Political Hotsheet
By

John Dickerson /

CBS News/ January 11, 2012, 5:25 AM

Will Mitt Romney's N.H. win silence critics?

Mitt Romney addresses a primary night victory rally in New Hampshire

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney addresses a primary night victory rally in Manchester, New Hampshire, Jan. 10, 2012.

/ Getty


This post originally appeared on Slate.

For the last week, Mitt Romney has called himself "landslide Romney," repeating a joke from John McCain about his eight-vote victory in the Iowa caucuses. The title fits a little better now.

Romney won the New Hampshire primary by a handy 13 points with 40 percent of the vote. In the much-watched fight for runner-up, Ron Paul got that "real nice second place" he'd been predicting, with 23 percent of the vote, and Jon Huntsman finished third with 17 percent -- to the disappointment of New York magazine editors, but few Republican voters.

Mitt Romney has been an anemic candidate, ahead in the polls but not strong enough to lock up victory. Will New Hampshire put some iron in the blood, or is it a pale win that won't quell conservative calls for a nominee they can believe in? Romney is now the first non-incumbent Republican candidate in history to win the Iowa caucus and the New Hampshire primary, and he can expect a bump in the polls in South Carolina and Florida, where he is already ahead.

Special section: Campaign 2012

Romney calls himself a "numbers guy," but by the numbers he has a tremendously long way to go. He has won only a handful of delegates. Even after the first four contests, only 15 percent of the delegates will be apportioned. Romney is banking that his wins create a bandwagon effect, drying up the money of his competitors and shrinking the appetite for the anti-Romney candidate. He is, in essence, hoping for the surge that has lifted every other candidate in this race except him.

Expectations were high for Romney, and he met them.

Thirty-five percent of New Hampshire voters said their most important issue was beating Barack Obama. Romney won 60 percent of them. He carried all groups -- from Tea Party supporters to conservatives to moderates. Despite this week's attacks on Romney's tenure at Bain, voters still seem persuaded by his argument that his business experience makes him the best candidate to handle the economy. Among the 6-in-10 voters for whom the economy was the top issue, Romney more than doubled the support of his nearest competitor.

Ron Paul won handily among young voters, getting 40 percent of the 18-29-year-old vote. He also won with voters who said voting for a "true conservative" was what motivated their vote. Paul grinned to his supporters at his election night party, and he reveled in being called "dangerous." Mitt Romney won handily, he said, "but we're nibbling at his heels."

But even if he was nibbling, the exit polls showed Paul's limitations. 55 percent of those polled in New Hampshire said they would be dissatisfied if he won the nomination. Only 37 percent said that about Romney.

In South Carolina, which votes a week from Saturday, Romney can expect 10 days of hell. South Carolina is likely to be the last stand of the anti-Romney forces, or the place where they turn the tide. Romney is likely to be the target of sustained attacks that may be the last serious assaults of the primary-season nomination battle if he does well there.

The Romney campaign is hoping that New Hampshire will validate him and sweep away the stories about Republicans unhappy with the front-runner. In the latest CBS national poll, 58 percent of Republicans say they want more presidential choices. Romney leads that poll, but with only 19 percent. In exit polls of New Hampshire voters, 31 percent said they wanted another candidate to join the race.

New Hampshire may end up acting as a shield for Romney against the recent attacks on his business career. Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry, and Jon Huntsman characterized Romney as a ruthless corporate raider. Though the attacks started too late to change the New Hampshire result much, Romney can claim that New Hampshire voters heard them and decided they were without merit.

It's not clear who will go hardest after Romney now. The problem traditionally with attacking in a multicandidate field is that you harm the front-runner but you also hurt yourself. You don't attract his voters -- you drive undecided voters away from both the target and yourself.

That may be happening to Gingrich, who pressed the case against Romney most thoroughly, and whose super PAC plans to run millions of dollars of ads in South Carolina on the issue. His attacks on Romney's record at Bain were roundly criticized by conservatives from the National Review to Rush Limbaugh. Romney can't usually count on such conservatives as his allies. Romney also got a solid from Ron Paul, who said Huntsman, Perry, and Gingrich were attacking the free-market system.

Gingrich won only 10 percent of the vote but vowed to continue his attacks on the front-runner.

"We're going to go all out to win in South Carolina," he told CNN's John King. "We think that the contrast between a Georgia Reagan conservative and a Massachusetts moderate is pretty dramatic."

Jon Huntsman also said he would continue his campaign, though South Carolina may be too conservative for him. After all, 40 percent of his New Hampshire supporters said they were satisfied with Obama as president.

Rick Santorum didn't match the surge he had in Iowa. But his 70 visits to New Hampshire and his Iowa bounce apparently made him a more attractive candidate. Santorum, who tied Gingrich at 10 percent, came in third among late-deciding voters.

On Election Day, Romney enjoyed a movie in relative anonymity with his grandchildren, something he won't be able to for much longer. The kids saw The Muppets and Romney watched Mission: Impossible. After New Hampshire, he hopes one describes his rivals and the other describes their chances.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
17 Comments Add a Comment
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noloyalisti says:
The entire Republicon Party is a clown sideshow. We really don't need that wing of the Top 1% Political Party of America.

The obsolete GOP hates American workers, the middle class, the poor, minorities, women and children. Who would be stupid enough to vote for these evil anti-democratic clowns?
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chris87654 says:
Critics don't matter much. Hopefully this will silence the idiots who think some GOP sideshow (like Palin or Perry) can win a general election. NH showed the will of sane Republicans, which is closer to that of the majority of voters - the US is not composed of rightwingnuts. It was good to see about 2/3 of them are fiscal conservatives instead of social "conservatives". Amazing how wingnuts want the government to shrink unless it involves forcing people to accept their social issues, which should be left up to states - social issues never caused anyone to lose a job or home.
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anonymous010 says:
Considering that it was businessmen who got our economy into this mess in the first place, the last thing I'd want is a businessman in a position to do further harm. That's like putting a compulsive thief in charge of security and expecting him not to steal.
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occupy_cbs says:
MsmCorrupt: "If you don't want the same foreign policy as Bush-Cheney, you won't support Mitt Romney. Mitts foreign Policy advisers worked for Bush-Cheney."



That's a fact, just another PNAC NEOCON for an expanded military-industrial complex and more wars we can no longer afford.

How about a $10,000 bet?
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liquidify says:
Answer: No, it will not silence the critics because Romney is a false conservative and for those of us who are real conservatives, he cannot get our vote.

As we saw with McCain, getting the baby boom generation's version of conservative vote is not enough to win in the general.
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sallychicago replies:
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Whether he's a false or true conservative he's still John Kerry 2.0 -- filthy rich and has no idea what the common man looks like or thinks. Anytime you own 15 homes and tear down a house to rebuild it better -- I wonder how many people can identify with that.
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LudwigVonMises says:
WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH
MITT ROMNEY IS A CONSERVATIVE

~ An updated version of the Ministry of Truth's slogan from George Orwell's 1984
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matzeklein says:
Why? As the body of Christ has been split so is their political influence.
And the attitude - country first Christ second - is wrong?

What needs to be done to become salty again?

Watch video: A German preacher's thought on American Christians and politics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpLYq525SpM
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sandy 1027 replies:
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I am a Christian, and actually agree with Evangelicals on some social issues, but what I don't agree with is how , many times, Christ is presented to the world by my brethren.A lot of us want to fix people outwardly, and not truly inwardly, first.

Also, many Evangelicals are wedded to a political party that holds a view about the role of government and the poor and disadvantaged that isn't doctrinally sound because throughout scripture , not only were Jews and Christians alike taught to care for "the least of these" ( feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, ministering to the sick),but it was a command to a nation that had no separation of church and state, so the government had a role in caring for these folks; and Christ made a dire pronouncement against countries that didn't do so.
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wdcpost says:
Willard Mitt Romney, born March 12, 1947 is an American businessman and politician. He was the 70th Governor of Massachusetts from 2003 to 2007 and is a candidate for the 2012 Republican Party presidential nomination.
http://www.wdcpost.com/2012/01/mitt-romney.html
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Atlanticum says:
"Romney calls himself a "numbers guy,"...

I call him a huckster and a used car salesman. Please, no.
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sallychicago replies:
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HAHAHA :) He does come off as a click car salesman doesn't he? I'm concerned about his owning 15 homes (shades of Perry?) and wanting to tear down a house in California to rebuild it bigger. Something's not right about his wealth. Maybe he has too much?
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ModerateRep1 says:
Romney will get the nomination. He's been consistant with his campaign and despite the effort of the left to dig up dirt on him, he still stands up to muster. Democrats are simply scared. I don't mean moderate Democrats or Independents. I mean the left-wing, fanatics who would love to see a government controlled police state. They saw the promise of this kind of system with Obama, but the Citizens of the United States are smarter than that.
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sallychicago replies:
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Don't know about "consistent"....He's learning how not to say flubbing remarks. But when that 3am call comes into the White House, I would prefer that Obama answer it than Romney.
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