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Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum In Tight Race Ahead Of 2012 Michigan Primary

Mitt Romney Rick Santorum

THOMAS BEAUMONT and KASIE HUNT   02/25/12 08:22 PM ET  AP

FLINT, Mich. — Republican Mitt Romney fought Saturday to prove he is the strongest challenger to President Barack Obama, an increasingly difficult task given the tight race in his native state of Michigan against surging conservative Rick Santorum.

In the final weekend of campaigning before Tuesday's Michigan and Arizona primaries, Romney focused on central and southeast Michigan's urban and industrial centers in hopes of pulling ahead of Santorum.

With a Michigan victory, Santorum could solidify his place as a real threat to Romney heading into Super Tuesday, the 10-state sweepstakes on March 6. Santorum's victories so far have come in lower-turnout party caucuses.

While Romney kept most of his attention on the Democratic incumbent, he also worked to lay doubt about the core principles of his lightly funded main GOP rival.

Romney is the one facing stubborn doubts from some conservatives for his changed positions on social issues, but he tried to portray Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, as a Washington insider with cracks in his own conservative credentials. Santorum called such criticism "laughable" and said Michigan, where Romney was born and raised and his father was governor, was winnable.

A crowd in Lansing heard Romney accuse Santorum of caving to party leaders on issues he opposed, including financing Planned Parenthood.

"This is not time for lifelong pols who explain why they voted for this or that based on what they were asked to do by their fellow colleagues," Romney told about 300 activists gathered for breakfast at a country club. "I will be a president of principle."

Later in Flint, he declared himself a Washington, D.C., outsider and implied Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, is an insider: "I don't have any political payoffs I have to make."

Romney tried to undermine Santorum's profile as an abortion opponent by noting Santorum's backing in 1996 of fellow Pennsylvanian Arlen Specter in the GOP presidential race. "He supported the pro-choice candidate," Romney told more than 2,000 at a forum in Troy put on by a tea party umbrella group. Santorum spoke to the group, Americans for Prosperity, earlier Saturday.

Santorum, who has portrayed himself as a loyal conservative and is popular among evangelical conservatives, ridiculed Romney's claims.

"It is absolutely laughable to have a liberal governor of Massachusetts suggest that I am not a conservative," Santorum said to cheers to the same group. "He repeatedly gets up and says all these things that he didn't do that he did do. Folks, this is an issue of trust."

The volleys over principle and loyalty punctuate the all-out two-man race in Michigan, leaving behind the two others in the field. Both candidates are spending heavily on television advertising, although the better-funded Romney was laying out more.

Texas Rep. Ron Paul is hardly a factor in Michigan but is airing advertisements criticizing Santorum, which aids Romney. Paul was campaigning in Oklahoma earlier Saturday before making a stop at Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich was nowhere to be found in the state and has spent scant time in Arizona, which also holds its primary Tuesday.

Gingrich has acknowledged that he has no shot in Michigan or Arizona and has predicted Romney will win. Gingrich aides argue he stands to gain by Santorum or Romney coming out of Tuesday weaker.

Gingrich is betting heavily on Georgia, the state he represented in Congress, and a strong showing in Tennessee on March 6.

On Saturday Gingrich was in California for the state GOP convention. He forecast a drawn-out campaign that would give late-voting states a voice.

"There will not be any lockdown before we get to California," which holds its primary June 5, Gingrich said.

Romney campaigned across southern central and southeast Michigan, where his family name is familiar, and he reminded audiences of his ties to the state. Romney won the GOP primary here during his unsuccessful 2008 bid for the nomination.

In Lansing, the capital, Romney recalled his father's chilly winter inaugurals. Romney's wife, Ann, also born in Michigan, reminisced in introducing the candidate in Troy about growing up a Tigers baseball fan and working for her father's business in the Detroit suburb.

Polls show a dead heat between Romney and Santorum, who is playing up his family's blue-collar background as the grandson of a Pennsylvania coal-miner. "This race is close. This race is winnable. But you've got to want it," Santorum told tea party members in St. Clair Shores.

Romney's attacks are a potential problem for Santorum because he's based his candidacy on presenting himself as an uncompromising conservative, contrasting himself with Romney. The former Massachusetts governor has struggled at times to explain why he's changed his position on abortion and other issues.

Santorum compared the health care bill Romney signed in Massachusetts in 2006 with the one Obama signed in 2010. The federal program is wildly unpopular with conservatives.

"Are you going to vote for someone that says one thing one day anything else the next day that's necessary to win? Or are you going to vote for someone you trust?" Santorum asked the crowd in Troy.

Santorum later made a quick detour to Tennessee, a Super Tuesday state that's gotten much less attention, to speak at a tea party rally in a large church in Chattanooga.

In Tennessee, Santorum rebuked Romney for backing the Wall Street bailout. He acknowledged that he and Romney opposed the auto industry bailout, and said Romney was inconsistent.

"I didn't pick and choose based on who my friends are," Santorum said to loud applause. "These are the biggest issues of this race. And we need a candidate who isn't compromised on every single one of them."

Santorum called Obama "a snob" for saying every American child should be able to go to college.

"Why does Obama want everybody to go to college? So his liberal college professors can be indoctrinating people like he has," Santorum said, drawing a long ovation.

___

Associated Press writer Brian Bakst in Burlingame, Calif., Charles Babington in Chattanooga, Tenn., and Tim Martin in Mount Pleasant, Mich., contributed to this report.

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FLINT, Mich. — Republican Mitt Romney fought Saturday to prove he is the strongest challenger to President Barack Obama, an increasingly difficult task given the tight race in his native state o...
FLINT, Mich. — Republican Mitt Romney fought Saturday to prove he is the strongest challenger to President Barack Obama, an increasingly difficult task given the tight race in his native state o...
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04:47 PM on 02/27/2012
Politisite Political Projections: Michigan Primary Tuesday February 28, 2012 has the race as a tossup as well. Looks to us that Romney may pull out a slim victory.. but the numbers are right at 36.5% each. We also Have Ron Paul third and Gingrich fourth. http://wp.me/pOe4O-aac

In Arizona, a bit different story, we have Romney with a 15.7 point lead.
01:27 PM on 02/26/2012
Romney can mend the financial fences torn down by Obama. He's the only one with the background and experience to develop economic policies and govern.

Obama's reign has been a disaster for the US. Can't wait for him to pack up and leave.
01:43 PM on 02/26/2012
I don't see it, he made $23 million last year, and look how he....and I'm going to use this term very loosely..."earned" the $23 million. Look into it, do your research...I'm not going to tell you how...you look for yourself and tell me if he is an ethical person.

He is completely out of touch with the average American you asked him how much a loaf of bread or a gallon of gas costs...he would not know. He is not a conservative, he is simply the guy that wants to wear a black tie and host dinners and ride around in the presidential limo...he is not the man for the job. Obama will eat him up and spit him out, he does not understand the constitution, he is a pretty boy with no substance....HE IS DEFINITELY NOT A RONALD REAGAN! He's got the hair...but that is where it ends.
01:52 PM on 02/26/2012
I have many times listed the virtues of Mitt Romney on this site. It is you that is misinformed. Romney has been a good guy all his life...and given back to the country in many ways.

Check the "Governorship of Mitt Romney". But, more importantly, check "Overwhelm the System" by Wayne Allen Root.
01:19 PM on 02/26/2012
I'm shocked that more coverage is not going to Ron Paul? He vastly out raises all of the other candidates in terms of donations coming from active military, he consistently finishes much higher in actual votes received than the pre-voting polls tell us. He probably is second in terms of delegates that are going to support him. He is the only real conservative that is in the race. He consistently has crowds of thousands of people, party bias toward counting votes and declaring winners are clearly bias to Romney such as in Maine...but it is never reported? And finally, he consistently is the national candidate that can beat the president in a general election....why isn't this being reported? If Santorum or Romney win the nomination, they are going to be chewed up and spit out by President Obama...WHY CAN'T CONSERVATIVES SEE THIS? Do you really believe Santorum or Romney can debate the president? Give Ron Paul the chance to debate the president, he will garner the needed independents and blue dog democrats...and most importantly the young and minority vote. Wake up Republicans!
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12:37 PM on 02/26/2012
Thousands, and repeatedly overflow crowds come out for Paul in nearly every state, while the others draw only a weak couple of hundred, and yet we're supposed to believe the rigged polls and elections. Pu-leze.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ross nichols
10:18 AM on 02/26/2012
Romney looked great in that EMPTY stadium-I could not stop laughing-the chairs were the wrong height
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ross nichols
10:14 AM on 02/26/2012
The Israelies will incite violence in Afghanistan-and start trouble with Iran-to change direction of our election---watch and see--we will be in war with Iran,and Repubs. will lead the way-just like Iraq.!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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kaykaythere
Game of Global ThermoNuclear NukeATroll anyone?
12:54 PM on 02/26/2012
And it will all be Obama's fault for being a muslim.........(snark)
nothingchanges
too soon old, too late smart
09:56 AM on 02/26/2012
Personally I'm far less concerned about how many are IN the race, than the DIRECTION the race is headed in.

When it's a race to the bottom.........................who wins?
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dbw53022
Fiscally conservative. Socially liberal.
08:34 AM on 02/26/2012
I thought Joe Scarborough on Letterman summed up Romney perfectly.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pzw5W5gZyC0
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08:24 AM on 02/26/2012
Santorum is not a threat. He has the least delegates out of all four candidates for the Republican nomination. The misreporting going on with the delegate counts is absolutely astounding.

For anyone who is interested, here's a more accurate look at the delegate count:
Total Delegates (IA, NH, SC, FL, NV, MN, CO, ME)
Romney: 93 (6, 7, 2, 50, 14, 2, 7, 5)
Paul: 82 (13, 3, 0, 0, 5, 28, 17, 16)
Gingrich: 29 (0, 0, 23, 0, 6, 0, 0, 0)
Santorum: 25 (6, 0, 0, 0, 3, 7, 9, 0)
Unpledged: 14 (3, 2, 0, 0, 0, 3, 3, 3)
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12:40 PM on 02/26/2012
And yet a lot of media show their own skewed idea with Paul at the bottom. Even here at HP.
But the cat is out of the bag and the GOP power players are worried, and grumbling about maybe changing the nomination rules.
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john rajah
'Why do u call me Lord and dont do what I say?'
04:39 AM on 02/26/2012
Have the Koch brothers and their ilk decided who will better suit them?
08:05 AM on 02/26/2012
I think they are still on the "anyone but Obama" band wagon. Anyone but the person trying to stop them and their kind from running rampant over our citizens.
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gonealreb
Our Constitution is just fine, thanks anyway.
04:32 AM on 02/26/2012
Santorum called Rmoney a Liberal?

The Mormon's backed the John Birch Society when they called Civil Rights "communist legislation".

We gotta Ricky a new Thesaurus.
03:31 AM on 02/26/2012
The GOP is about abortion and gay marriage, guns and school prayer of that old time religion. Come on Bubba, step up to the plate, where’s your NASCAR round and round and round and round no win issue mentality that you once had putting Bush 2 into office. These red herring issues worked twice before, why not take them out of the closet, brush them off, and use them again.
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kaykaythere
Game of Global ThermoNuclear NukeATroll anyone?
12:57 PM on 02/26/2012
So as an fan of IndyCar going round and round and round, can I please at least call myself and Obama snob?
02:10 PM on 02/26/2012
Yes, and you might like watching tennis and ping pong too.
02:39 PM on 02/26/2012
I hear #26 is the car to watch today, (if the race gets started) It's a long shot, but I hear it's got the stickiest tires.
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l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
02:53 AM on 02/26/2012
It's always been a two-man race - Romney and someone else.

Every few weeks the leader board has changed. a new star would rise, challenge Romney, there would be talk about whether Romney is really able to fend off the challenge and is he really the choice for the GOP. Then the challenger fades and Romney waits for the next challenge.

Santorum is is own worst enemy Aside from not having the money or organization he is self-righteous, sanctimonious and completely out of touch even with many GOP voters. He is challenging hard but is fading even now due largely to his virulent talk and inflexibility. He will squander his opportunity in Michigan.

And even though the GOP will still be questioning if Romney is their man and talking about a brokered convention, by next week he will be waiting for the next challenger to emerge. Then the next two-man race will be on.
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kaykaythere
Game of Global ThermoNuclear NukeATroll anyone?
12:57 PM on 02/26/2012
The two-man race is Romney versus Romney, Frick versus Frack, Flip versus Flop
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
04:15 PM on 02/26/2012
LOL! You get the Laugh of the Day Award.
01:01 AM on 02/26/2012
Santorum called Obama "a snob" for saying every American child should be able to go to college.
"Why does Obama want everybody to go to college? So his liberal college professors can be indoctrinating people like he has," Santorum said, drawing a long ovation.

Whaaaat? Can this dweeb seriously think education is a bad thing or is this more pandering?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
REMEMBER2050
Bring on that War on Women, GOP! I'm game.
01:56 AM on 02/26/2012
Kids who are college graduates make on the average a million more in their lifetimes. Furthermore, a summer 2010 Pew Center poll showed a direct correlation between being a liberal and the amount of education you've received, as in the more education you have, the more liberal you are.

Well. That's all this country needs--well-heeled or even affluent professionals who are making plenty of money and who will probably vote Democrat.

The last thing Republicans want kids to have is education. That would mean the eventual extinction of the Republican Party. Which explains why they've been trying to gut education since at minimum 1980. Might be a lot earlier--1980 was when I first started keeping track.

I am saying, by the way, that this is a deliberate strategy. This is no gut reaction or some misguided attempt to save money. I am saying Republicans KNOW they benefit from a poorly-educated populace.
02:40 AM on 02/26/2012
The smartest people are those who don't let themselves be pigeon-holed into either camp.
07:58 AM on 02/26/2012
Hey, I have an idea. Let's take away birth control from those that cannot afford it and then they will be forced to work two jobs at minimum wage to feed these unwanted kids. If we can keep them down, and keep being able to look down our noise at them, we don't have to worry about them trying to get educated or having the time or energy to get out and vote. To make sure our plan works, lets take away any and all safety nets that might catch them before they hit rock bottom. We can protect our country from the educated and insure many more generations of the same.
01:23 PM on 02/26/2012
The truth is, the majority of college professors are made up of the Boomers of the 60's...and as such, are anit-establishment and radically liberal. They have injected liberal politics into their courses, trying to sway young and impressionable students. This is something that bears investigation...and suspension where necessary. It's not their job to liberalize and socialize our kids.
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JoeHilley
NY Times Bestselling Author
12:27 AM on 02/26/2012
And not an original idea among them