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Mitt Romney To Skip Iowa, Florida Straw Polls

Mitt Romney Iowa Straw Poll

THOMAS BEAUMONT   06/ 9/11 09:51 PM ET   AP

DES MOINES, Iowa — Presidential candidate Mitt Romney does not plan to compete in the Iowa Republican straw poll in August, an event he spent more than $1 million to win four years ago but that would divert time and money from a 2012 campaign designed to present him as a national candidate, aides confirmed to The Associated Press on Thursday.

The decision is a measure of how different a Romney 2012 campaign would be from 2008. It is also further evidence that the non-binding contests, of which Iowa's is the best-known and highest profile, are seen as optional for better-known candidates.

"It's a gamble that you put a lot of resources behind and it's not a predictor of who wins the caucuses. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it's not," said Charlie Black, a 30-year Republican presidential campaign strategist who advised John McCain's 2008 effort. "It's an opportunity for underdogs. It's a trap for front-runners."

Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, also is not planning to compete in any other of the many nonbinding straw polls in early nominating states, including Michigan or Florida. The deadline to register delegates for the Florida straw poll in September is Friday.

"We respect the straw poll process. In the last presidential campaign we were both strengthened as an organization and learned some important lessons by participating in them," Romney campaign spokesman Matt Rhoades said in a written statement provided to the AP. "This time we will focus our energies and resources on winning primaries and caucuses."

Romney has said he will campaign in Iowa, where he finished second in the 2008 caucuses. He visited Iowa last month, reconnecting with elements of the statewide network he built over the course of a year and with roughly $10 million in 2007. Romney aides also confirmed Thursday that he will participate in the Fox News Channel debate in Iowa scheduled two days before the Aug. 13 straw poll in Ames.

But deciding not to spend money on straw polls, an effort in Iowa that cost his campaign $1.5 million in 2007, is in line with what advisers have said will be a more disciplined Romney campaign, focused on winning the nomination with an economic message and allocating campaign dollars for the long haul.

"The campaign is making a smart decision to not compete in the upcoming series of straw polls," Brian Kennedy, Romney's Iowa steering committee chairman and a former state GOP chairman, said in a statement. "Mitt's focus is on winning the nomination, not the straw polls."

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a national GOP poll leader in early 2007, opted not to compete in the Iowa straw poll after reconsidering his stake in the caucuses, where his moderate social positions clashed with the state's evangelical, conservative base. McCain, who also led in early 2007 GOP national polls, opted out as well, although the decision involved the Arizona senator's shaky campaign finances.

Romney's decision could raise expectations for former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who has arrayed a robust and seasoned Iowa campaign staff, including Romney's 2007 straw poll planner. Pawlenty must win or do very well in the caucuses to have a chance at the nomination. Pawlenty's campaign affirmed his plan to compete in the Iowa straw poll after Romney's decision was announced.

"There are many, many presidential candidates that need to demonstrate organizational strength and support in Iowa, and the straw poll will be the place to do it," Iowa Republican Party Chairman Matt Strawn said.

Iowa's straw poll is the best-known of the many non-binding popularity contests held in early-nominating states. Iowa's has grown in 30 years from a small event of about 1,400 to a pre-caucus summer festival that draws thousands of participants and a contingent of national media to Iowa State University's Hilton Coliseum.

Straw polls can create buzz for little-known candidates, fuel fundraising efforts and stir up activists in early-voting states, including in South Carolina, which is known for a series of county-level GOP straw polls.

Critics say the events are stacked toward well-funded campaigns that can afford to buy blocs of tickets and ferry their supporters to the events.

Iowa Republican Party officials have pushed back against criticisms that its event is a money grab by the Iowa Republican Party. Candidates bid thousands of dollars for plots on the coliseum grounds to erect tents to feed and entertain supporters. The 2007 straw poll cost the state GOP roughly $600,000. Party officials also have lowered the ticket price by $5 to $30 since 2007.

"The notion that the straw poll is seven-figure windfall to the Republican Party of Iowa is simply not accurate. We hope to generate income and have money left over and organize for 2012," Strawn said.

Iowa's has had the effect of stamping front-runners and drive up expectations, as they did for George W. Bush with his victory at Ames in August 1999; likewise with Romney after his all-out effort in 2007.

But Iowa's straw poll also can hobble a candidate who does not meet expectations, as it did for then-Kansas Sen. Sam Brownback and former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson in 2007. And only twice in the four Iowa straw polls since the meager 1979 turnout has the eventual caucus winner won.

Mike DuHaime, who managed Giuliani's campaign, said other candidates need more than Romney does the lift a straw poll victory can create.

"It can help create the perception of a serious, national candidate. Most people already believe that about Gov. Romney," said DuHaime. "Why go out and spend a lot of money for something that doesn't carry with it something tangible?"

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DES MOINES, Iowa — Presidential candidate Mitt Romney does not plan to compete in the Iowa Republican straw poll in August, an event he spent more than $1 million to win four years ago but that ...
DES MOINES, Iowa — Presidential candidate Mitt Romney does not plan to compete in the Iowa Republican straw poll in August, an event he spent more than $1 million to win four years ago but that ...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Godweiser 07:34 AM on 06/10/2011
The Iowa Caucus doesn't seem to be a very good predictor and can actually make a front-running candidate look bad. I suppose it's a balancing act, but the thing is...Palin or Bachmann or some other twisted piece of work would probably beat Romney at these polls because she's more popular with the freakjobs that vote at them.

That is probably the unvarnished version of the reasoning for declining to  Read More...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
03:15 PM on 06/11/2011
Good thinking on Romney's part. The straw polls only cater to the most extreme side of the party. Basically to win the poll the candidates have to race to the right. Romney can make a niche for himself as a moderate candidate with the ability to beat Obama in the general election.
02:23 PM on 06/11/2011
In regards to Iowa and also New Hampshire early voting for President, the NYT did an article as why these two states are atypical and don't address our nations issues. I.E., economic development and everyday working families.

While expensive to start a campaign in a state with a diverse population with urban and suburban center and would focus the national debate in a very different way.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/01/business/economy/01leonhardt.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=2016%20presidential%20primaries%20&st=cse
11:41 AM on 06/11/2011
Romney, using the MA health care system as plug, has, along with the MA KKK (Kennedy, Kerry Klan) , ransacked the pockets of thousands of MA residents in the lower income class with his health care! One of the biggest methods of 'filling their own already fat bank accounts' was limiting the number of insurance carriers by 'kickbacks' and promises to these carriers of premiums. Go to the Mass.gov website and click on the list of carriers as though you were trying to get Insurance in MA, and over and over you get the same response.."we don't carry insurance in this state"!!!!! Lower middle class people who are already strapped with food, clothing and shelter costs - many who have to work 2 and even 3 jobs just to make ends meet are also strapped with having to make insurance premium payments on top of everything else!!! And if the payments are not made, they are taken from the individuals 'badly needed tax refund'!!!! A high price to pay for one's constitutional right to choose whether or not to purchase a private sector product being VIOLATED!!!!!
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eyeforeye42
Do the right thing for the right reason
05:02 AM on 06/11/2011
Oh. I thought he would bail like the others! He doesn't need Iowa or for that matter any of the midwest states. He just needs the right states and to heck with the rest of you non believers in angel Moron-I.
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srivers
"Honesty is the best politics." - Stan Laurel
10:47 PM on 06/10/2011
A Pat Oliphant Cartoon:

http://synd.imgsrv.uclick.com/comics/po/2011/po110610.gif
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thanks4Watching
Daily dose of cynicism
06:46 PM on 06/10/2011
No offense to Mormons, but I really can't see the more hardcore social conservatives in the GOP getting behind a Mormon candidate.

I'd love to be proven wrong, though. I'd personally love to see Mitt Romney be the GOP candidate, he's clearly much more sane than Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain, and their ilk.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ObamAtomic
03:04 PM on 06/10/2011
He need to skip all states altogether.
03:03 PM on 06/10/2011
He can afford to lose Iowa, but he needs Florida.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Le Facteur 99
Jeremiah was right.
02:23 PM on 06/10/2011
Is he serious? Why not skip SC too, since he has no chance there.
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christopherflynn
The wreligious wright is always rong...
02:23 PM on 06/10/2011
that's called showing some semblance of intelligence...He doesn't stand a chance with the rr wing zealots...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Progress08
I've come to regard you as people I've met
01:49 PM on 06/10/2011
Skipping Iowa may not be smart. Without Huckster running Iowa is wide open.
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christopherflynn
The wreligious wright is always rong...
02:26 PM on 06/10/2011
coming from the great state of IA, he could never run it...I know what you meant, I'm making a play on the missed punctuation... ;-) (and your microbio is exemplary...already fanned ya)
chris
Grunty1
Micro-bio this
01:31 PM on 06/10/2011
Good idea, Romney. That strategy worked out so well for Rudy last time around...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Progress08
I've come to regard you as people I've met
01:51 PM on 06/10/2011
I live in Des Moines and Rudy's HQ last time was in a crappy little strip mall way off the beaten path. They only chose it b/c it's fairly close to the freeway and he could hit and run pretty easily if he wanted to. Didn't matter though since he failed miserably. If he runs again I'll pay attention to where he's locating.
01:28 PM on 06/10/2011
"If you're going to participate in the Iowa process, then you better get in the straw poll."
-- Mitt Romney, quoted by Politico, four years ago.

"If you're going to lose in the Iowa process, then you better skip the straw poll."
Mitt Romney 6/09/11
01:08 PM on 06/10/2011
Romney is serious judging from the volume of responses any headline with his name generates. He obviously does not want evangelicals to define early on his chances - smart - and the question is to what degree it will matter later.
American politics is recently hijacked by lack of reason - that judging for example by the noise TP is able to raise, and by this standard he is not the right candidate no matter what pretzel contortions and figures of speech he tries.
But we are optimistic about the future, are we not. After all we will not run off the cliff on own will. or will we?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laserstain
01:00 PM on 06/10/2011
Because he is not a Conservative. He is a squishy progressive just like Bush was and Obama is. He might be the type of Progressive most Democrats want, but he is a Progressive.

The only two Conservatives we have in the GOP race are Gary Johnson and Ron Paul. They are for Individual Rights and Liberty. Not central control of people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lawlibrarian
Happiness is a warm puppy
01:11 PM on 06/10/2011
Bush was a PROGRESSIVE???? WHAT are you SMOKING????? Progressivism is a political attitude favoring or advocating changes or reform through governmental action. Shrub didn't try to reform a blessed thing in this country, which is why we are in the economic catastrophe we are!!!! No oversite on business, housing, banks or the environment. President Obama is kept from being as Progressive as we need by the Party of NO. No ideas, no jobs, no houses....nothing that could actually HELP the American people!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laserstain
01:28 PM on 06/10/2011
"?Progressiv­ism is a political attitude favoring or advocating changes or reform through government­al action"

Yep, thats exactly what Bush was. Thats what progressive is. Its central control by government action. It is what gave us the war on drugs, prohibition of booze, Eugenics and every other form of social control over our daily lives. The ills of the early 20th century were all Progressive. President Wilson and his racism in Government was in the name of Progressiveness. Obama is being a great Progressive, are you kidding me. You just dont like the type of progressive he is. To get rid of our Drug laws is Conservative. You live in a 1984 world like most Dems and Republicans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laserstain
01:30 PM on 06/10/2011
Bush almost doubled the size of Govenment and Government spending on "Social Issues" He was the largest contributor of AIDS spending in the 3rd world, He destroyed out housing market by making sure "Everyone can get a home" weather they have the money or not.

Bush was not a Conservative. The only two Conservatives we have in the GOP race are Ron Paul and Gary Johnson.
Grunty1
Micro-bio this
01:32 PM on 06/10/2011
Sure think, Bucko. Come back when you've stopped lying to yourself. Dubya was the proto-Rushpublican. He did nothing but follow your party ideology to the letter.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
laserstain
01:40 PM on 06/10/2011
No, according to your scale where is JFK? JFK was to the right of Ray-gun. Bush was to the left of Clinton. You guys just get filled with hate and do not look at issues of the people in office. Bush was a big social spender, just not on the stuff you wanted him to spend money on. I want zero social spending. That is not the role of our federal government, thats the role of our city and state governments.