NorthIowaToday.com

Founded in 2010

News & Entertainment for Mason City, Clear Lake & the Entire North Iowa Region

Romney faces uphill climb in wooing Iowa voters

By David Lightman, McClatchy Newspapers

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Mitt Romney faces daunting challenges in this, the first state to vote for the 2012 Republican presidential nominee.

Foremost is the sudden widespread support for Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House of Representatives.
Romney’s campaign is taking a good-guy, bad-guy approach, leaving attacks on Gingrich to surrogates while the candidate stays above the fray.

(PHOTO: Mitt Romney returns an autographed hat to Susan Miller, a farmer from Wellsburg, Iowa during a town hall meeting to discuss jobs and the economy at Diamond V, an animal nutrition company in Cedar Rapids, Iowa on Friday, December 9, 2011.)

But Romney also has to overcome his image as someone too willing to change positions. His political problem is stark:

Gingrich’s poll numbers suggest he could score the kind of huge win in this state’s Jan. 3 GOP caucuses that could give him enough momentum to threaten Romney’s chances in New Hampshire on Jan. 10. Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, is counting heavily on a victory in that state’s first-in-the-nation primary to give him a significant boost.

In light of the Gingrich surge, Romney is suddenly under intense pressure to make a decent showing in Iowa to preserve his own viability down the road. Romney “has to finish strong,” said David Kochel, Romney’s Iowa consultant.

Romney’s campaign began taking on Gingrich this week. Restore Our Future, a political action group backing Romney, released a web ad blasting Gingrich as having “a ton of baggage.”

Two prominent Romney supporters lashed out in a conference call with reporters on Thursday at Gingrich’s erratic history and sometimes caustic demeanor. Former New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu accused Gingrich of, among other things, “irrational behavior that you do not want in the commander in chief.”

But Romney himself wouldn’t comment on the accusation Friday. “I can’t write a script for Governor Sununu or anybody else,” he said. Nor would he comment on the ad.

Instead, Romney stayed lofty during a visit to the Diamond V plant in Cedar Rapids, where workers make dietary supplements for animals and people.

Asked by reporters about Gingrich, Romney said that while they differed on a Medicare overhaul proposal, he could support any of his GOP rivals over President Barack Obama.

“Yes, they’re all qualified, including Speaker Gingrich,” Romney said.

During an hourlong question-and-answer session with voters, Romney took only one polite dig at Gingrich, citing the former speaker’s comment in May that Rep. Paul Ryan’s Medicare plan was “right-wing social engineering.”

Ryan, R-Wis., would change Medicare into a program of federal vouchers to subsidize the purchase of private health services rather than the government-paid approach in place since 1965. Romney called Ryan’s plan “a very important step to protect Medicare and Social Security. We’re going to have to make changes like the one Paul Ryan proposed.”

Romney, Gingrich and four other Republican presidential candidates will face each other for the first time this month at Saturday night’s Des Moines debate. The two-hour debate, which ABC will televise, begins at 9 p.m. EST. They’ll also debate Thursday on Fox News from 9 to 11 p.m. EST in Sioux City.

The debates will be crucial, said John Powers, a Cedar Rapids retiree.

“I’m just sizing up everything. The big thing I’m waiting for is that debate tomorrow,” he said.

Romney has begun fighting harder, but he has to overcome not only Gingrich but his own image. When asked about Romney, many voters roll their eyes and shake their heads.

“I doubt I’ll vote for him. There’s just something about him,” said Jeff Trier, a Des Moines financial adviser.

It’s clear that Romney has strong pockets of support, notably among moderates and in the business and professional communities.

“People say he looks slick, but you can’t change the way you look,” said Margo Nahas, an Adel jewelry designer. “And people do change their minds. My husband was pro-choice, and now he’s pro-life. I don’t disrespect him. People get older and they mature.”

Supporters also like Romney’s perceived electability.

“I think he has a better chance to beat Obama. Gingrich has a lot of baggage,” said Luann Steenhoek, a Cedar Rapids real estate agent.

But going negative in genteel Iowa is always a risk, and Romney’s late effort rankles some Iowans, who wish he’d come sooner.

Romney’s taking a gamble, said Craig Robinson, editor of The Iowa Republican, a statewide newsletter and website.

“I think Romney has no choice but to attack Gingrich,” he said. “The problem is that in doing so, he’s probably going to help the other candidates competing in Iowa (more) than helping himself, because he’s not been here.

“So it makes sense, but it’s probably not going to help him, either.”

___
©2011 the McClatchy Washington Bureau

0 LEAVE A COMMENT2!
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Even more news:

Copyright 2024 – Internet Marketing Pros. of Iowa, Inc.
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x