Rick Santorum’s dramatic three-state sweep this week may have been a triumph of pluck and perseverance, but it was also something else: a startling rejection of Mitt Romney.
It’s
easy to wave away Santorum’s triple triumph in Minnesota, Missouri, and
Colorado as an exercise in symbolism that netted him no delegates. But
as a snapshot of the state of the GOP race, it’s a rather dark picture
for Romney.
“These
results are a serious blow to Romney that crystallized the conservative
questions about his bona fides and punctured it,” says Ari Fleischer,
the former Bush White House spokesman. “If your campaign is built on
inevitability, a puncture can take you down.”
Ed
Rollins, the veteran GOP strategist who briefly ran Michele Bachmann’s
campaign, says Romney “has been running for six years and never quite
connected. He’s spent no time talking about his years as governor, which
is not exactly an all-star four years. He now wants to pretend he’s a
right-winger, and it’s just not believable.”
Adds
John Feehery, a former House Republican official: “Santorum doesn’t
have any organization or money—he’s able to win based on the idea that
the base doesn’t like Romney.” Romney “struck a bad chord” with his
gaffe about not being concerned about the very poor, says Feehery: “Many conservatives, especially Christian conservatives, actually care about the poor.”
Romney
is still the likely nominee, of course, but these and other GOP
analysts are saying for the first time that Santorum has a shot. They
see him as having eclipsed Newt Gingrich, whose fortunes have sagged
since his brief, shining moment in South Carolina.
Given
that Romney was coming off solid wins in Florida and Nevada, his vote
totals on Tuesday were stunningly weak, even if social conservatives
form the backbone of the electorate in the three states.
As Ron Brownstein points out in National Journal,
Romney got 25,900 votes in winning the Minnesota caucuses four years
ago; this time, in finishing third, he won only 8,090. The same pattern
held in the Colorado caucuses, which Romney won last time with 42,218
votes; on Tuesday he finished second with 22,875. And he drew just over a
third as many votes in Missouri’s beauty contest as in 2008.
Maybe
the results amounted to a giant protest vote. Maybe Romney does poorly
when he doesn’t have much time to campaign or when he doesn’t pour money
into attack ads. But there may well be something deeper that goes to
both style and substance.
Romney
comes across as overly scripted, and sometimes aloof, whether he’s
hitting his talking points or reciting “America the Beautiful.” He’s a
bit ill at ease among average voters. What was striking about his
concession speech Tuesday night was that when he talked about his father
struggling to make it as a carpenter, he seemed to be speaking from the
heart. (Of course, Dad went on to become head of American Motors and
Michigan’s governor, so that’s the closest Romney can come to a
rags-to-riches narrative.)
And
what, at its heart, is Romney’s message, other than that Obama is
flailing and the former head of Bain Capital is the man to fix the
economy? Romney lacks an animating idea that would bring voters to their
feet and faces such complications as the similarities between Obama’s
health-care reform and his own in Massachusetts.
“The conservative electorate of 2012 really is hungry for the authentic, Washington-changing candidate,” Fleischer says.
Perhaps
that’s why the Romney camp is now going after Santorum as a Beltway
insider. Top adviser Eric Fehrnstrom told MSNBC that Santorum and
Gingrich are “two peas in a pod—longtime Washington legislators.” And a
Romney email blast portrayed Gingrich and Santorum as wild-eyed
earmarkers, with such headlines as “Santorum Brought Over $1 Billion in
Pork-Barrel Spending Back to Pennsylvania” and “Santorum Voted for the
Bridge to Nowhere.”
It’s
no accident that Santorum, a favorite of religious conservatives, used
his Tuesday-night speech to trumpet his opposition to the White House
rule requiring Catholic organizations to offer contraception in
health-insurance plans—an issue that has been heating up in recent days.
“If
he becomes the champion of the conservative Catholic/Christian
coalition, he could be very credible,” says Rollins. “He’s a tough
debater. There are no liabilities to him. He’s every bit as
knowledgeable as Gingrich, though not as articulate. He’s more
disciplined in his message. He is the true-blue Catholic; Gingrich is a
convert who’s had multiple marriages.”
Santorum
“knows the issues better than Romney does,” Feehery says. “He’s got a
better message and is more consistent.” One political weakness, says
Feehery, is that Santorum is not a Tea Party favorite: “He’s a
big-government conservative, a traditional Republican—a George W. Bush
compassionate conservative.”
“Santorum doesn’t have any organization or money—he’s able to win based on the idea that the base doesn’t like Romney.”
Santorum’s
ability to remain in the first tier depends in part on whether his big
night triggers a flood of donations, so he doesn’t get buried in
Michigan or Arizona by millions in negative ads. One question is the
extent to which Wyoming financier Foster Friess, who has been bankrolling Santorum’s super PAC (as well as The Daily Caller), is willing to open his checkbook.
It
may turn out that Santorum is only the latest in a series of
Not-Romneys—Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry, Herman Cain, Newt Gingrich—who
flash across the political landscape before burning out. But if
Santorum can eclipse Gingrich and get Romney one-on-one, as in Missouri,
or if they alternate tackling the frontrunner in states where each man
is the strongest, this race isn’t over by a long shot.
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Howard Kurtz is The Daily Beast and Newsweek’s Washington bureau chief, and writes the Spin Cycle blog. He also hosts CNN’s weekly media program Reliable Sources on Sundays at 11 a.m. ET. The longtime media reporter and columnist for The Washington Post, Kurtz is the author of five books.
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.
Howard Kurtz is The Daily Beast and Newsweek’s Washington bureau chief, and writes the Spin Cycle blog. He also hosts CNN’s weekly media program Reliable Sources on Sundays at 11 a.m. ET. The longtime media reporter and columnist for The Washington Post, Kurtz is the author of five books.
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.
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