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Rick Santorum: Brokered Convention Would Give Me The Nomination

Rick Santorum Brokered Convention

PHILIP ELLIOTT   03/12/12 09:39 PM ET  AP

BILOXI, Miss. — Rick Santorum said Monday his path to the Republican Party's presidential nomination counts on continued chaos in the field and a fractured GOP arriving at its nominating convention in late summer.

Though former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has a commanding lead in the crucial race for delegates to the national convention, Santorum told reporters a day before Alabama and Mississippi's presidential primaries that his standing in the race will improve if conservatives coalesce behind him – and if Newt Gingrich exits the race soon.

"People of Mississippi and Alabama want a conservative. ... If they want a conservative nominee for sure, they can do that by lining up behind us and making this race clearly a two-person race outside of the South," he said while beginning his day on the Gulf Coast in Biloxi, Miss.

As he closed his day in Montgomery, Ala., he encouraged his supporters to stand with him.

"If we win Alabama, a conservative will be nominated by the Republican Party. And if we nominate a conservative, we will defeat Barack Obama in the general election," he said.

Romney is on pace to reach the 1,144 delegates needed to clinch the nomination in June. He has 454 delegates to Santorum's 217, according to an Associated Press count. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has 107 delegates and Texas Rep. Ron Paul has 47.

"We sure as heck aren't going to go to a convention all the way to the end of August to select a nominee," Romney said.

At the current pace, Santorum and Gingrich won't come close to catching Romney. Their only chance at winning the nomination is to keep Romney from collecting the needed delegates, then forcing a fight at the convention in Tampa, Fla., in late August.

Romney dismissed that strategy.

"Everybody has a scenario where they can become the nominee. That's fine," Romney told Fox News. "So far, we've got two, two and a half times as many delegates as he and millions of more votes than he has. ... If he is able to pull off a miracle, so be it. He'll be the nominee."

Santorum brushed aside skepticism about his plans.

"I think you've been listening to math class and delegate math class instead of looking at the reality of the situation. The reality of the situation is that it's going to be very difficult for anyone to get to the number of delegates that is necessary to win with the majority at the convention," he said. "The only way, really, I believe that someone is going to get there is if the conservatives unite."

In a memo from consultant John Patrick Yob, the campaign argued that any discussion of delegates is premature.

"Romney has a delegate problem in that he will have a very hard time getting his moderate supporters elected as delegates in these convention systems," he wrote, suggesting that the results so far may prove meaningless if the local parties ignore vote results.

"Time is on Rick Santorum's side. He will gain delegates as this process plays out and conservatives are elected as national convention delegates," according to the memo.

But conservatives so far have failed to unite, because Santorum and Gingrich continue to splinter the anti-Romney vote.

Gingrich has won only in the South – in South Carolina and Georgia, his home state. His aides had cast Tuesday's primaries in Mississippi and Alabama as must-win states, though the former House speaker later contradicted that assessment and vowed, too, to campaign all the way to the convention.

Santorum suggested Gingrich's appeal was limited to the South and, by contrast, said he had mounted strong efforts from coast to coast. Santorum won in Iowa, Colorado, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Oklahoma, among other states, and came very close to upsetting Romney in Michigan and Ohio.

He also hinted that Romney's inability to connect with voters in deeply conservatives states should give the party reason to worry about his appeal in a head-to-head contest with President Barack Obama.

"There's no away game for me. The entire country is a country that I feel comfortable with," Santorum said in a dig at Romney, who recently described campaigning for the Deep South contests as "a bit of an away game" for him.

But Santorum can't match Romney in money and organization.

"We're playing catch-up," he said. "That's what happens when you compete in every state and you don't have the resources of everybody else."

Romney's campaign plus an allied campaign committee run by former aides is spending more than $2.5 million on TV ads in Alabama and Mississippi. Santorum's campaign has few commercials there, though a separate campaign committee that supports him is spending around $500,000 on advertising.

Santorum also discounted Romney's appeal within the party.

"They are not going to nominate a moderate Massachusetts governor who's been outspending his opponent 10-1 and can't win the election outright," Santorum said on NBC's "Today." "What chance do we have in a general election if he can't, with an overwhelming money advantage, be able to deliver any kind of knockout blow to other candidates?"

"We're going to be the nominee," Santorum said, adding later. "Gov. Romney will not make it."

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BILOXI, Miss. — Rick Santorum said Monday his path to the Republican Party's presidential nomination counts on continued chaos in the field and a fractured GOP arriving at its nominating convent...
BILOXI, Miss. — Rick Santorum said Monday his path to the Republican Party's presidential nomination counts on continued chaos in the field and a fractured GOP arriving at its nominating convent...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sophist FCD
vocatus sum pejora per melioribus
09:36 PM on 03/16/2012
Santorum brushed aside skepticism about his plans.

"I think you've been listening to math class..."

--------

And, as everyone knows, math class is for snobs.
08:24 AM on 03/14/2012
Let's be serious for a minute here Rick. You could never win in a general election: disaffected/unhappy democrats, women, or a majority of independent voters. Maybe you'll gain some recognition as that candidate who said some ridiculous things to get the I'm-not-that-guy votes. You are a distraction from the match-up between the Goldman Sachs candidates Obama and Romney
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nikki717
War...what is it good for?
04:30 PM on 03/13/2012
Bizarre thought process Rick.
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sanevoter
Still never missed a vote since 1965
03:06 PM on 03/12/2012
Broke, broken, brokered, busted. The GOP died in 2008, it was smothered in the hills and mountains of northern Alaska and it's dead body dragged to the Arizona desert. RIP GOP
02:22 PM on 03/12/2012
The GOP would never give Santorum the nod, and he knows it. WOMEN DISLIKE HIM! The GOP knows he could never get elected in a national race. Independents would run away from him in droves. He opposes birth control. And, he doesn't believe in the separation of church and state. In other words, his religion bleeds over into his politics, and no rational person would ever trust him in the White House.

He's just trying to con the far right into continuing to vote for him even though his doesn't have an ice cubes chance in hell. Don't be fooled folks, Santorum is unelectable and the GOP establishment knows it.

Also, ask yourself why it's OK for a supposedly loyal Republican to plot to deny the nomination to the guy who has received the most votes.
08:14 AM on 03/13/2012
I agree with your first paragraph. Take Michigan exit polls. Ron Paul got 2% more from working women than from non-working women. Unfortunately, with Michigan's economy in the toilet and single women more drawn to the Democratic Party, only 1:5 women worked! Of Non-Working Women, Newt & Mitt received the inverse bounce: ~ 2%. Santorum didn't.

Lets go to South Carolina. Newt took this state (and subsequently neighboring Georgia), but women altered second place. Based on one poll, if women's support mirrored men, Ron Paul would be second, and Mitt third! Mitt does better with the ladies.

In '08, John McCain had a gender gap (in at least one state, though I think several), and Mitt either had no gap, or an insignificant 1% edge with women.

As for the last comment, though, I don't think it's disloyal to continue to play by the rules I try to gain the nomination. If you think your candidacy would ultimately be best for your party and your country, and you see a route to success, it might even be your duty. Was John McCain what was right for the Republican Party? As a Republitarian, I'd argue a resounding no is the answer to that question. If Mitt could have wrestled the nomination in '08, I would have been all for that. If Ron Paul could get the nomination through delegate defection - and restore to my party her paleoconservative roots, I'd be in favor of that as well.
08:18 AM on 03/13/2012
Oh yeah - and when a Santorum staffer said the Bible entombs female candidacies for the Presidency - while Michele Bachmann was still in the race - to my knowledge, Santorum did not publicly rebuke this discriminatory, impolitic vaunting of complementarianism. The term some theologians use since "separate but equal" doesn't sound so good these days ;)

Gee, wonder why Rick can't get the female vote.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
farfull123
02:05 PM on 03/12/2012
Gee, and I thought with the absence of those two loonies, Michele Bachmann and Herman Cain, that the GOP campaign would become boring but Little Ricky is more than making up for their loss...

Quick question, Ricky---why has not one elected GOP state politican from your home state of Pennsylvania endorsed you? Hell, it's been 5 years since you represented your state...you must have really p o'ed them!...
08:15 AM on 03/13/2012
They know him too well.

March 13, 2012 - I don't think it is at all a lock Rick will carry his home state.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dsrtjoe
01:58 PM on 03/12/2012
As far as describing any prediction Santorum makes...the words bold and stupid are interchangable.
fallenawayrepublican
cheney/ bush cured me, praise the lord.
01:52 PM on 03/12/2012
Lil Ricky will not be cumming from behind/
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Raglimidechi
standing on fishes
01:42 PM on 03/12/2012
Santorum: "What chance do we have in a general election?" Slim to none. Republicans are going to great effort to nominate a candidate who is simply going to lose in November.
fallenawayrepublican
cheney/ bush cured me, praise the lord.
01:40 PM on 03/12/2012
Lil Ricky missionary position Santourm has a very narrow base, the rest of us are laughing at him. I would love to see him get the GOP nomination, it would be hilarious. But alas even the GOP isn't that stupid. Are they? Well I guess there was that Palin nonsense.
01:30 PM on 03/12/2012
i hope Santorum wins. either way even a Christian secret Muslin hawaiian born non american socialist liberial elete food stamp using middle east apeasing bin laden killer will have no problem winning
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sfurr
01:16 PM on 03/12/2012
GOTP logic:

1. Romney is a weak candidate who has failed to decisively defeat the other GOP candidates
2. A weak candidate will deliver a poor showing in the general election
3. Santorum and Gingrich are weak candidates who are unable to compete effectively against a weakened front-runner
4. Therefore, in a brokered convention, we should replace a weak candidate who has been unable to deliver a decisive victory with weaker candidate (insert name here) who has been unable to compete effectively against a week front-runner.

Who would want to give such clowns responsibility?
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theiFyoU
I used to be disgusted, but now I'm just amused.
01:06 PM on 03/12/2012
How do you get elected, after you have been magically brokered, if you creep out 85% of women who aren't married to you?
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SCboy
Dogs are people too.
12:56 PM on 03/12/2012
Just keep thinking, 59-41. That's the percentage by which Pennsylvanians threw him out of his Senate seat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harleigh
a merikan snarkerer fer jebus!
12:56 PM on 03/12/2012
Nothing would be better for merika than a brokered Palin-Bachmann ticket fer jebus.
fallenawayrepublican
cheney/ bush cured me, praise the lord.
01:43 PM on 03/12/2012
The correct spelling is jeebuss
02:56 PM on 03/12/2012
No, it's hay-zoos
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Harleigh
a merikan snarkerer fer jebus!
07:40 AM on 03/13/2012
Oh SNAP! Now we gotta get all the campaign literature and yard signs redone!