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There are countless others talked about
-- and they, too, were on hand. New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte, South Dakota Sen. John Thune and Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell all received polite receptions. Rice, a party favorite, was buzzed about as she sat in the Romney family's private box and later addressed the delegates. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who gained national attention for his fight against his state's public employee unions and for defeating a recall effort, delivered a robust speech in which he said that Romney, like himself, understands that "people, not the government, create jobs." "Now, more than ever, we need reformers ... leaders who think more about the next generation than just the next election," Walker said. "That's what you get from Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan." Christie's blunt, brash personality was on display during his keynote address as he implored: "Everybody stand up. There's no time left to waste." South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, an Indian-American, drew hearty applause when she criticized Obama's challenge to her state's new immigration law. It requires police who have stopped someone for unrelated issues to report it if they suspect the person is in the country illegally. "If this president refuses to protect our borders, refuses to protect our citizens from the dangers of illegal immigration, then states have to take it upon ourselves," she said. Rubio was slated to introduce Romney on Thursday and gave a preview of his speech while at a salsa concert Monday night. "There's no community that understands how to grow an economy faster than Americans of Hispanic descent," Rubio said. "We're as entrepreneurial, as hardworking as any people in this country and at the end of the week it will be clear to all of America that there's only one person running for president that understands what it takes to grow the economy and that's Mitt Romney." The deep roster excites rank-and-file Republicans about the future. "I see wins, wins, wins," said Denise Graves, a delegate from Linden, Mich. Allen Alley, chairman of the Oregon Republican Party, said he was excited about hearing some of the new GOP stars that he hadn't seen before, saying, "The country will be introduced to a Republican Party that they have not been aware of."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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