Romney targets Obama
Ex-governor reprises attacks on economic policies after Illinois win
CHICAGO: White House hopeful Mitt Romney set his sights squarely on President Barack Obama after racking up another victory in a plodding Republican nominating race that may not be decided until June.
Romney’s decisive win in Illinois on Tuesday likely won’t help him win Obama’s home state in the Nov 6 election, but it has brought him closer to clinching the Republican nod.
He used his victory speech to reprise his attacks on Obama’s economic policies and cast the general election as a choice between “economic freedom” and “job-killing regulation”.
“Over the past three years this administration has been engaged in an all-out assault on our freedom,” Romney told supporters gathered in an affluent Chicago suburb.
“It’s time to say these words. This word. Enough. We’ve had enough.”
Underdog Rick Santorum was unbowed by Romney’s widening lead, rallying supporters in his home state of Pennsylvania to help him “close this gap and (move) on to victory!”
His campaign vowed to take the fight all the way to the Republican convention in August, but it’s not clear if Santorum can stop Romney from winning the 1,144 delegates needed to clinch the deal before then.
The former Massachusetts governor already had a commanding delegate lead and Tuesday’s resounding win in this midwestern state will provide Romney with momentum ahead of polls in Wisconsin, Maryland and Washington, DC on April 3.
It will also provide Romney with a cushion ahead of an expected Santorum victory in Louisiana on Saturday.
But with many states awarding delegates proportionally, it could take Romney until May or June to reach the majority needed to knock his rivals out of the race.
“The question isn’t who’s the nominee,” said Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Centre for Politics.
“It’s whether Romney soars or limps into (the convention in) Tampa. That’s not determined yet.”
While Romney may have a better chance of winning over the moderates and independents who often decide general elections, he has failed to rally the Republican party’s conservative base in the grueling state-by-state primaries. — AFP