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Rick Santorum Plans Aggressive Strategy Against Mitt Romney

Santorum

STEVE PEOPLES   02/12/12 11:36 PM ET  AP

PORTLAND, Maine — A day after Mitt Romney regained some momentum in the Republican presidential contest, his rival Rick Santorum went on the attack, calling the front-runner "desperate" while promising to compete aggressively to win the state where Romney grew up.

Santorum said Sunday he could do "exceptionally well" in Michigan, where Romney's father served as governor. The Midwestern state and Arizona host Republican presidential nominating contests on Feb. 28.

"We're going to spend a lot of time in Michigan and Arizona, and those are up next. And that's where we've really been focusing on," Santorum told ABC's "This Week." He suggested that a strong showing in those contests would make the presidential contest "a two-man race," dismissing current rivals Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul.

Santorum shrugged off his third-place finish Saturday in caucuses in Maine, where he didn't actively compete, as well as his second-place finish in a straw poll of conservative activists.

Romney has been painting Santorum as a long-time Washington insider who pursued home-state projects. Santorum on Sunday described Romney's recent criticism as "desperate."

"You reach a point where desperate people do desperate things," said Santorum, who represented Pennsylvania during his 16 years in Congress, first in the House and then in the Senate.

Maine GOP officials declared Romney the winner of Saturday's caucuses. The results ended a three-state losing streak to Santorum, who swept contests in Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri on Tuesday.

With the next primaries more than two weeks away, the break seems unusually long in the rapid-fire race that's featured six contests in the last 14 days. Romney and his rivals now have 17 days to raise cash and bolster their organizations for what's shaping up to be a slog to the Republican nomination and the right to face President Barack Obama in November.

As Santorum eyes Michigan, Romney turns his attention to extending his huge cash advantage over his rivals.

The Massachusetts governor left Maine before the caucus results were announced to attend a West Coast fundraiser Saturday night. He issued a written statement to mark his victory in the low-turnout contest.

"I'm heartened to have the support of so many good people in this great state," Romney said in the statement. "The voters of Maine have sent a clear message that it is past time to send an outsider to the White House."

Romney is expected to spend much of next week courting donors, while sprinkling in a handful of campaign events. He'll be in Arizona Monday evening.

Romney won a plurality of the Maine vote just hours after winning the presidential straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Committee conference in Washington.

But questions about Romney's durability as his party's presumed front-runner persist. Fully 61 percent of Maine voters selected a candidate other than Massachusetts' former governor in a state practically in his backyard. And Romney's showing was down considerably from 2008, when he won 51 percent of the vote.

Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, a prominent voice among some conservatives, said Romney has work to do to convince GOP voters he's moved beyond his "pretty moderate past ... even in some cases a liberal past."

"I am not convinced, and I do not think the majority of GOP and independent voters are convinced," Palin said on Fox News Sunday.

Romney has focused more on social issues in recent days. He has been particularly aggressive in criticizing Obama's recent decision regarding contraception.

On Friday, after three weeks of controversy that pitted the nation's Catholic bishops against the White House, Obama revised his policy. Instead of requiring church-affiliated nonprofit employers to cover free contraception with the health insurance they offer workers, the policy now requires insurance companies to provide free birth control coverage in separate agreements with workers who want it.

White House chief of staff Jack Lew defended the decision Sunday, noting that there is no longer room for compromise.

"This is our plan," he said on CNN's "State of the Union."

Santorum said the president's plan doesn't resolve the issue. He says many Catholic institutions are self-insured and those organizations will still be forced to pay for women's contraception despite their religious objections.

"There's no compromise here. They are forcing religious organizations, either directly or indirectly to pay for something that they find is a deeply, morally, you know, wrong thing," Santorum, a Catholic, told NBC's "Meet the Press."

The focus on social issues plays well for Santorum, who has long been considered a staunch cultural conservative. Those credentials helped fuel his success last week.

But he wasn't a factor in Maine, where Romney captured 39 percent of the vote, narrowly defeating Paul's 36 percent, state Republican chairman Charlie Webster said. Santorum and Gingrich, who didn't actively campaign in Maine, won 18 percent and 6 percent respectively.

It was a disappointing showing for Paul, who on Sunday suggested that there was virtually no difference between his rivals.

"All three of them have represented the same system, the same status quo," Paul said on CBS' "Face the Nation."

The Maine vote totals reflected about 84 percent of the state's precincts, with nearly 5,600 Republicans voting out of 258,000 registered. The contests scheduled for the coming days will not be counted, including an entire county that postponed its caucuses because of a snow storm.

"We were a little bit disappointed last night," Paul said, because he's done well in that county in the past and expected to do well Saturday.

Coming off last week's success, Santorum saw a surge in donations. His campaign reports gathering $3 million in the three days immediately following after last week's hat trick, but he's unlikely to catch Romney in the money race.

Santorum reported just $279,000 in the bank at the end of December, compared with Romney's $19.9 million. Gingrich had $2.1 million, but is still carrying substantial debt, while Paul reported $1.9 million.

Romney won 11 delegates and Paul 10, according to an analysis of the Maine results by The Associated Press. Santorum and Gingrich were shut out. That brings the delegate count to 123 for Romney, 72 for Santorum, 32 for Gingrich and 19 for Paul, with 1,144 delegates needed for the nomination.

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PORTLAND, Maine — A day after Mitt Romney regained some momentum in the Republican presidential contest, his rival Rick Santorum went on the attack, calling the front-runner "desperate" while pr...
PORTLAND, Maine — A day after Mitt Romney regained some momentum in the Republican presidential contest, his rival Rick Santorum went on the attack, calling the front-runner "desperate" while pr...
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07:25 PM on 02/13/2012
Patriots will never vote for a BAGGER
07:24 PM on 02/13/2012
Santorum is bringing down the republican tea party. You go girl.
07:22 PM on 02/13/2012
I love this election. It is the year of the failed baggers.
07:21 PM on 02/13/2012
Santorum never had a chance but he will be remembered for labeling the entire republican tea party as women haters. BAGGERS!
07:18 PM on 02/13/2012
Santorum is a record DB.
07:18 PM on 02/13/2012
Palin/Trump will be drafted after Romney goes down tomorrow. Santorum is a wuss and will never be taken seriously.
06:46 PM on 02/13/2012
Democrats alway thought that if Romney made it past Super Tuesday, he would be the Nominee. It now looks as though Romney will NOT survive the day. He may maintain the lead in delegate totals, but he will have no momentum. That means a new Candidate must emerge, because the others are a joke.
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rmax53
http://obamaachievements.org
05:31 PM on 02/13/2012
Those who keep using "Santorum" and "surge" in the same sentence are either being ironic, or they are web-search challenged.

Some of the synonyms for surge (better or worse?): billow, deluge, efflux, flood, flow, growth, gush, intensification, outpouring, swell, upsurge.
05:21 PM on 02/13/2012
I want to see the Republican candidate that can best attack Obama's failings...and beat him at the polls. The Republicans need to quit their infighting.
06:48 PM on 02/13/2012
Failings? Are you joking? The GOP financial collapse of Sept 2008 is over. Foreign policy? Better not go there. Your BS flies on Fox but not in the real world.
08:23 PM on 02/13/2012
Are you aware that the Dems took over the majority in the House and Senate on Jan 3, 2007? Therefore, for the last two years of the Bush presidency, the Dems were totally in control. Then along came Obama...so for the past 5 years the Dems have had a 2/3rds control. They own this economy...lock stock and barrel.

The Dems appointed Frank as head of the House Financial Committe and Dodd as head of the Senate Banking Committee...that duo helped sink us with Fannie and Freddie.
07:16 PM on 02/13/2012
Romney is your man then..... He is the only one that can go up against Obama and WIN.....
07:19 PM on 02/13/2012
Romney is a big fake. Everyone knows that. Hannity included.
08:09 PM on 02/13/2012
I agree. I support Romney now...and hope he is the nominee.
02:55 PM on 02/13/2012
I hope this goes on and on for additional weeks and months.

I love watching Republican ant hill in turmoil and confusion.
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jabber60
05:55 PM on 02/13/2012
YO WANT TO WATCH CONFUSION, TAKE A LOOK AT THE PRESIDENT!!!
07:21 PM on 02/13/2012
Yeah. He was real confused reversing the GOP financial collapse of Sept 2008. Remember that date BAGGER. You candidates long for the polices of THOSE DAYS. BAGGERS!
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Lifelong Liberal
Obama/2012 - Because Women's Rights ARE important
07:39 PM on 02/13/2012
I could use a good laugh. When's the next Republican Debate?
01:01 AM on 02/15/2012
you may as well join us we have been laughing since nobama was elected
02:25 PM on 02/13/2012
Why wouldn't he just tell us what he will do and not tell us what romney doesn't do? Does he not have anything else to say? Now he has to attack? Loser won't get my vote.
democles
swords-r-us
01:59 PM on 02/13/2012
Santorum is looking out for domestic burka manufacturers. Were he to be elected Ayatollah Santorum would make sure women wore them.
01:07 PM on 02/13/2012
So Rick plans an aggressive strategy against Mitt, which makes me wonder if it will be as aggressive as his strategy against "black" people on welfare, his words not mine, sorta like Newt's statement that black people should be demanding a paycheck not a government welfare check.

Racism? You bet.

Will Rick's aggressive strategy against Mitt be as ferocious as his all out assault on women's rights? On gay rights? On religious freedom?

Religious freedom is about choice, not about having a right wing religious zealot seeking to impose his version of what that religion should be and pass laws to ensure it has the full force and effect of law is not religious freedom.

Santorum and Gingrich should take their racist views and start their own chapter of either the KKK or Neo Nazis. Their view does not comport wit the Constitution, human rights, women's rights or gay rights.

This is not conservative politics which is about status quo, but rather an attempt to take the nation backwards.

Neither are really very bright, their unoriginal ideas have failed in the past and of course will again. Neither offer solutions but rather instead, offer extreme right wing social engineering.

Irony could not have had better children than these two.
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rmax53
http://obamaachievements.org
05:35 PM on 02/13/2012
Didn't Rick claim to have said "blah" people? Which was actually worse, since there are so many more blah people than black people to offend. I'm certainly offended by him (I admit to feeling a bit blah lately).
bouvdoggie
hopeful pessimist
12:44 PM on 02/13/2012
Beware women of this country. These so-called men only want to get into our panties and tell us what we can do with our private parts. They haven't said a single word about forcing men to use contraceptives [condoms] or offering them free condoms. They want to have complete control of our bodies but say nothing about taxes or the economy or jobs here in this country. They are a one subject party of poops.
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Charleyeo
04:39 PM on 02/13/2012
Fav'd!
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baydolphins
Gone crazy...back soon
12:21 PM on 02/13/2012
is he going to 'out-pray' him or 'out severe' him?