Political Hotsheet
By

Sarah B. Boxer /

CBS News/ January 23, 2012, 11:48 AM

Romney slams Gingrich as "highly erratic"

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney

/ AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

Updated 7 p.m. ET

TAMPA, Fla. -- An aggressive Mitt Romney on Monday made it clear that he will seek to make rival Newt Gingrich's record the central issue in the days leading up to Florida's primary, launching a multipronged attack on several past controversies and calling the former House speaker "highly erratic."

"He voted in favor of establishing the Department of Education, and yet he gets in a debate and says we should get rid of the Department of Education and send all the education issues back to the states," Romney said. "He's ... opposed vehemently to the Massachusetts health care system, and yet just a couple years ago wrote about what a superb system it was.

"He's gone from pillar to post almost like a pinball machine, from item to item in a way which is highly erratic. It does not suggest a stable, thoughtful course which is normally associated with leadership."

Romney also picked up on an argument that Rick Santorum has sought to make -- that there could be a surprise with Gingrich that Republicans can ill afford.

"I think it's an appropriate that people should know if there's going to be an October surprise," Romney said. "And in the case of the speaker, he's got some records which could represent an October surprise.... So let's, let's see the records from the ethics investigation; let's see what they show, let's see who his clients were."

Gingrich said on Monday morning he would seek to publicly release his contract from his Freddie Mac work. He has steadfastly denied doing any consulting on behalf of the mortgage giant, saying that his firm provided historical advice.

One of Gingrich's campaign surrogates pushed back on Monday against Mitt Romney's attacks, comparing his friend's Freddie Mac work to the ex-Massachusetts governor's work in the business world.

"The governor did consulting work in terms of financial services," former Rep. J.C. Watts, R-Okla., told reporters in a conference call. "I think beating up Newt Gingrich for consulting, or beating up Mitt Romney for consulting in the private sector -- I think that's about like saying, let's beat up Michael Jordan for being a great basketball player."

But Romney made clear he sees his rival as vulnerable on the issue. "What Freddie Mac did in this market is to cause part of the underpinnings of the collapse which has hurt so many people here in Florida, and of course, Newt Gingrich was working for Freddie Mac," he told Fox News on Monday.

Romney's team also rolled out what would be the first negative advertisement directly from his campaign, aimed at Gingrich. Called "Florida Families," it highlights Sunshine State families who suffered at the same time that Gingrich profited from Freddie Mac.

In the 30-second commercial, a narrator says, "A historian? Really?" and concludes by saying, "If Newt wins, this guy would be very happy" -- flashing an imagine of an exuberant President Obama.

Romney's allies in the Republican establishment signaled that they would join him in attacking Gingrich on trustworthiness and transparency. "He's called upon Governor Romney to be transparent," said former GOP hopeful and Romney supporter Tim Pawlenty in a conference call with reporters. "Well, Speaker Gingrich needs to be transparent."

Pawlenty added to the clamor for more information about the now-opaque nature of his work with Freddie Mac. The issue takes on additional weight in Florida, a state ravaged by the mortgage crisis. Pawlenty and Florida House Speaker-designate Will Weatherford focused their attacks on Gingrich's involvement with Freddie Mac, which they charge contributed to the collapse of the housing market.

Pawlenty rejected the notion that Gingrich served as a historian. "The notion that he was paid $1.7 million as a historian for Freddie Mac is just BS," Pawlenty said. "It's just nonsense." But he added that he had nothing against lobbyists -- just ones who obscure their jobs.

"One of the issues in this campaign is who represents Washington, D.C. -- and all of the dysfunction and incredible disappointment and frustration that the United States of America and its people have towards Washington, D.C. -- and who doesn't. Newt Gingrich has spent almost his entire adult life either as a member of the Congress or as somebody who's been an influence-peddler, post-speakership, in the way that I've described. And to suggest that he's the outsider simply defies the facts," Pawlenty said. "There's only one outsider in this race ... and that's Mitt Romney."

Weatherford added, "Our party is in a moment where we have to decide what we want to do and [the] direction that we're going to go, as we face what I believe is going to be one of the most historic elections in our lifetime. And we need principled leaders, not political opportunists. Transparency goes both ways, and Newt Gingrich spent the last two weeks talking about transparency and coming after Governor Romney from that front, but it works both ways."

Romney's campaign also unveiled a new anti-Gringrich theme, "Unreliable Leader," issuing a news release showing a photo of Gingrich with Rep. Nancy Pelosi, a widely loathed figure among conservatives. Gingrich appeared in a 2008 ad with Pelosi calling for action on climate change -- a move that he has acknowledged was a grave mistake on his part.

In the Fox News interview, Romney indicated that one of his issue focuses will be on health care, a particularly important issue to Florida. "I know something about making health care work more like a market," he said. "I understand how markets work, and I believe the people here in Florida will give me the boost I need to go on to the next few states and get delegates I need to become our nominee."

Catherine Hollander and Sarah Huisenga contributed

Full CBS News coverage: Mitt Romney

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
81 Comments Add a Comment
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Zann-Zel says:
by Mortarman291SG January 23, 2012 6:53 PM EST
by Zann-Zel January 23, 2012 5:09 PM EST
But you are talking about "the law" as of 1776.
I'm talking about the law as of 2012.
If you lived back then, around 1776....would you have been one of the ones trying to hold up the law of The King? Or would you have been a revolutionary?

One thing you absolutely cannot do Mort is turn back the clock.

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But we can. Why? Because they arent laws in the first place.
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Okay Mortar. In what order? What would you do first? And tell me what reaction you'd expect to get. When you cut out all food stamps, what do you thing will happen, really? When you cut out all medicaid/medicare what do you think will happen then? Tell me what order you'd do all this in and how you would keep total chaos from taking over the country when you do.
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Thinkbeforeyouwrite says:
This 1% versus 99% thing that is being talked about ad nauseum is pretty stupid. It is as wrong as when we stereotype races, ethnic groups, religions, etc. I am sure there are people within the l% who are doing more than their fair share and some people within the 99% who are not. I agree a wide wealth disparity is not good for any country and we need to work on getting it back to where it was but let's not demonize certain groups of people. It will not help anyone.
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dj_chi replies:
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Romney was heavily supported by people with over $200k incomes. Gingrich by those below $200k. That's not demonizing, just pointing out the facts.
Zann-Zel replies:
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We aren't demonizing the 1%. We simply want our government to stop catering to the top 1%. Make them pay the same tax rate as everyone else without all these loopholes they can buy to get out of it!
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Ms Clarity says:
Hey Romney: And in those days they will say good is evil and evil is good. In a world of universsal deception telling the truth is a radical act. Erractic - that's your reaction to the truth. hmmmmmmm your hitler is showing.
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wggreen says:
Romney has got to stop spreading these vicious truths about Newt.
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dj_chi replies:
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As if Romney doesn't have his own long list of examples of being on both sides of an issue.
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noloyalisti says:
These Republicons can't really be serious can they? Their candidates are so flawed is so many ways, it is hard to believe that anyone could consider any of them.

Honestly, they are representing such backwards and failed policies, it's almost like the last 70 years of progress did not matter. Does anyone really like any of their ideas? Do they like all the divisiveness, the class warfare and bad foreign and financial policies they extoll. Honestly.
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kevjustice says:
gop candidates doing major damage to each other! lol! lmao!
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P0STING_AWAY says:
by Zann-Zel January 23, 2012 5:28 PM EST
I may do that in Texas too! : )
Vote for the Worst! LOL
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The Worst ???
Could you be a little more specific ????
They are all bad.
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Zann-Zel replies:
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We were discussing voting for Ron Paul - I could rephrase that though, I don't consider him the worst, I consider him the most harmless. But I do believe he is the least electable.
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FormerUSMCSergeant says:
I'm waiting for newt to claim he's the only candidate with "character".

That'll be a hoot and a half.....
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tsigili says:
The "nice guy" isn't so nice, now is he??????
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noloyalisti says:
Isn't Robmee the idiot who said corporations are people my friend? How much further out of touch can one Top 1% person be?
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