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Iowa Caucus 2012: GOP Candidates Make Hard Push As Result Remains In Doubt

THOMAS BEAUMONT   12/29/11 09:28 PM ET   AP

DES MOINES, Iowa — With time running short, Republican presidential candidates Rick Santorum, Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich battled Thursday to win over a pivotal crop of undecided conservative voters. Of all the candidates, only Mitt Romney seemed to largely escape attack as he worked to win a state that long seemed out of reach until this week.

"Don't settle for what's not good enough to save the country," the newly ascendant Santorum implored Iowans at city hall in Coralville, urging voters to put conservative principles above everything else and suggesting that his rivals, and specifically Ron Paul, lacked them.

For the first time, though, the former Pennsylvania senator became a target.

"When he talks about fiscal conservatism, every now and then it leaves me scratching my head because he was a prolific earmarker," Perry, the Texas governor, said of Santorum as the day began, referring to special spending projects members of Congress seek. "He loaded up his bill with Pennsylvania pork.'"

Santorum defended the practice as part of lawmakers' constitutional role as appropriators, telling CNBC that he owed it to Pennsylvanians to bring money to the state. He said earmarking became abused and that he would support a ban on them if he were president.

Perry also slapped at Santorum in a radio ad and in a new TV commercial that lumps him in with Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Paul and says: "The fox guarding the henhouse is like asking a congressman to fix Washington: bad idea."

The maneuvering underscored the fluid – if not convoluted – state of the GOP presidential race as Tuesday's caucuses loom while cultural conservatives and evangelical Republicans, who make up the base of the electorate here, continue to be divided. That lack of unity paves the way for someone who is seen as less consistently conservative.

Five days out, public and private polling show Romney and Paul in strong contention to win the caucuses, with coalitions of support cobbled together from across the Republican political spectrum and their get-out-the-vote operations – beefed up from their failed 2008 bids – at the ready. They're the only two with the money and the organizations necessary to ensure big turnouts on Tuesday.

Three others – Santorum, Perry and Gingrich – will have to rely largely on momentum to carry supporters to precinct caucuses. Each was working to convince fickle conservatives that he alone would satisfy those who yearn for a nominee who would adhere strictly to GOP orthodoxy.

Bachmann, meanwhile, worked to convince backers that her cash-strapped campaign was not in disarray after a top supporter in Iowa abandoned her to back Paul.

After state Sen. Kent Sorenson bolted as her Iowa campaign chairman, Bachmann continued to bleed staff, losing her Iowa political director, Wes Enos, on Thursday. Some evangelical pastors have said they've urged her to quit the race.

Bachmann condemned Sorenson for quitting, and defiantly vowed to continue in the race.

"Iowans aren't told who to vote for. Iowans are independent and they're going to make their decisions," Bachmann said in Des Moines, on the last day of a 10-day tour of Iowa's 99 counties.

Ads, mostly negative, flooded television and radio. They filled mailboxes, too.

No less than five new TV ads were rolled out Thursday, with Romney, for one, releasing a 60-second, optimistic commercial promoting his vision for America and illustrating his confidence with his standing in the primary race. He was staying far from the fray and looking toward the general election.

"In the campaign to come, the American ideals of economic freedom and opportunity need a clear and unapologetic defense. And I intend to make it because I have lived it," Romney says in the commercial that includes patriotic images and scenes from his June campaign announcement in New Hampshire.

He's in the midst of a four-day trek that he hopes will seal victory here and give him momentum heading into the Jan. 10 New Hampshire primary, the closest thing to a must-win state for the former Massachusetts governor.

On the second day of his bus tour, Romney turned out big crowds at stops in northern and eastern Iowa, focusing on more populous areas and counties he won four years ago.

"We have a choice in this coming election of what kind of America we're going to have," Romney said at J's Home Cooking in Cedar Falls, before meeting a crowd of 500 in Mason City. "It's not just about replacing a president. It's about saving the soul of America."

He didn't acknowledge his rivals but an outside group aligned with him rolled out a new ad against Gingrich that asks, "Haven't we had enough mistakes?" and notes the former House speaker's past admissions of judgment lapses.

As Romney sailed above it all, the fight raged among his rivals elsewhere in the state, where all six candidates competing in the caucuses are spending almost all their time for the next five days.

Looking to capitalize on his burst of support in new polls, Santorum made a play for tea party backers lining up behind Paul by arguing that the Texas congressman is longer on promising sweeping change than enacting it. "The guy has passed one bill in 20 years. What makes you think he can do any of these things?" Santorum said.

He added: "We need someone who has the bold, sharp contrast not just to win the election but govern the country, not somebody who is just a little better."

And, Bachmann castigated Paul's opposition to military intervention in Iran as "dangerous." She also suggested that his opposition to the federal war on drugs amounted to supporting the legalization of cocaine and heroin.

Perry focused his criticism on all the others on the right, saying: "There are other conservatives in this contest. I readily agree. But their records don't always square with the rhetoric." And, as he argued that he was the only true outsider in the race, Perry noted that four of his rivals – Gingrich, Paul, Santorum and Bachmann – have a combined 63 years of experience in Washington.

"I am asking you to vote your conservative values," Perry implored.

The closest anyone got to criticizing Romney directly was when Perry was asked in Cedar Rapids about family dynasties and cited, among other families, the Romneys.

In response, Perry mentioned his own modest upbringing and said: "I'm glad you gave me the opportunity to reflect my differences with Mitt."

The worst Romney faced from his rivals were veiled shots.

Santorum said Republicans must draw a clear contrast with Obama, rather than nominate a Republican with moderate tendencies out of political expedience.

"We need someone who has the bold, sharp contrasts, not just to win the election but to govern the country. Not just someone who is a little bit better," Santorum told supporters.

Perry was asked about family dynasties and the questioner cited, among other families, the Romneys. Perry stopped short of criticizing Romney's privileged upbringing. He mentioned his own humble beginning in small-town Texas before adding: "I'm glad you gave me the opportunity to reflect my differences with Mitt."

Gingrich, for his part, spent the day trying to wrap himself in President Ronald Reagan's cloak, announcing the backing of the late president's son, Michael, and, a day earlier, support from Reagan economic adviser Arthur Laffer.

Even as the polls show him sliding, Gingrich projected an upbeat image.

"The strategy of focusing on jobs and economic growth, staying positive and being pretty relentless in answering questions at every meeting is working," he insisted.

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott, Mike Glover, Kasie Hunt, Brian Bakst and Shannon McCaffrey contributed to this report.

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DES MOINES, Iowa — With time running short, Republican presidential candidates Rick Santorum, Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich battled Thursday to win over a pivotal crop of undecided conservative v...
DES MOINES, Iowa — With time running short, Republican presidential candidates Rick Santorum, Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich battled Thursday to win over a pivotal crop of undecided conservative v...
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12:03 AM on 12/30/2011
MR SANTORUM SAYS TO DRAW A CLEAR LINE BETWEEN PRESIDENT OBAMA AND REPUBLICANS............HOW? THEY ARE ALL OBVIOUSLY FOR THEMSELVES AND THE RICH AND SUPER RICH AND THE BANKS AND CORPS. THEY ALL SAY THEY ARE CHRISTIANS AND STAND FOR PROLIFE YET THEY TURN RIGHT AROUND AND IF OUR CITIZENS DROP DEAD FROM NO INS TO GET MEDICAL CARE BECAUSE THEY CANNOT AFFORD IT AND I KNOW. I INS SHOPPED AND THE COVERAGE WOULD NOT ALLOW ME TO GET ANY MED CARE THAT I REALLY NEEDED. IT WAS SUCH A HIGH PREMIUM AND THE CO PAY AND I WAS LAID OFF AND UNEMPLOYED. I WAS SO SICK WITH PNEUMONIA AND OTHER ISSUES I ALMOST DIED. 49 OK TO DIE? IS THAT HOW THEY ARE GOING TO CUT BY DENYING PEOPLE ANY MEDICAL CARE AND UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS AND FOOD STAMPS WHICH IS ONLY 130 FOR ONE PERSON FOR THE ENTIRE MONTH AND YOU CANNOT BUT ANY TOOTHPASTE OR TOILET TISSUE OR SOAP WITH IT. C;'MON GET THE TRUTH NOT THE FACTS THE TRUTH. THE BIG SHOTS LIKE ROMNEY AND HUNTSMEN OUTSOURCED OUR JOBS AND THEY SHOULD NOT BE PERMITTED TO RUN AND THEY SHOULD LOSE THEIR CITIZENSHIP THEY ARE ILLEGALS NOW. THEY LAID OFF THOUSANDS AND CLOSED COMPANIES ALL FOR CHEAP LABOR AND PROFIT AND BEING RICH IS NOT ENOUGH THEY HAVE TO BE GROTESQUE.
12:24 AM on 12/30/2011
WHY IS THE SALARIES OF ALL THE POLITICIANS NOT CUT? THE CUTS START FROM THE TOP DOWN NOT THE BOTTOM UP. THERE IS NOTHING LEFT TO TAKE FROM THE BOTTOM EXCEPT OUR LIFE. WHICH THEY ARE ALL FORIF AMERICANS DROP DEAD IN THE ST FROM NO MEDICAL CARE AND NO FOOD OR SHELTER AS LONG AS THEY ARE FILTHY RICH SO RICH IT IS DISGUSTINGL...........AND THE BIG MEGA CHURCHES IN THIS COUNTRY ARE THEY PAYING TAXES. JESUS WHOM THEY SAY THEY SERVE AND FOLLOW TOLD THEM TO PAY THEIR TAXES AND HE PAID PETERS FOR THEM. SO I ASK IF THEY ARE PAYING TAXES AND WHY DO THE RICH HAVE TO HAVE FIVE AND MORE MULTI MILLION DOLLAR HOMES ETC.? WHY AREN'T THEY PAYING AT MIN 25 PERCENT TAXES THEY ARE NOT THE JOB CREATORS THEY OUTSOURCED OUR JOBS AND TOOK THEIR BUSINESSES OVR SEAS SO THEY SHOULD LOSE THEIR CITIZENSHIP AND SHOULD NOT BE ABLE TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT. JESUS ALSO WALKED EVERYWHERE HE WENT. HOW COME THEY HAVE TO HAVE PRIVET JETS AND EXPENSE ACCTS ETC., ALL OFF THE TAX PAYERS AND THE MIDDLE CLASS AND POOR ARE THE ONES PAYING THE TAXES AND HOW DARE THEY USE EDUCATION LIKE ROMNEY. HE SAID ONLY THE BEST AND BRIGHTE.ST REALLY. HITLER HAD A FIVE BETA CAPA AND WAS A MASS MURDERER AND RACIST HE HATED THE JEWISH PEOPLE AND THE DISABLED AND POOR AND UNEDUCATED ? DOES THAT SOUND FAMILAR?
08:46 PM on 12/29/2011
He is very very crazed. There is a difference.
06:14 PM on 12/29/2011
Romney's using that religionist language too, claiming his campaign is about "saving the soul of America." If these candidates want to 'save America's soul,' they sure don't belong in the White House; let them join a church, become a pastor or writer or lecturer but above all, not try to corrupt our Presidential office by using it for their own religionist purposes.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olderthan
05:36 PM on 12/29/2011
Soon the GOP will take it to another state and it will become "strange." It is the GOP that is "downright strange."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kinogod
word farmer
04:58 PM on 12/29/2011
Happy? He must have found toilet paper to clean up his drippins.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seven Teenatheart
Tolerance, peace, and sanity. Be your own person.
04:37 PM on 12/29/2011
I think it started out "strange", moved to "bizarre", passed "circus" and went into "that nightmare you want to forget as soon as possible" territory ages ago....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Evilweasel
04:30 PM on 12/29/2011
Santorum is really, really happy. There was a time when happy=gay. Therefore, one could accurately state that Santorum is really gay! Bet he hates that!
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busterggi
I'm a Sally Randian
04:10 PM on 12/29/2011
Valse triste
03:15 PM on 12/29/2011
Vanity and reality bites
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PeterinSydney
02:14 PM on 12/29/2011
Now how about an even better suggestion -- both Bachmann and Santorum quit for the good of America and the world.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gurukalehuru
cwtc7
01:51 PM on 12/29/2011
It seems to me the "Romney surge" is pretty much totally illusory. He spends a bunch on TV ads, adds a few people out working the streets to drum up the big crowds, whose size is then exaggerated by the press (note this fawning article), racks up the big endorsements because the pros want him, that's true, and has a good poll or two.
But when the people from the neighborhood get together in a room and talk; the Paul supporters, the Santorum supporters, even the Bachmann and Perry supporters will all have something to say. The name Buddy Roemer might pop up. Romney's supporters will actually be forced to say why they want Romney, and I doubt they will be convincing.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gurukalehuru
cwtc7
01:41 PM on 12/29/2011
The Iowa State Fairground is not in Ames. Any reporter can screw up a little detail like that, I just thought I'd let you know.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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MikeElPaso
I have chosen to opt out of the Badges prog
01:38 PM on 12/29/2011
"Primary Fight Becomes Downright Strange"

"becomes"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Querent
I just had to say that.
01:30 PM on 12/29/2011
Why mess around, evangelicals? Why not ask both of them to quit?
01:44 PM on 12/29/2011
A two-for
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Jeffin90019
Independent, occasional absolutist
01:17 PM on 12/29/2011
I cannot imagine a single one of these GOP candidates as president of the United States. Not a single one. I'll take a flawed but serious president over these cartoon candidates every time. When the GOP returns to being a serious party, maybe the voters will return. Until then, the Republican Evangelical Faith deserves a long political exile for their dastardly behavior over the past three years.