Latest book shows Romney family values not just fluff

Latest book shows Romney family values not just fluff

Ann Romney excused herself, then laughed hardily as we began chatting this morning. When you have 10 rushed minutes to speak with someone as experienced with reporters as the former First Lady of Massachusetts, it doesn't make sense to start the interview by asking the same predictable questions she's answered and dodged a thousand times before.

We began instead by discussing the Fluffernutter recipe she included on page 11 of The Romney Family Cookbook.   Written in 2013, an old photograph included in the book shows how much the family loves the All-American Fluffernutter. After Romney stopped laughing and caught her breath, she asked if it would be OK to use some of our 10 minutes to relate a family story. She said one of her boys summed up his disappointment with not having dad win his bid for the White House by saying, "Mrs. Obama's nutritional initiatives may be a good idea, but if dad were in the White House now, kids would get Fluffernutter sandwiches for lunch everyday and love it."

Carson polishes outsider image at New Hampshire gathering
Donald Trump

Carson polishes outsider image at New Hampshire gathering

Samantha-Rae Tuthill

Durham, N.H. — Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson polished his outsider's credentials at a packed meeting here Wednesday, criticizing American politics and suggesting he would take on the establishment should he win the nation's top office.

"We must remember that we are not Democrats or Republicans first, we are Americans first," the retired neurosurgeon said, drawing applause from a generally enthusiastic crowd in a University of New Hampshire ballroom.

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