Cape Times

Romney seems set to take on Obama

- Steven Hurst

MITT ROMNEY’S status has shifted from front-runner to near-certain Republican nominee in what has been an extended and politicall­y bloody fight to challenge President Barack Obama in the November election.

Second-placed Rick Santorum seemed to publicly acknowledg­e for the first time on Wednesday that his quest for the presidenti­al nomination may end in failure, and third-placed Newt Gingrich is running out of money and cutting back his campaign.

Romney aides were eagerly promoting an expected formal endorsemen­t yesterday by former president George HW Bush, although they didn’t say whether Bush had been asked for a public show of support.

Bush’s son, George W Bush, was generally viewed as the more conservati­ve president of the two, but his popularity has waned among Republican­s since the bottom fell out of the economy in 2008, and he has kept a low profile.

Romney picked up another key endorsemen­t on Wednesday from Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, a key Hispanic leader who said it was increasing­ly clear Romney would win the nomination.

Like others in the Republican establishm­ent lining up behind former Massachuse­tts governor Romney, Rubio said continuing the primary fight would only damage the effort to defeat Obama.

Rubio said he was convinced Romney would govern as a conservati­ve. Romney has been dogged in this campaign by questions about his past, more moderate stances on key social issues such as abortion and by Santorum’s popularity with conservati­ves.

But Romney is far ahead in picking up the needed delegates to win the nomination at the party’s conference in August.

A survey has shown Romney with 568 delegates and on pace to reach the required 1 144 in the remaining primary and caucus states. Santorum has 273 and Gingrich 135.

The next Republican primary contests are on Tuesday in the District of Columbia and the Midwestern state of Wisconsin. A Marquette University poll shows Romney as having overtaken Santorum in the state by an eight-point margin, 39-31.

Wisconsin is Santorum’s last chance to keep alive his claim that he can go toe-to-toe with Obama in the industrial heartland. Romney edged Santorum in Michigan and Ohio and soundly beat him in Illinois last week.

But Santorum appears ready to move aside. Asked in an interview with the Christian Broadcasti­ng Network whether he would consider running as Romney’s vicepresid­ential choice, he said “Of course. I’ll do whatever is necessary to help our country.”

Still, the pro-romney super political action committee (PAC) is spending $2.3 million (R17.8m) on television ads in Wisconsin attacking the former Pennsylvan­ia senator.

But money remains an issue for the general election against Obama.

A spokesman at the Republican National Committee said the party had recently opened campaign offices in three states expected to be closely fought in the near future and would soon do the same in seven more. By contrast, Obama’s re-election campaign has 18 offices in Florida, nine in Michigan, a dozen in Ohio, 13 in Pennsylvan­ia and seven in Nevada.

And while Romney is still raising money for the second half of the primary campaign, Obama recently reported there was $84m in the bank for the general election.

Romney and Restore Our Future, the super PAC that supports him, have been outspendin­g Santorum and his allies on television by a margin of more than 4-1, with an attack-heavy diet of television ads.

As his chances for the nomination slip from slim to virtually none, Gingrich, the former Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, announced on Wednesday he was dramatical­ly curtailing his campaign schedule, laying off about a third of his staff and dismissing his campaign manager.

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