Los Angeles Times

GOP slugfest could drag on till June

The party loses some ground as Romney’s conservati­ve foes dig in, forcing him to fight for each delegate.

- Paul West reporting from washington

A presidenti­al primary season that opened with great promise for Republican­s is entering its second half with a flawed front-runner and shaky prospects for victory in the fall.

Mitt Romney won six states Tuesday, extending his lead in convention delegates. But in some respects he came out of the day in worse shape than he began it. His scrappy rival, Rick Santorum, has been reinvigora­ted by wins in three states, and Romney’s hopes for a swift end to a brutal GOP campaign have disappeare­d. Now, the Romney camp is being forced to buckle down for what could be a prolonged struggle for delegates that runs well into the spring, and possibly beyond, to the national convention in August.

“I am prepared to fight all the way to become the nominee,” Romney told CNBC on Wednesday. “We think that will get done before the convention. But one thing I can tell you for sure is there’s not going to be a brokered convention, where some new person comes in and becomes the nominee. It’s going to be one of the four people that are still running.”

Romney is still the oddson favorite to become his party’s nominee, and President Obama remains a vulnerable incumbent. But recent polling shows Obama leading all of the Republican contenders in test matchups, as well as increasing evidence that the prolonged, divisive primary battle is causing significan­t damage to the GOP.

“The economy is improving and people are feeling a little bit better about Obama, especially independen­ts. Also, the Republican Party and the Republican candidates have lost ground in the eyes of voters,” said Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center.

But “the Democrats can’t take anything for granted,” he said. “They’re in better shape than they were several months ago, but it’s way too early to pocket this one.”

Romney’s immediate challenge remains his Republican opponents. Newt Gingrich, marginaliz­ed by his failure to win outside the

Deep South and seething with resentment at Romney and the national GOP “elite,” whom he castigated Tuesday as he claimed victory in Georgia, is regarded by party insiders as a threat who could prolong his candidacy almost indefinite­ly.

The former speaker of the House and Santorum “are in this for the long haul. You have got two of the most stubborn conservati­ves in the movement, not willing to blink for the other,” said a longtime Republican strategist, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about his party’s prospects. “It helps Romney a lot that Newt is still in there. If he dropped out, Romney would have his hands full with Santorum.”

Santorum, a more agile politician than Romney, has emerged as a surprising­ly tough opponent. The former senator from Pennsylvan­ia came within 10,000 votes (out of 1.2 million cast) of scoring an upset in Ohio. And his emotional speech there on election night, about family, freedom and heartland values, highlighte­d his campaign’s greatest asset: his own political skills.

“We’re in it to stay,” he said afterward.

Santorum’s accomplish­ments are all the more impressive because of a glaring lack of financial resources and an improvisat­ional campaign that relies heavily on existing conservati­ve networks: evangelica­l Christians, antiaborti­on activists, fellow home-schoolers and tea party supporters. In Ohio, Romney outspent him by more than 4 to 1, an advantage that helped Romney claw his way back after trailing in preelectio­n polls.

Romney’s aides argued Wednesday that the former Massachuse­tts governor was the only contender with a clear mathematic­al path to the nomination, although he currently has fewer than 40% of the delegates needed to win. According to the latest Associated Press count, Romney has 415 delegates of the 1,144 required. Santorum has 176 delegates; Gingrich, 105; and Ron Paul, 47.

Yet two months into a grueling primary campaign, he remains unable to rally the GOP’S conservati­ve base and unite the party, despite having more wins than all of his rivals combined.

Exit polls from Tuesday’s contest revealed an increasing­ly familiar, and troubling, pattern for Romney: He’s winning upscale, better-educated Republican­s but running poorly among bluecollar voters — a key swing group in presidenti­al elections. In Oklahoma and Tennessee, which Santorum won easily, Romney got less than one-fourth of the votes of those earning less than $50,000 a year.

Perhaps most worrying for the Romney camp: Their candidate is losing ground when primary voters are asked which candidate best understand­s the problems of average Americans. His recent ill-chosen remarks, such as volunteeri­ng that his wife owns “a couple of Cadillacs,” have served to highlight the gap between ordinary voters and one of the wealthiest men ever to seek the presidency.

“They need to try harder,” said the Republican strategist. “You can’t just have people who make over $250,000 a year voting for you and not have the conservati­ves and evangelica­ls. You’ve got to work on building the coalition.”

Another longtime party strategist voiced concern about the flight of Latino voters, alienated by the harsh tone and language of the GOP debate over immigratio­n. Women are abandoning the Republican front-runner too. In a recent trial heat, Obama carried female voters by a lopsided 59% to 38% over Romney, according to a national Pew poll. And that was before the most recent destructiv­e sideshow over Rush Limbaugh’s comments about contracept­ion, which the strategist ruefully described as “a drive-by shooting at the Republican field.”

A series of upcoming tests in the Midwest and South, where Romney has yet to demonstrat­e strength, could sap whatever impetus he seeks to gain from Super Tuesday wins. Alabama, Mississipp­i, Kansas and Missouri will hold primaries and caucuses over the next 10 days.

Romney’s best chance to rebound won’t come until the March 20 primary in Illinois, where he will be favored to take the statewide vote, though districts “downstate and to the west may be more highly contested,” said Richard Williamson, the Republican national committeem­an from Illinois and a Romney supporter.

But Illinois is no more likely than Super Tuesday to end the race. And even if Romney maintains his current pace of picking up delegates, it could be June before he clinches the nomination.

In the meantime, Democrats, laying the groundwork for a general election less than eight months away, were taking new potshots at the GOP front-runner.

While Romney “continues to grind out … tactical victories in a kind of death march,” Obama strategist David Axelrod told reporters, the president’s aides are “encouraged” by what they see.

“If you look at where we were six months ago, where we are today, we believe we are making steady progress because of what we’re doing, because of what the economy is doing and because of what the Republican­s are doing,” he said.

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 ?? Brendan Smialowski ?? A NEWT GINGRICH PORTRAIT by artist Steve Penley is taken to a rally for the candidate in Atlanta.
Brendan Smialowski A NEWT GINGRICH PORTRAIT by artist Steve Penley is taken to a rally for the candidate in Atlanta.
 ?? James Gibbard ?? RICK SANTORUM BACKERS in Tulsa react to news of their candidate’s victory in Oklahoma.
James Gibbard RICK SANTORUM BACKERS in Tulsa react to news of their candidate’s victory in Oklahoma.
 ?? Justin Sullivan ?? MITT ROMNEY SUPPORTERS watch election returns during a Super Tuesday gathering in Boston.
Justin Sullivan MITT ROMNEY SUPPORTERS watch election returns during a Super Tuesday gathering in Boston.
 ?? Jerome A. Pollos Coeur d’alene (Idaho) Press ?? A RON PAUL SUPPORTER with an oversized image of her candidate at a Rathdrum, Idaho, caucus.
Jerome A. Pollos Coeur d’alene (Idaho) Press A RON PAUL SUPPORTER with an oversized image of her candidate at a Rathdrum, Idaho, caucus.

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