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Rick Santorum, Mitt Romney Attack Obama Campaigning Ahead Of New Hampshire Primary

Rick Santorum Mitt Romney

DAVID ESPO and STEVE PEOPLES   01/ 5/12 10:29 PM ET   AP

MANCHESTER, N.H. — Mitt Romney's Republican presidential rivals repeatedly attacked him as a candidate of the status quo and a timid, less-than-reliable conservative Thursday as they simultaneously sought to slow his campaign momentum and personally audition for the role of conservative rival-in-chief.

"Don't settle for less than America needs," said Rick Santorum, eager to capitalize on his second-place finish behind the former Massachusetts governor in this week's Iowa caucuses, a scant eight votes off the pace.

A heavy favorite to win New Hampshire's primary next Tuesday, Romney all but ignored his Republican rivals as he campaigned in two states. Instead, he criticized President Barack Obama as a "crony capitalist. He's a job killer."

Without saying so, the rest of the field appeared to share a common campaign objective – hold down Romney's vote totals in New Hampshire, then knock him off stride 11 days later in South Carolina, the first Southern primary of the year.

Romney benefited handsomely from having several rivals split the vote in Iowa, where his winner's share was roughly 25 percent.

"Gradually you are going to see we have a difference of opinion about which will be the last conservative standing," former House Speaker Newt Gingrich told reporters as he campaigned in New Hampshire. "But I think you'll eventually come down to one conservative and Gov. Romney and he'll continue to get 25 percent."

Also vying to emerge as Romney's chief rival were Texas Rep. Ron Paul and former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, while Texas Gov. Rick Perry awaited South Carolina.

"We can't afford to have a status quo president," Huntsman said in Durham, N.H. "We can't afford to have a coronation for president."

Huntsman made hay out of winning the endorsement of The Boston Globe. It was the second time Massachusetts' largest newspaper had snubbed Romney ahead of the New Hampshire primary.

Gingrich unveiled a new television commercial aimed at voters in New Hampshire and South Carolina that cited one review of Romney's jobs program as timid and nearly identical in part to the president's.

"Timid won't create jobs. And timid certainly won't defeat Barack Obama," the ad said.

Ironically, in a year in which polls show the economy is overwhelmingly the top issue for voters, the first two contests are in states with low joblessness – 5.7 percent in Iowa and 5.4 percent in New Hampshire.

That all changes a week later.

South Carolina's unemployment was 9.9 percent in November, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, worse than 41 other states and more than a full percentage point higher than the national average.

Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, managed to criticize Romney and most of the other Republicans in the race in the space of a few sentences.

"I've never been for government-run health care," he said in a swipe at both Romney and Gingrich. "I'm not for no regulation, I'm not a libertarian," he added, a jab at Paul.

Yet he also fielded pointed questions from his audiences – something that he said happened regularly in Iowa, when he campaigned with little or no media coverage for months.

In Tilton, N.H., he was pressed for his views on gun control, given his endorsement in an earlier campaign for former Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter, who favored restrictions. Santorum responded that he is committed to the rights of gun owners.

Later, in an appearance before college students in Concord, he was asked about his opposition to same-sex marriage, which is legal in New Hampshire. "So anyone can marry anyone else?" Santorum said, swiftly turning the conversation to polygamy. "So anyone can marry several people?"

The crowd objected and tried to talk over him.

"Stop. This is not participatory. We're not going to do this. I'm going to ask the question," Santorum said, growing testy.

Santorum's aides say he has raised $2 million on the strength of his Iowa showing. The campaign sought to show momentum by announcing the support of a New Hampshire tea party leader and Catholicvote.org, an online organization, as well as another state senator and the chair of the conservative think tank Cornerstone.

"Our mission here is to show that we're the conservative alternative to Mitt Romney," Santorum said, virtually conceding he wouldn't be able to close a yawning New Hampshire gap in the polls before next Tuesday.

Gingrich sought to set a high bar for Romney. "It's probably one of his three best states, but we'll see whether he gets a majority here," he said.

In the ebb and flow of the campaign, one-time national front-runner Gingrich was hoping to reverse a slide that landed him in fourth place in Iowa. Santorum is ascendant, and Huntsman is hoping to make a statement after skipping Iowa to concentrate on New Hampshire.

Paul, somewhat curiously, was absent, after a third-place finish in Iowa. He is scheduled to arrive in New Hampshire on Friday, in time to campaign and participate in a pair of weekend debates.

Perry, who finished fifth in Iowa, is bypassing New Hampshire to try and resurrect his chances in South Carolina.

Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann dropped out after a last-place showing in Iowa, and her erstwhile rivals quickly contacted her supporters in South Carolina, hoping to enlist them in a new cause.

Her campaign manager there, state Sen. Lee Bright, said he has been contacted by aides to Huntsman and Santorum but intends to remain neutral for the time being.

Romney's strengths in New Hampshire include a familiarity that comes with having served as governor of next-door Massachusetts for four years. He also campaigned in the state in 2008, when he made his first run for the White House.

A relative newcomer on the national stage then, he lost to Sen. John McCain, who won the GOP nomination.

Now, four years later, McCain is campaigning for him, as is South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

In a television ad launched in South Carolina, Romney criticized the Obama administration for bypassing the Senate to appoint three new members of the National Labor Relations Board. He said the move was part of a policy that affects the economy "based not upon what's right for the American worker, but instead, what's right for their politics."

Gingrich, too, slapped Obama on the subject, and urged Congress to defund the agency.

The NLRB was at the center of a recent controversy in South Carolina when it filed a lawsuit accusing Boeing of building a non-union plant in the state for construction of its 737 airplane to retaliate against past Machinists union strikes at a factory in Washington state.

The lawsuit was dropped after the company and union agreed on a new contract.

___

Espo reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Brian Bakst in St. Paul, Minn.; Philip Elliott, Kasie Hunt, Shannon McCaffrey and Holly Ramer in New Hampshire; Jim Davenport in Columbia, S.C.; and Beth Fouhy in New York contributed to this report.

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MANCHESTER, N.H. — Mitt Romney's Republican presidential rivals repeatedly attacked him as a candidate of the status quo and a timid, less-than-reliable conservative Thursday as they simultaneou...
MANCHESTER, N.H. — Mitt Romney's Republican presidential rivals repeatedly attacked him as a candidate of the status quo and a timid, less-than-reliable conservative Thursday as they simultaneou...
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Tejascc
So Blue in a Red State
02:11 PM on 01/05/2012
"Rick Santorum, Mitt Romney Attack Obama Campaigning Ahead Of New Hampshire Primary"

Wondered when it would start. The old Obama bashing ploy. Well, as long as they keep their facts straight it will be great. Oooh, facts. My mistake. Facts and truth are of little value to the republican party. Facts and truth are merely stumbling blocks and will not get Santorum or Romney elected.
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redhead55
01:49 PM on 01/05/2012
"Washington Monthly asked a group of distinguished journalists and scholars to think through the likely ramifications of a GOP victory in November. Here’s what they conclude:

* David Weigel reports that the Tea Party will control the agenda regardless of which Republican wins the nomination.

* Norman Ornstein and Thomas Mann predict that there’s a “better-than-even chance” that the Senate filibuster will be destroyed.

* David Roberts shows that the GOP won’t eliminate the EPA, but will permanently cripple it.

* Harold Pollack disabuses liberals of the hope that health care reform can survive a Republican presidency.

* Dahlia Lithwick writes that one more round of judicial appointments by a Republican president will lead to a generation of anti-government rulings no future Democrat can undo.

Plus: Jonathan Bernstein on why campaign promises matter; Michael Konczal on the end of Dodd-Frank; James Traub on the GOP’s “more enemies, fewer friends” doctrine; and Paul Glastris on why, this time, conservative anti-government aspirations will be fulfilled."
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ceeenbee
01:07 PM on 01/05/2012
I love how these guys, who each got a whopping 1.3% of the vote in Iowa, now think that gives them a mandate across the country. (p.s. I am sure ricky would like a "man date" but, that's another story.)
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Jack Starr
Not one of the Top 2%
12:29 PM on 01/05/2012
Here's a great article that shoots down Romney's entitlement society claim.
http://www.tampabay.com/opinion/columns/for-merit-based-societies-look-to-europe/1209104
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ethiopia1a
The COMMA Sutra,,,,making grammar sexy since 1875
12:17 PM on 01/05/2012
Santorum should go ahead and claim Pamela Anderson as his running mate "The 3 Biggest Boobs On The Trail"
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LINY01
Kind Thoughts lead to Kind Words
12:16 PM on 01/05/2012
Santorum=hypocrite. Great article, here's excerpt:

As a Philadelphia-based political reporter, I arrived in town just seven months after Santorum became my state’s junior senator. I followed his 12 years on the Washington political stage closely, and I think people obsessing on the “man-on-dog” stuff are missing the bigger picture. For one thing, the self-styled “family values” expert has a surprisingly ambiguous record with his own personal ethics.

Also, Santorum’s legislative record shows that his real workaday agenda was not so much waging culture wars as protecting the interests of the 1 Percent, the millionaires and billionaires who funded the modern Republican Party.

http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/attytood/The-Santorum-that-America-doesnt-know.html
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KRY
Trickle down only trickles away!
12:34 PM on 01/05/2012
His political smell is not much different from the rest of the rethugliclowns. Super pacs did not see him coming, now they know he is the flavor of the month..... LOL ! Another one bites the dust ! They are running out of clowns..Hmm
12:00 PM on 01/05/2012
Negative campaigning is only effective when one's core points simply aren't that good--at least not good enough to stand alone without the negative campaigning attached.

I am so liberal I am libertarian: Ron Paul 2012
12:25 PM on 01/05/2012
You must have loved those ads Paul ran calling Romney a liberal. Those were positive, right?
12:37 PM on 01/05/2012
I am not aware of those ads. But I do listen to Ron Paul speeches. In them I have noticed he avoids attacking Obama, but rather, just says he is the last in a long line of people who have shared the same policies.

And last I looked, calling someone a, "liberal," is not derogatory.
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KRY
Trickle down only trickles away!
12:39 PM on 01/05/2012
Libertarian Really ! Pot smoking want to get laid rethugliclown in sheep's clothes only worst. Do away with the Federal Government? State against state Really ! Paul is only in it to be thorn in Romney's side....
12:42 PM on 01/05/2012
I believe you are confusing a Libertarian with a Big Government Republican.
11:52 AM on 01/05/2012
Unless you have never watched a presidential race they all start off fighting each-other. Democrats did it in 2007 GOP are doing it in 2012. Then they turn their anger towards the person the are trying to unseat. Nothing new, been happening since this nation started electing Presidents.
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Carol Faber
11:44 AM on 01/05/2012
if ricks office is buzzing it's probably from the flys atracted to all the poop he's been spreading
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KRY
Trickle down only trickles away!
12:40 PM on 01/05/2012
Hit the funny bone LOL!
11:42 AM on 01/05/2012
That's all they've got. Aside from Romney's bluster and Santorum's holier than thou demeanor, they have nothing to run on.
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KRY
Trickle down only trickles away!
12:48 PM on 01/05/2012
Exactly Obama bash No policy . I would like to hear policy over Obama bashing ... It is the same smell from all of the clowns. Once these clowns pick a candidate .. Get ready... Carpet bomb with mis-leading negative adds coming to your town soon delivered by super-pacs. Because corporations are people too ! Ask Mitt...
09:57 PM on 01/05/2012
The problem is that there are plenty of "sheep" out there who believe this and are allowed to vote!
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ed leveridge
11:39 AM on 01/05/2012
Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney are nothing more than lying flip floppers who will say and do anything to get elected. Why won't Mitt release his tax returns?
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LINY01
Kind Thoughts lead to Kind Words
12:24 PM on 01/05/2012
Don;t worry, if Willard gets the nomination he will eventually be forced to release those returns. And, they will only tell us what we all know already, that he is richer than rich. But by delaying the release, he will make it worse for himself.
12:26 PM on 01/05/2012
Because he's embarrassingly wealthy and his laid-off employees are not.
11:04 AM on 01/05/2012
I'm interesting in hearing Gringich's opinion about how the Santorum bilked the PA taxpayers by having them homeschooled with the PA cyber charter school system while having a primary address in Virginia. See, even Rick isn't above cheating.
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LINY01
Kind Thoughts lead to Kind Words
12:25 PM on 01/05/2012
See article I posted above..There is a reason PA voted him out
10:51 AM on 01/05/2012
It is going to be fun to watch Newt take Mitt apart in the next debate..I predict that Newt will make a strong comeback while taking down the front runner. He has acquitted himself well in all the debates, showing the illogic of his opponents’ positions on illegal immigration as well as other issues. He won each of the debates hands down and is clearly the brightest of the candidates. He also has a history of being able to compromise, having worked well with President Clinton to pass critical legislation on welfare reform while adhering to the principles of his contract with America. His foreign policy is principled but a little rough around the edges as is his general personality. Nevertheless, he has proven himself to be the most middle of the road candidate left standing and worthy of my support. www.centerleftright.com
11:33 AM on 01/05/2012
Hmmm....By judging the independent vote in Iowa, I would say you are wrong.
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pmoschetta
Where are the Jobs, Speaker Boehner?
12:06 PM on 01/05/2012
Is drug use rampant in your family?

Newt is equally as far right as Mitt and Perry. Santorum is clearly hanging off the cliff and Ron Paul is already over it