported:

Obama won by five million votes. But Friess dismissed that margin, arguing that a 350,000 vote flip across four states (which he couldn’t name) would have given Romney the election.

To me, 350,000 votes is not a huge mandate, even though the total numbers, which take into account a lot of those center cities, went for Obama.

When I asked him if he was saying that votes from “center cities” should be discounted, his answer, in full, was: “Yes.”

Friess went on to say that there is a lack of entrepreneurship in “these center cities.”

I have to admit, “center cities” is a euphemism I haven’t heard before. I suppose Friess assumes that if he said he doesn’t want to count votes from “inner cities,” he’d be accused of racism, so he uses “center cities” to make the racism more oblique. How gracious of him.

Friess added that he believes in supporting gay rights by preventing “Sharia law”; the gender gap would be smaller had Democrats not “seduced” women voters; and he’s looking forward to investing heavily in Republican candidates during the 2014 midterms.

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“Damn inner city folks having the same right to vote as other people.”

I hope this guy sits on a Lego and it bruises his taint.

Billionaire Republican Foster Friess: I Hope Obama’s ‘Teleprompters Are Bulletproof’

Wealthy GOP super PAC donor Foster Friess, fresh off announcing a conversion from Rick Santorum’s corner to Mitt Romney’s, drew a little unwanted attentionWednesday when he used gun imagery to weigh in on the shifting state of the 2012 race.

“There are a lot of things that haven’t been hammered at because Rick and Mitt have been going at each other,” Friess said during an interview on Fox Business News. “Now that they have trained their barrels on President Obama, I hope his teleprompters are bulletproof.”

He quickly went on to admit that he “probably shouldn’t have said that.”

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Is it just me, or is it always the republican punditry that makes the remarks that reference gun violence against their political opponents?

CBS News - Santorum Says He’s Not Responsible for Biggest Backer’s “Bad Joke” - Foster Friess’ comment on MSNBC Thursday that women should hold a Bayer aspirin between their knees to use as contraception didn’t go over very well

Taking a page from rival Newt Gingrich, Republican presidential hopeful and newly minted front-runner Rick Santorum on Friday slammed the media for asking about a controversial comment one of his supporters made about contraception a day earlier.

“My record stands for itself,” Santorum said in an interview on “CBS This Morning” after being asked about Foster Friess’ comment on MSNBC Thursday that women should hold a Bayer aspirin between their knees to use as contraception.

Asked what he had said to Friess, Santorum said it was “a bad joke” and said he should not have to respond to questions about the comments because he did not make them.

Charlie Rose retorted that he was asking about the senator’s views, not Friess’ views.

“Hold on Charlie, when you quote a supporter of mine who tells a bad off-color joke and somehow I am responsible for that, that is gotcha,” Santorum told host Rose.

“Nobody said you were responsible, they said how would you characterize it and what have you said to him? Not that that you were responsible. It’s to understand how you differ from what this person said,” Rose shot back.

Friess later apologized for the comment on in a blog post, saying that the “aspirin joke bombed as many didn’t recognize it as a joke but thought it was my prescription for today’s birth control practices. … After listening to the segment tonight, I can understand how I confused people with the way I worded the joke and their taking offense is very understandable. To all those who took my joke as modern day approach I deeply apologize and seek your forgiveness.”

Santorum backer Foster Friess apologizes for contraception comment

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Wow, if Santorum danced around that question any more it would be a fucking ballet.