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Republican Presidential Field Remains Crowded With Second-Tier Candidates

Republican Presidential Candidates 2012

By MIKE GLOVER   11/25/11 06:33 AM ET   AP

DES MOINES, Iowa -- They are barely blips in presidential polls and their campaign cash is scarce. Some are running on empty, fueled mainly by the exposure that comes with the blizzard of televised debates in this election cycle and interviews they eagerly grant to skeptical reporters.

Yet the second-tier candidates for the Republican presidential nomination soldier on. They argue that the race is far from over and that anything can happen with polls showing a wide-open race in Iowa five weeks before the Jan. 3 caucuses.

Former Sen. Rick Santorum is typical when he resists the conventional wisdom that only candidates with a lot of cash and a big campaign can win.

"I feel like I'm doing what I'm supposed to be doing and I feel like I'm making a difference in the race," said Santorum, who barely registers in state surveys despite having campaigned in Iowa for more than a year. "I absolutely believe our time will come and we'll have the opportunity to have the spotlight turned on us."

Santorum, who represented Pennsylvania in Congress for 16 years, frankly acknowledges the possibility of a different outcome.

"If it doesn't, you know, it doesn't," he said.

Even more than energy and determination, also-ran candidates rely on particular issues, free media and prospects for the future to drive them to keep their small-scale operations going.

With polls and money putting candidates like Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich and Herman Cain atop the field of Republican rivals, there's a crop of others likely to remain in the race until voters have their say. One force in that dynamic is the fluidity of this year's contest.

Rep. Michele Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman, was among the many candidates who surged when they got into the race but then plummeted in the polls. She's gotten feistier as her fortunes have sagged.

"I guarantee you, with everything within my being, I have the backbone," Bachmann said. "I'll put my backbone up against any other candidate in the race."

That includes Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who is adamant that he's not giving up, even as his campaign flails and his once-flush bank account suffers following a series of debate missteps that has some of his fundraisers questioning his viability. He, like Bachmann, Santorum and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, are barely blips in many surveys.

Although they don't seem to be catching fire, it turns out that the nomination itself is not the only prize to be had by seeking a presidential nomination.

Rep. Ron Paul's hard-core libertarian views energize a small but loyal base. Santorum uses his platform to hammer his hard-core anti-abortion stance. Bachmann just released a book whose sales could see a boost in the run-up to the Iowa caucuses.

And history shows that future leadership posts – and presidential runs – can be in the offing.

Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa waged a long-shot bid for the Democratic nomination in 1992, getting forced out after the early primaries. He endorsed candidate Bill Clinton, kept his seat in the Senate and became an influential voice in the Clinton White House.

Romney lost his first presidential bid in 2008 but used that experience to build a network of political and financial supporters serving him well in this election cycle.

There are other reasons too to press ahead when chances of victory seem slim, not the least of which is how quickly politics can change.

Just ask Gingrich. The former House speaker was a footnote in the race this summer after his campaign imploded. Now, as Iowa voters give him a second look, he's enjoying a rise in state and national polls. And he reports that money and manpower are now flowing his way.

It's not unusual for second-tier candidates to stick around long after they have fallen out of favor with voters and donors alike. The structure of the race in Iowa and other early voting states like New Hampshire and South Carolina is designed to make it possible for them to keep going because the states are relatively cheap places to campaign and they value hand-to-hand campaigning over pricy TV ads.

"In Iowa, you can sleep on people's couches and hang on for a long time with very little money," Republican strategist Rich Galen said. "You can live off the land in Iowa. You can't do that in Florida."

The nature of the politics of the first three states to vote also encourages longshot candidates because the contests are dominated in both parties by hard-core activists more interested in political purity than poll numbers.

Steve Scheffler, who heads the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition, notes that very few people in Iowa have made firm decisions on whom to support, meaning the race could be anyone's to win.

"There's enough fluidness in the race and enough people out there who are not entrenched in stone," Scheffler said. "The verdict is still out there."

Thus, so too are the second-tier candidates.

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DES MOINES, Iowa -- They are barely blips in presidential polls and their campaign cash is scarce. Some are running on empty, fueled mainly by the exposure that comes with the blizzard of televised de...
DES MOINES, Iowa -- They are barely blips in presidential polls and their campaign cash is scarce. Some are running on empty, fueled mainly by the exposure that comes with the blizzard of televised de...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Hillbilly49 12:51 PM on 11/25/2011
WHAT HAVE CONSERVATIVES BEEN IN FAVOR OF ?


Conservatives were in favor of:

England during the Revolutionary War.

human beings held in the bondage of slavery.

women being denied the right to vote in America.

prohibiting the use of beer and alcohol consumption by Americans.

restricting the use of private and public drinking  Read More...

06:27 AM on 11/29/2011
"Sorry guys! Paul is the only person who will actually CHANGE things."

Really? If true, that would be tragic.The current life expectancy in America is 77 years.Ron Paul is already 76.He's teetering over the chasm.Ronald Reagan was the oldest person to serve as President taking office at the age of 69. After leaving office at 78 he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's. Thirteen Presidents were dead before getting to Paul's age. And that's not counting Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley or Kennedy. He hasn't got enough energy, or strength left, to hold his hand over his own heart. And its a grueling job. He needs a warm blanket, a glass of cocoa and a t.v. guide. As for CHANGE, if Paul's elected the person in charge of CHANGE will be a visiting nurse.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gypsysailor
Things that might have been never were.
12:19 AM on 11/28/2011
Now there is a house chock full of nuts.
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
12:12 AM on 11/28/2011
In the US of A.

Being a "celebrity" pays a whole lot better than being a politician.

(Case in point..............Sarah Palin, $125,000 a year as Governor of Alaska, $100,000 an engagement as a public speaker, she didn't "quit" her job, she got herself a promotion).

It ain't about votes, or serving the American electorate...................it's about money.
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drwtsn
Could I please get an upgrade to a macro-bio?
11:03 PM on 11/27/2011
Santorum: "I absolutely believe our time will come and we'll have the opportunity to have the spotlight turned on us." --- August 19, 2013 through September 2, 2013, right after he comes out of the closet.

And Bachmann definitely has the backbone to match any of the other candidates. What she's missing is what most people have above the top of their backbone.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CroatianCritter
is keeping people honest
09:09 PM on 11/27/2011
Once again, this piece is filled with propaganda. See this about Ron Paul's chances.

http://dailycaller.com/2011/11/15/ron-pauls-19-percent-in-iowa-may-indicate-a-path-to-the-nomination/

His chances are increasing daily. His problem is that if he starts winning this nomination, the Republican party is likely to split (Due to the Christian right, pro-Israeli, endless war wing known as the neo-cons). For all those who think voting for Paul is a mistake, then can you answer the question this reporter poses in THE ATLANTIC.

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/11/why-do-liberals-keep-sanitizing-the-obama-story/248890/

Obama has been Bush's third term. There is no other way to put it. Sorry guys! Paul is the only person who will actually CHANGE things.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seymourhiney
11:21 AM on 11/28/2011
Bin Laden changed things.
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Almondo
Agnostic Realist Tradevknaught
07:26 PM on 11/27/2011
I would think they could call the 0% unGov and have her slip them some cash on the down low.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truthocentric
Greetings Earthlings
04:45 PM on 11/27/2011
All I can say is that we'd better start checking those "faulty" Diebold voting machines now, because these folks aren't up to the challenge.
03:38 PM on 11/27/2011
I don't see why anybody would run, the next few years look like the America as we knew it comes to an end. We will be broke and all hell will brake loose as the people will surely feel the effects. Seems like all of the east is getting tired of our being there and throwing our influence around. Now include Russia.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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02:50 PM on 11/27/2011
All Clowns.
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Spadreisle
OBAMA 2012! My Prez gots game!
02:49 PM on 11/27/2011
The party that has to take on an 18-year old high school student, needs to change its colors from red to chicken yellow!
Karma2U
Blessed are the Peacemakers
12:13 PM on 11/27/2011
The deck is stacked with jokers.
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Almondo
Agnostic Realist Tradevknaught
07:27 PM on 11/27/2011
Nah, it is full of "discard this card" cards.
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jobscabin
Starry Eyed Liberal King
08:42 AM on 11/27/2011
The Republican Party has an uncanny ability to turn any of these candidates into a front runner for a month or two. How gullible are their voters? Bachman had mid twenties ratings when the Party said so; then Perry got to the thirties when the Party shifted gears; then Cain surged when theParty said "we'll give him a try"; now Kingwretch is back as the Party second fiddle and the Republican voters have him in the mid-twenties. Very similar to the Bolsheviks and their Party-line candidate.

50 million voters who are led by their nose-rings, afraid to think for themselves.
Views from the Middle
Politicians seem to only listen to the extremes
08:31 AM on 11/27/2011
Let's be honest. The 2nd-tier candidates are out there to get publicity for a book or a job or some personal agenda. They are abusing the system and the American tax payers.
07:29 AM on 11/27/2011
Comedy Central (aka GOP Presidential Race) has been a little slow because of Thanksgiving. I look forward to what they have in store for us this coming week.
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07:42 AM on 11/27/2011
The next Roast (debate) is Dec. 10.
11:16 AM on 11/27/2011
Thanks, I'll be tuned in ;)
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SpitfireMK9
I'm an Itchybiscuit.
07:00 AM on 11/27/2011
A wise person once said that: 'When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail'. Welcome to the line-up of Republican 'hammers' - view the election of a Republican President as the 'nail'. I'm certain sure these lot ain't gonna 'nail it'.