USA TODAY US Edition

In wake of defeat, a pause for reflection

Candidates take a breather as party weighs its future

- Jackie Kucinich @jfkucinich USA TODAY

A bag of blue and white lanyards stamped with the RomneyRyan logo sat atop a cardboard box in the lobby of the Romney campaign’s headquarte­rs midday Wednesday — the only evidence of the frenzy of the Republican presidenti­al campaign that ended the night before.

Around 12:30 p.m., Mitt Romney’s presidenti­al campaign staff began arriving at the nondescrip­t building in the North End, exchanging hugs with one another before walking into the building.

“Can we give it a little more time? It’s still pretty raw,” said Romney political director Rich Beeson, when asked what happened to the campaign that was expressing such confidence just 24 hours before.

The end of what will likely be former Massachuse­tts governor Mitt Romney’s last presidenti­al bid stunned those around him. Not only had he lost, he lost every swing state except North Carolina and Florida, which remained too close to call Wednesday.

Romney spent Wednesday morning with his family. Around 4 p.m., he arrived — still with a Secret Service escort — at the headquarte­rs where the campaign staff had gathered for a final meeting. Shortly after he entered the building, his theme song, Born Free, could be heard from the sidewalk.

Two hours later, he and his wife, Ann, left without saying a word to reporters who asked him what was next. They got into a silver Saab with a Romney bumper sticker, and were

“Republican­s are going to have to take a very serious look at what happened and why it did happen and why we were not more competitiv­e at the presidenti­al level.” Newt Gingrich, formerHous­e speaker

driven away by son Tagg.

The former governor was expected to spend the night at his home in Belmont.

Rep. Paul Ryan on Wednesday returned with his family to Janesville, Wis., where he had been re-elected to serve his eighth term in Congress on Tuesday night.

“I am immensely proud of the campaign we ran, and I remain grateful to Gov. Romney for the honor of being his running mate,” Ryan said in a statement. “I look forward to spending some time with my family in the coming days and then continuing my responsibi­lities as chairman of the House Budget Committee and representa­tive of Wisconsin’s 1st Congressio­nal District.”

Although the spotlight on Ryan is likely to grow brighter in the coming years, Romney’s place in the Republican Party remains uncertain.

Romney’s loss and those that the Republican Party as a whole endured Tuesday have caused some soul-searching.

FormerHous­e speaker Newt Gingrich told CNN onWednesda­y that he “was wrong” when he said Romney would be the next president.

“I think the country was looking at a different set of things than we were looking at,” he said. “Republican­s are going to have to take a very serious look at what happened and why it did happen and why we were not more competitiv­e at the presidenti­al level.”

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, one of Romney’s top Republican surrogates, said on CBS that the Obama campaign simply beat Republican­s on the ground and that the GOP needed to do a better job reaching out to women and minorities.

“We obviously didn’t do it that well in the battlegrou­nd states this time,” McDonnell said. “And we’re going to find a way to do that much better because I think — we believe in — we believe in our cause. And we think it’s right for America. We just didn’t do a very good job.”

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