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    The Week

    Romney on the precipice

    Santorum is surging toward on improbable win in Michigan — a victory that might just push the juggernaut Romney campaign right off a cliff

    Mitt Romney now has some breathing space vouchsafed by the right-wingers who reluctantly picked him in the Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll, not to mention the Republicans who bothered to show up at the semi-real polling places of the sparsely attended and barely contested Maine caucuses. That breathing space stretches to primaries in Arizona and Michigan on February 28. Lord knows what will come out of Romney's mouth between now and then. 

    At CPAC, Mitt eked out a narrow margin over Rick Santorum after the Romney campaign bought registrations to pad his total and the organization changed the voting rules in a way that benefited the establishment choice. The change was aimed at stopping Ron Paul, who'd won CPAC before, but didn't attend this year. It's part of a pattern in this year's GOP contest — from a "mistake" in Iowa that stole Santorum's victory on election night to the sudden rediscovery of previously unenforced rules in Virginia that are keeping Santorum and Newt Gingrich off the state's primary ballot.

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    Romney showed up at CPAC and offered the kind of trademark gaffe that in his campaign is prologue as well as past.

    In Maine, where Paul was Mitt's only active opponent, Romney's 3 percent victory margin let him escape a disaster that would have compounded his trifecta of defeats in Missouri, Minnesota, and Colorado on February 7; this was supposed to be Mitt's month, with Newt the beleaguered alternative, but Santorum swept all three contests.  

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    On the rebound, Romney showed up at CPAC and offered the kind of trademark gaffe that in his campaign is prologue as well as past. He disobeyed his handlers again and spoke off script and off prompter. He's repeatedly derided President Obama for using a teleprompter, so Romney's reliance on it is just another flip-flop. Regardless, he ought to stick to the words on the screen. He was supposed to say that he was the "conservative" governor of Massachusetts; instead he extemporaneously proclaimed that he was "severely conservative."

    This tin-tongued, all-but-senseless phrase created a head-scratching moment that provoked derision and rebuke from Republicans as diverse as David Frum and Rush Limbaugh. "Severely constipated" is a phrase that makes sense — and might apply to Romney. But "severely conservative" not only suggests that he's adverb-challenged, but reveals how hard he's straining, too hard, to prove he's something he's not — a genuine, card-carrying, consistent paladin of the hard right. He discards his past positions on basic issues of conscience like an old pair of sneakers so he can run as fast as possible in the opposite direction. This has led skeptical Republicans to doubt not only his convictions, but his character — and left him struggling for a nomination that, by all the conventional measures, long since should have been his. 

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    Instead, on the same day as CPAC and Maine, Public Policy Polling, which has been remarkably accurate during this turbulent primary season, showed Santorum leading Romney 38 percent to 23 percent nationally, with Gingrich at 17 percent and Paul at 13 percent. And with a pandering Romney increasingly self-positioned as T.S. Eliot's "hollow man, head piece filled with straw [poll]," you have to wonder whether the establishment-ordained candidate, the "inevitable" nominee according to many commentators (including me), could actually fail in the GOP for the first time since 1964. 

    As empty — or craven — as Romney is, you can't beat no one with no one. But it should worry the Romney campaign that in the PPP data, his favorable/unfavorable rating among Republicans is just 44 percent to 43 percent, while Santorum's favorable is 64 percent, and his unfavorable just 22 percent. 

    SEE MORE: Mitt Romney's disputed CPAC and Maine wins: What they mean

     

    I still believe Santorum is a hopeless choice for the GOP, although I very much hope he's the nominee. And I see Newt Gingrich, the Colonel Blimp of this spectacle, as a "safety net" who in his ego-fuelled drive toward the bitter end may save Romney — to use his own phrase — from a "very poor" performance in the next round of primaries. 

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    Romney still has all the usual assets — money, structure, endorsements — although the once penurious Santorum raised $3 million, at a clip of a million a day, after his February 7 triumphs. Most of the Santorum money is coming on the internet from a grassroots that seems to be telling Mitt: "Don't tread on me." 

    So the bottom line is this: The nomination may be Romney's by the standard playbook and the prevailing GOP tradition of primogeniture, but he actually has to win it with real voters — and Santorum presents a real threat on February 28. 

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    Arizona, with its Mormon-heavy GOP electorate, is widely conceded to Romney; if he falters there, his chances could evaporate in the desert sun. Michigan is another story. It is one of Romney's home states; like the first Bush, also seen by conservatives though a glass darkly, but ultimately imposed on them, he has multiple home states. But Romney may find it hard going when he goes home again. He dissed the auto industry bailout: "Let Detroit go bankrupt." And his step-home state, where he lived as a young man but never since, is also the home of a Republican Party dominated by the religious right. 

    With his call to rebuild manufacturing and his appeal to so-called social values — a sanctification of intolerance, and a fierce enmity toward diversity, a woman's right to choose, and even birth control — Santorum calculates that he can play and win in Michigan. And right now he is. According to PPP, Santorum is surging to a 15-point lead.

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    In Boston, the Romney forces are plotting how the empire strikes back. Perhaps they'll even consider asking casino magnate Sheldon Adelson to keep funding the Gingrich super PAC; it matters less that the PAC would attack Mitt than that, in the end, Newt will continue to drain support from Santorum. If Gingrich drops out or is forced out because he runs out of money, PPP reports, 58 percent of his vote would shift to Santorum, and 22 percent to Romney. Boston can't afford that. 

    Surely the battle plan includes Mitt doubling down on doing anything, saying anything, shedding any remnant of his own record to appease the tea partiers and the culture warriors — while, the strategists have to pray, holding onto the suburban Republicans and the moderate remnant who believe Romney doesn't really mean it. But that's precisely the problem the "severely conservative" candidate faces: He sounds like an unconvinced and unconvincing mouthpiece with his pollster and handlers functioning as tag-team ventriloquists. 

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    So that leaves Boston's other front, the kind of thermonuclear ad offensive that vaporized Newt in Florida. I know, it was the super PAC that did it, and of course Romney didn't know anything about it. And I know too that Gingrich is pretty good at blowing himself up. Now the Romney side has to launch again, but training the warheads of February on Santorum could backfire. Republicans could decide that Romney has gone nuclear one time too many. 

    SEE MORE: Is Mitt Romney 'buying' the GOP nomination?

     

    Beyond this, Santorum doesn't remotely resemble the target rich environment of Newt's failures and foibles. Yes, he lost his Senate re-election in Pennsylvania in 2006 — because, he can say, he stood firm for conservative principles. Yes, he sought earmarks for his state while he was in the Senate — but how does that transgression stack up against the mortal sin of RomneyCare? Yes, he's against a national right to work law — but that was about state's rights. And he did serve in Washington; but in Romney's case, the failure to do so wasn't for lack of trying: He was trounced by Ted Kennedy in 1994. 

    Mitt's bet now — and it's necessity as much as strategy — is that Santorum's answers can never catch up with wave after wave of negative ads. Thus Romney may extort the Republican nomination from a reluctant, even resentful electorate by arguing that that other guy's a bigger bum than he is. Romney's peril is that the attacks may prove to be small beer — or from his perspective, small root beer. Santorum is a committed and credible ultra-conservative — and Republicans respond not only to what he says, but how he acts. 

    SEE MORE: Mitt Romney's 'landslide' Florida win: What it means

     

    When he left the campaign trail to spend crucial hours at the hospital bedside of his young daughter, Santorum gave primary voters a compelling glimpse of his character. To Republican faithful, he may be the real deal — a sharp contrast with Mitt's inauthenticity and Newt's demonstrated belief that marriage is between one man and three women. 

    Leading up to Michigan and Arizona, we'll watch not only ad warfare, but a Republican debate that will draw a big audience. Will Romney be frozen in the ice of his script, afraid of another gaffe, but then thrown off his customarily stiff stride by another unexpected turn for which he's unprepared? Can Santorum take control, creating his own defining moment — or will he spend the night on the defensive? 

    We are on the precipice of uncertainty in a campaign whose path once and then again seemed predestined. The logic still says Mitt is it. But life, even in politics, isn't always logic. He can't lose his way to victory — and if he loses again in Michigan, the race will be blown wide open, at least for a while. All the while Romney will be weakened by the continued shape-shifting and out of touch indifference that have already brought him negative ratings from independents and general election voters. And with a plague of pollsters now showing him behind Obama, his electability argument frays —  and he may be deprived of the last refuge of his opportunism. 

    As Steve Schmidt, John McCain's campaign manager in 2008, has observed, the drawn out Democratic primary contest that year reflected a truth that strengthened the party for the fall — Democrats wanted to nominate both Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton; this year Republicans want none of their candidates. Still someone has to prevail.

    The improbably named Foster Friess, the wealthy investor whose largess has sustained Santorum through the winter of his campaign, tells this joke: "A conservative, a liberal and a moderate walk into a bar... [T]he bartender says: 'Hi, Mitt.'"

    That's what nags about this manufactured man. So despite six years of campaigning, an ocean of cash, the imprimatur of GOP elites, and the consensus of the commentariat, it's Romney who now stands on the precipice. Ironically, his Mormonism may be the least of his difficulties and a vital asset; it certainly was in Nevada, and should be in Arizona. But now it's Michigan that matters. Maybe, just maybe, you can't be as severely phony as Mitt Romney and win the nomination early on — or even at all. 

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    19 comments

    • Jack  •  Irvine, California  •  3 mths ago
      As a democrat, I hope Santorum wins the nomination, because he is not a politician, he is a walking cartoon, Obama will eat him alive.
    • Jack  •  Austin, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Why do they keep saying Romney won Maine. The Washington County vote hasn't been cast yet and wont be until the 18th. Ron Paul is extremely close to him in vote total and has a strong base in that county.
      • DanU 3 mths ago
        It's all spin
      • J C 3 mths ago
        Oh, that's right. Ru Paul will sweep to victory in the end. He's just coyly holding back now to leverage the impact.
      • h2o4ever 3 mths ago
        The GOP monied bigwigs are handing the nomination to Romney under the noses of the Tea Party and they are just standing there and taking it.
    • Richard  •  Melbourne, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      Maybe if the GOP didn't Worship Grover over all of us Voters. They are incapable of raising taxes like Reagan did; they are incapable of Governing.
    • TheDevilzAdvocate  •  Detroit, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      I hate how pundits assume that a candidate should win the state that they are from. Mitt Romney may like Michigan, but Michigan doesn't like Mitt Romney. We'll take Ron Paul instead!
    • Eagle Ethos  •  3 mths ago
      Whoa ... Romney bashing at its finest!
    • Rick  •  3 mths ago
      rick who??
    • mydogshakespeare  •  3 mths ago
      Foster Friess' joke suggests that Romney might actually make the best POTUS. Too bad, hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee, Friess was trying to suggest just the opposite. Now Cons see Romney as a clown... just like folks to the left have pretty much seen him all along.

      The only way for the GOP to "win back" the POTUS is by rolling out a surprise candidate that grabs the right-wing imagination, knocks the left off balance forcing errors and demoralization, and who can peaks in late October. Otherwise, the POTUS is Obama's/Democrat/'s to lose.
    • Caliban  •  3 mths ago
      "you have to wonder whether the establishment-ordained candidate... could actually fail in the GOP for the first time since 1964"

      And may he do every bit as well as Goldwater in the general election too!
    • Topkick  •  3 mths ago
      This whole primary season just keeps getting curiouser and curiouser! Everyone gets a chance to be "King for a Day."I wouldn't be really surprised if this goes all the way to the Convention, and a clone of Ronald Reagan jumps out of a cake to accept the nomination!
    • Hai  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 mths ago
      Do us all, both Democrats and the Republicans, a favor by calling it quit. Santorum is an idiot, Romney is out of touch, confused man and Newt thinks everybody is wrong and he is right. Sadly, that leave Ron Paul and I like him but..... he should have been our president long time ago. So called Republicans best are comedians and they are not funny. They lay eggs every place they go. I know that they are campaigning but the things they say about our President are nasty and treacherous. If I was saying it, I would have been investigated by the FBI. They have nothing good to say about America. They are party poopers. And no one enjoys poopers. Where are the real Republicans who works for better USA?
    • Richard  •  Melbourne, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      You could almost feel sorry for the GOP if they weren't such a lousy bunch of near-traitors for what they've done to America. They really belong downstairs next to the Whigs.....no; I wouldn't wish that on the Whigs. They just need to go away.
    • George  •  Little Rock, Arkansas  •  3 mths ago
      As I have said before, whichever Republican turns out to be the frontrunner, be afraid, be very afraid, if they win the Presidency.
      • Rick 3 mths ago
        the only thing worse is nObama winning -
    • h2o4ever  •  3 mths ago
      While Bob Shrum's bias is very evident in the piece, he does make a few good points, but not for a second do I believe that Romney is on the precipice. The GOP establishment is obviously handing the election to Romney as we see with the shenanighans they pulled in Maine and Iowa.
      • Jerome 3 mths ago
        Maybe his bias is evident because it's an "opinion" piece?
    • Independence76  •  3 mths ago
      How much does it cost to buy an election?
    • Dana  •  3 mths ago
      Looks like you all are having a pederast convention in here.
    • Nancy  •  Mauldin, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      Why do they say that Santorum won Iowa--8 precincts heavy for Romney never made it to be counted? Why does Santorum act like a sore loser and smart mouthed, yuppie lobbyist when he doesn't get his way? No executive leadership skill background to turnaround this country-Romney has turnaround skills.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 mths ago
        He's turned around on every position he's ever taken..... I guess you're right.
    • Topkick  •  3 mths ago
      Just when you thought the GOP was about to annoint their "Holy One," it turns out he may be the "Anti-Christ!"
    • Nancy  •  Mauldin, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      Romney has the proven, conservative turnaround experience to lead this Country on a hard turn to the Right-the only candidate who can. By invitation he took on the corrupt, fined, bankrupt Olympics with 9/11 security risks to national treasure;spent millions to rescue colleagues daughter.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  De Witt, New York  •  3 mths ago
      From Wikipedia article on the author of this "journalism" piece: Robert M. "Bob" Shrum (born 1943) is an American political consultant, who has worked on numerous Democratic campaigns. ...worked for George McGovern... ...later worked for Ted Kennedy... helped Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis...helped Al Gore ...worked on John Kerry's campaign...Shrum is a regular columnist for The Week magazine's website. In other words, this piece masquerading as journalism is simply Democrat propaganda. Note, too, nowhere does it mention that Shrum is a Dem operative.