Political Hotsheet
By

Stephanie Condon /

CBS News/ February 7, 2012, 10:02 PM

Rick Santorum sweeps Missouri, Minnesota, Colorado

Rick Santorum AP Photo/Jeff Roberson

Updated Feb. 8, 1:36 a.m. ET

Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum swept the nominating contests in Missouri, Minnesota and Colorado Tuesday night, putting him back in contention for the GOP nomination.

Santorum now has four victories under his belt in the GOP race, more than any other candidate. His new standing stalls Mitt Romney's earlier momentum and gives Santorum grounds to argue that he -- not Newt Gingrich -- is the best conservative alternative to Romney.

Speaking from his Missouri campaign headquarters in St. Charles Tuesday night, Santorum looked ahead to the general election.

"I don't stand here to claim to be the conservative alternative to Mitt Romney," he said. "I stand here to be the conservative alternative to Barack Obama."

Santorum said that during the nominating contest, "Gov. Romney's best attribute is, 'I've got the most money and the best organization.'" But in the general election, Santorum said, that won't be the case. With that in mind, he said Republicans need a candidate who can make "sharp contrasts" with the president.

With 3,653 of 4,137 precincts reporting in Minnesota, Santorum won 45 percent of the vote, with Rep. Ron Paul of Texas coming in second place with 27 percent. Romney earned 17 percent while Gingrich took 11 percent.

With all precincts reporting in Missouri, Santorum carried 55 percent of the vote, while Romney took 25 percent and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas took 12 percent. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich failed to get on the ballot in Missouri.

In Colorado, Santorum won 40 percent of the vote, while Romney won 35 percent. Gingrich won 13 percent, and Paul took 12 percent.

Missouri election results
Colorado election results
Minnesota election results
Full coverage: Campaign 2012

Officially, a total of zero delegates will be awarded after Tuesday's contests. The Minnesota caucuses are the first step in a long process to assign delegates; the same is true in Colorado. Missouri's primary has been described as simply a "beauty contest," since the state's delegates will only be awarded after the March 17 caucuses. Still, the night clearly presented the former Pennsylvania senator with the opportunity to re-emerge as the conservative candidate in the race.

Watch Santorum's Tuesday night remarks at left.

Santorum just barely edged out Romney in the Iowa caucuses in January, but he fell behind Romney and Gingrich in the following nominating contests. Santorum spent more time than any of the other candidates in Missouri, which borders Iowa.

Romney should have had the advantage in both Colorado and Minnesota, which he carried in the 2008 Republican presidential primaries. He awaited the returns Tuesday night in Colorado, where he spent most of the past week campaigning.

"This was a good night for Rick Santorum," Romney said Tuesday night from Denver. "But I expect to become our nominee with your help."

Taking shots at all of his GOP rivals, he said, "I'm the only person in this race, Republican or Democrat, who has never served a day of time in Washington. In the world I come from, leadership is about starting a business, not trying to get a bill out of committee."

Rick Santorum finally gets his moment
In Denver, Romney uses Obama's 2008 convention speech against him
Estimated Republican Delegate Scorecard
Full GOP primary results

Anticipating Santorum's strong performance, the Romney campaign this week sought to tamp down expectations for Tuesday. Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a Romney supporter, argued Monday that Santorum is neither as conservative as he has painted himself nor as conservative as are Minnesota caucus-goers. He noted that the Minnesota caucuses typically have a "modest turnout" and heavily conservative voter base.

Paul managed to perform well in Minnesota with a strong organization and several recent campaign stops there. He also benefits from the caucus system, which draws in more dedicated voters. Over the past week, his events drew thousands of supporters.

Noting the enthusiasm among his supporters, Paul said Tuesday night, "I keep thinking it must be a lot more fun really believing in something than just campaigning for nothing."

The libertarian congressman said that while he has yet to win a state, his campaign is excelling at picking up delegates along the way. A candidate needs 1,144 delegates to secure the GOP nomination. Paul said that when the "dust settles," he expects to pick up a significant number of delegates in Minnesota.

Gingrich was in Ohio on Tuesday night, where Republican voters will weigh in on "Super Tuesday" on March 6, along with nine other states.

Counting pledged and unpledged delegates, Romney now has 97, Santorum has 39, Gingrich has 30 and Paul has eight.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
193 Comments Add a Comment
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Quivley says:
Santorum's glory will be short lived. He does NOT have what it takes to win the white house, NOR does he have the executive experience to be our president. Santorum would be wiser to see if he cannot win a v.p. or cabinet spot.
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FACEITT replies:
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AND..to put the icing on the cake, Rush "dope dealing, communist leaning Limbaugh has endorsed him. What more do you need? Trump endorsed Romney and his wake will be held soon. With Limbaugh involved, they might hold a double wake for Santorum and Romney. Gingrich is cremating himself and Ron Paul is attempting to rise from the dead with no hopes of resuscitation in sight.
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noloyalisti says:
Isn't this the fake Christian who was run out of Pennsylvania, not exactly a progressive state? Isn't this a Republicon who goes against all the teachings of Jesus? And whatever he says is exactly the opposite of the truth? Like today when he said Democrats are against freedom because they don't want fake Christians like Sanitorium telling everyone else what to do?
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markag55 replies:
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Holy be, noloyalisti! Go for it! Rick Santorum may just be the antichrist. Well, on second thought, he doesn't have enough power or influence to be that. Let's just say he's a misguided, lying, SOB. Is that fair to say?
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EmpireGeorge_------ says:
by Zann-Zel February 9, 2012 11:44 AM EST

Of course that was the reason those people came here. But what about those who came later? Many came running FROM religious persecution! Many came for religious freedom. We have to face the fact that we are a melting pot of cultures, and therefore Can NOT just choose one religion to represent us all.
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That's why I was saying that it's only this one settlement that had furthering the christian faith as their motive....but not everyone else, so it only holds little weight, so to speak.

But, those other colonists, who also came to escape religious prosecution, in the overwhelming cases, they were Christians, escaping persecution.....they weren't hindus or budhists, they were christians......so, It's really just too bad for the secularists/atheists, that the overwhelming majority of those colonists who founded this country, were......Christians.
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Zann-Zel says:
EmpireGeorge_------ February 9, 2012 11:37 AM EST
I'm the OG.....original gangsta of CBS....lol
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Maybe you should come back as OriginalGangsta! LOL!
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EmpireGeorge_------ says:
http://ratify.constitutioncenter.org/explore/FoundingDocuments/index.shtml
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ddd223 says:
google Santorum Sandusky . deserves attention
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Zann-Zel replies:
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While the establishment media has ceaselessly smeared Ron Paul for the controversial content of decades-old newsletters that were not even written by him, the comparatively shocking scandal of Rick Santorum having sponsored alleged child molester Jerry Sandusky has been almost universally ignored.

Santorum, who has cultivated an image as a clean-cut social conservative trumpeting family values, nominated Sandusky for a "Congressional Angels in Adoption Award," after Sandusky had already been accused of at least five cases of child molestation.

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noloyalisti says:
Who would have thunk it, the loser Sanitorium beating up on Mint RawMoney. You can't make up this wacko stuff. On the other hand you can't make up the clown show that the Republicon Party of fraud, waste, war and immorality has become.
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levelheadedtoo says:
There can't be a more confused bunch than Republicans right now. One day it is the crazy woman, then the guy that thinks abortions causes breast cancer, then the guy that wants to put a base on the moon, then the guy that says the poor are well taken care of. You had the 999 guy, the I'd do three things guy that could only think of two and of course there is the old guy that no one listens to. Now you have Trump expecting a cabinet spot. Who is going to tell him the bad news? Republicans are getting what they paid for.
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Zann-Zel says:
by troutfishman2 February 8, 2012 5:31 PM EST
It does not matter if we were "founded" on God, or Buddha, or The Three Stooges. Time goes on. The only thing that never changes is change.
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That was Jefferson's point!
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Zann-Zel says:
If it be enforced longer, it is an act of force, and not of right.
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So if we are sticking to the laws written over 200 years ago, we are not really governing ourselves. We are being forced to live by rules set down by people Long Dead!
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