Vancouver Sun

Romney cuts into Santorum support

He’s set to regain lead with attacks

- BY DAVID SCHWARTZ AND STEVE HOLLAND

PHOENIX, Ariz. — Mitt Romney, fighting his way back into the driver’s seat in the Republican presidenti­al race, assailed rival Rick Santorum on Thursday as a Washington insider in a line of attack that polls show seems to be working.

After repeatedly putting the former Pennsylvan­ia senator on the defensive in a debate on Wednesday over Santorum’s record of backing big spending in Congress, Romney kept up his attacks at a campaign appearance in Arizona.

“I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a politician explain in so many ways why it was he voted against his principles,” Romney told a builders’ conference in Phoenix.

Romney lampooned Santorum’s comments during Wednesday’s debate that he sometimes had to vote for bills he did not like — including spending programs, education reforms and increases in the federal debt — because politics was a “team sport.”

“He talked about this as taking one for the team,” said Romney, a former Massachuse­tts governor and venture capitalist. “I wonder which team he was taking it for? My team is the American people, not the insiders in Washington.”

Arizona and Michigan are the next battlegrou­nds in the state- by- state battle to pick a challenger to President Barack Obama in the Nov. 6 general election, with crucial nominating contests next Tuesday.

While Santorum, a social conservati­ve, has courted controvers­y with comments about abortion and gay marriage and the role of women in the military, Romney seems to have struck a chord with his portrayal of Santorum as a supporter of big spending.

Romney is fighting to regain the top spot in the Republican presidenti­al race, and holds a slight lead in a poll in Michigan after trailing Santorum by as much as double digits a week ago there.

Any comeback by Romney would be well- timed, with 10 Super Tuesday primaries coming on March 6.

On Thursday, Romney won a restrained endorsemen­t from Michigan’s largest newspaper, the Detroit Free Press — with the caveat that he stop “chestbeati­ng” to prove his conservati­sm and return the focus to his record and collaborat­ive leadership.

The primary in Michigan, where Romney was born and raised and his father was an auto executive and popular governor, has become critical for him.

A loss there would set off alarm bells about Romney’s ability to win the allegiance of conservati­ves and ensure a long and costly battle to find a challenger for Obama in the general election.

But a win there and in Arizona would put Romney back in command in a race that has featured a series of conservati­ve rivals who have risen to challenge him only to fall back into the pack.

Polls in Michigan and Arizona on Wednesday showed Romney gaining ground. He held a slight two- point edge on Santorum in an NBC/ Marist poll in Michigan, and a 16- point edge in an NBC/ Marist poll in Arizona, where a CNN/ Time poll earlier in the week gave him just a four- point edge.

Romney’s well- financed campaign has turned its sights on Santorum in TV ads, in a repeat of a barrage of attacks it launched against Newt Gingrich, a former speaker of the U. S. House of Representa­tives, who surged then fell.

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