Political Hotsheet
By

Sarah B. Boxer, Sarah Huisenga /

CBS News/ December 9, 2011, 7:45 PM

Romney still playing up differences with Gingrich over Ryan budget

With Herman Cain out of the race, the field narrows and Romney is forced to focus his attacks on Newt Gingrich. But Ron Paul, Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry are still campaigning hard ahead of the Iowa caucuses.

With Herman Cain out of the race, the field narrows and Romney is forced to focus his attacks on Newt Gingrich. But Ron Paul, Michele Bachmann and Rick Perry are still campaigning hard ahead of the Iowa caucuses.

Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich on Nov. 21, 2011.

/ AP Photo

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa -- On the eve of a crucial debate in the Hawkeye State, Mitt Romney on Friday continued to highlight his differences with Newt Gingrich on Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan's budget blueprint that Gingrich blasted as "right-wing social engineering" before walking back his comments.

Gingrich's campaign quickly retaliated, sending out surrogates to argue that the former Massachusetts governor's decision to attack was a sign of desperation that would backfire.

"Speaker Gingrich and I have a very different view, for instance with regard to Paul Ryan's plan, and the need to fundamentally transform Medicare .... So we'll talk about those differences and I think in the final analysis, Americans will decide who can best lead our country at such a critical time," Romney told a town hall audience here.

His comment came on the heels of a scathing web ad from Romney's "super PAC" attacking Gingrich on the issue as well as two days of conference calls from boosters of the former Massachusetts governor. And that line of attack is likely to continue at Saturday's ABC-sponsored debate in Des Moines.

Romney team slams Gingrich for criticizing Ryan Medicare plan

But the approach could falter if Democrats decide to follow their strategy of making the Ryan plan a central issue in the 2012 congressional and presidential races. The House Budget Committee chairman calls for revamping Medicare and transforming it into a voucher system, an approach Democrats are convinced will alienate older swing voters.

During the conference calls from Romney supporters on Friday, Mary Kramer -- a former Iowa state senator and U.S. ambassador to Barbados -- said that Romney "will never get derailed in such a way that he would embarrass us."

Another supporter, Iowa state Rep. Renee Schulte, added that Romney's "more disciplined approach is what we need in a president."

But there were signs that playing the attack dog still makes Romney uncomfortable. He refused to comment on the anti-Gingrich ad, and said of the supportive conference calls from his backers: "As for the comments of people who've supported me, I don't write the script for them."

Gingrich's backers, meanwhile, predicted that any negative ads would backfire in Iowa, where polls show the ex-Georgia congressman with a double-digit lead over Romney.

"What we're seeing from Mitt Romney and Boston is desperation and panic and I think that's going to be very frustrating to people moving forward," said Linda Upmeyer, Gingrich's Iowa chairwoman. "They don't want to see $3 million of attack ads -- believe me I get that feedback."

Former Iowa Rep. Greg Ganske echoed that sentiment: "I would have to say, where has Mitt been in Iowa? He basically was going to blow this state off until the Speaker rose in the polls, and now he's coming on with this huge $3 million buy attacking the Speaker. I think having been in politics, that is a very, very risky move."

Ganske also addressed the criticism of Gingrich's tenure as Speaker, saying that his friend has changed for the better since stepping down from that post and leaving Congress.

"I think in his time out of office he has had time to think about a lot of different things," Ganske said. "I think he's fundamentally a happier person than he was before."

Romney, who has taken heat for not spending as much time in Iowa as other candidates -- he had made four trips to the state since August -- vowed that he was committed to spending more time there. "As we get closer to the caucus time you're going to see more of me, more of my family, more of my ads," he said.

Romney also acknowledged the possibility of failure in speaking to reporters after the event. "I just happen to think that selection is going to ultimately come down to the question between the direction of the country and who is capable of leading the country at this critical time... I hope in that final analysis, I get chosen. If I'm not, I'll be disappointed, but not heartbroken; I love this country. I believe that the other Republicans are each good people."

Both Ganske and Upmeyer also sought to stress that their criticism of Romney's tactics wasn't a personal attack on Romney. "No campaign just lays down and allows and opponent to stab you in the heart," Ganske said. "I mean, it deserves a response."

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
14 Comments Add a Comment
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fedup12 says:
LOL I think it is funny that Gingrich wants to keep his past out of the campaign.

Could be there is a LOT of material there. Heck just on Gingrich's ethics.
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fedup12 says:
Mitt Romney is giving a speech.

He sounds like GW Bush regarding the middle east. He will fail on that policy. And break America trying.
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ipmutt says:
more anti republican rant from mainstream media.
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jimbom121 replies:
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How is this anti-republican?? Details please.
fedup12 replies:
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jpmutt must be one of those chicken littles that thinks all media is out to get republicans.
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creeper00 says:
This is actually funny. The Iowa caucuses really don't mean squat. Anyone remember the 2008 winner? It was a guy named Huckabee, who flamed out shortly after posting that win. But you candidates keep on spending your money here. We like it.
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kevjustice replies:
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sites to see in iowa: cornfields?
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GreedyOldPartee says:
Yes Mitt, hook your wagon to that goober from Wisconsin. Yeah, Wisconsin is just thriving having him there for guidance. Why is Ryan afraid to run for Kohls open senator seat? And why is the manikin still running for the WH.
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kevjustice says:
mitt is desperite. he's losing big in the poles.i'm no fan of newt but mitt you may have sealed your doom if your the gop candidate. seniors by the millions are totally againt the ryan comical plan. "reform" translation by gop means major cuts. the wall st flip-flopper is doomed.
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shurch4truth says:
Mitt was warned early on that he was barking up the wrong tree by directing his $ resources at Obama instead of Newt....now he's paying for it.

Mitt, I always felt there was lot about you that was artificial....seems to be coming to light now.

Newt, I always felt there was a lot about you that was scary - unable to control your emotions, unable to control your natural urges as a male, unable to prevent yourself from making the ultimate insulting statement which has always made you seem petty and mean.

USA Citizens - if you're inclined to vote Republican you have my sympathies
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jimbom121 says:
Gee Mitt, you want to use killing off medicare as a way to bash Gingrich?
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ipmutt says:
Any news on Obama giving Iran a drome? Why Not? Bias?
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tafhdyd replies:
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If you listened to real news rather than Fox you would have heard about it a couple of days ago.
P.S. Try spell check and hit the submit tab only once.
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ipmutt says:
Any news on Obama giving Iran a drome? Why Not? Bias?
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