Baltimore Sun

New Hampshire: Romney stronghold?

He’s favored but his campaign is taking nothing for granted

- By Maeve Reston

MANCHESTER, N.H. — When several GOP contenders announced they would fly straight from Iowa to South Carolina on Wednesday, bypassing the fight for supremacy in New Hampshire’s presidenti­al primary, few in this state were surprised, least of all the campaign of Mitt Romney.

In New Hampshire, Romney’s rivals will face an organizati­on that has been building almost since he lost to John Mccain here in 2008. Throughout this campaign cycle, as his poll numbers fluctuated elsewhere, New Hampshire has remained Romney’s fortress. And many voters here say the Jan. 10 primary is Romney’s to lose.

New Hampshire Republican­s “have a real tendency to pick the next person in line,” said Andrew Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire Survey Center, and in this case that is Romney.

“He is a more focused candidate; he’s focusing on the right issue; he’s got the best organizati­on of any candidate in the state … and on top of that he fits in with the New Hampshire electorate, which is largely a moderate Republican electorate,” Smith said. “All of those things together put him in charge.”

Still, during an interview last week at Romney’s New Hampshire headquarte­rs in Manchester, his state consultant Jim Merrill said the team was running the campaign as though they were “three votes down, three minutes to go.”

“Our strategy from Day One has to been to earn it, never take it for granted — and we’re not doing that,” he said. As a reminder of how quickly things can change, Merrill points to the New Hampshire exit polls from 2008, which showed that more than half of the state’s voters made up their mind in the last week — many of them in the last three days. For decades in New Hampshire, he said, “You’ve seen large shifts at the end.”

Nonaligned strategist­s here say that attitude is the right one. In a recent Boston Globe/unh survey, only 26 percent of voters said they had made a final decision.

New Hampshire voters have shown a willingnes­s to look elsewhere. At the height of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s surge last month, he drew more than 700 people to a tea partyorgan­ized rally in Windham.

Rep. Ron Paul of Texas, whose libertaria­n views and opposition to the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n have found favor here, has tripled his 2008 support in recent polls to maintain a steady secondplac­e position. Like Paul, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman — who held his 150th New Hampshire campaign event Tuesday night — has demonstrat­ed appeal to New Hampshire’s independen­t voters, who can cast a ballot in the Republican primary.

Former Pennsylvan­ia Sen. Rick Santorum, who kept pace earlier with Romney and Huntsman in the number of days spent in New Hampshire, could gain some traction among the voters looking for amore conservati­ve alternativ­e to Romney. But the social conservati­ves and evangelica­l voters who dominate in Iowa are a sliver of the electorate here and Santorum’s views on social issues are out of step with those of many New Hampshire Republican­s, the majority of whom support abortion rights and oppose the repeal of the state’s 2009 law permitting same-sex marriage.

By a wide margin, Romney has consistent­ly been ranked by New Hampshire voters as the candidate with the best chance to beat President Barack Obama, the one with the strongest family values and the contender best-equipped to handle the nation’s economic problems.

The former governor of neighborin­g Massachuse­tts and the owner of a summer home in Wolfeboro, N.H., Romney has tended to his relationsh­ips not just with New Hampshire’s power brokers — the state’s popular Sen. Kelly Ayotte and former Gov. John Sununu endorsed him — but also with local sheriffs and Statehouse leaders. Since 2008, his Free & Strong America PAC has donated more than $45,000 to New Hampshire’s federal candidates and the Republican state committee.

The campaign also has been relentless about identifyin­g its voters through phone calls and microtarge­ting — sending mail pieces tailored to each voter’s top concern, whether it be federal spending or illegal immigratio­n.

In a flier distribute­d to supporters who gathered to see Romney Saturday at the Old Salt restaurant in Hampton, his campaign boasted of having made more than 293,000 phone calls, knocked on nearly 50,000 doors and distribute­d 16,000 of the blue and white yard signs that seem to dot every corner of the state.

Familiarit­y with Romney has helped turn his way voters like Alice Bury of Amherst, an independen­t.

“In the beginning I had heard a lot about Romney flip-flopping, and that was one of the reasons I didn’t endorse him,” said Bury, a retired nurse who was deciding among Gingrich, Romney and Santorum until she attended Romney’s recent event in Londonderr­y. “But I’ve listened to him ... and he gave answers that really satisfied me. I looked at my own life. We’re all human. Has anybody not changed their mind?

“There’s never going to be a 100 percent match,” she said. “But he is really up there compared to the other candidates.”

 ?? JESSICA RINALDI/REUTERS PHOTO ?? Mitt Romney backers hold signs for the GOP presidenti­al candidate at a rally last month in Keene, N.H. Romney, former governor of neighborin­g Massachuse­tts, has campaigned extensivel­y in New Hampshire.
JESSICA RINALDI/REUTERS PHOTO Mitt Romney backers hold signs for the GOP presidenti­al candidate at a rally last month in Keene, N.H. Romney, former governor of neighborin­g Massachuse­tts, has campaigned extensivel­y in New Hampshire.

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