Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ February 13, 2012, 4:21 PM

Rick Santorum: No longer such a long shot

AP
After Saturday's Maine caucuses, we've come to something of a lull in the Republican presidential race.

The next nominating contests don't come until February 28, when there are primaries in Arizona and Michigan. There is only one debate scheduled before those contests, on February 22 in Arizona. Other than that there's not much action until Super Tuesday, on March 6, when ten states hold their contests.

Though Mitt Romney won the lightly-attended Maine caucuses, it's Rick Santorum that seems to have the momentum. A new Pew Research Center national poll shows Santorum with 30 percent support to Romney's 28 percent, with Newt Gingrich taking 17 percent and Ron Paul coming in at 12 percent. Even more importantly, an ARG poll of likely Republican primary voters in Michigan shows Santorum leading Romney 33 percent to 27 percent, followed by Gingrich at 21 percent and Paul at 12 percent. 

Even if Romney wins Arizona - which he is expected to do - he'd be severely damaged by a loss in Michigan, the state where Romney was born and where his father was a popular governor. Santorum has shown strength in the Midwest, where he seems to have a blue-collar appeal that Romney lacks; the former Pennsylvania senator has already won contests in Missouri, Iowa and Minnesota.

It's important not to overstate these early wins, which came in two low-turnout, non-binding caucus states and a Missouri primary that didn't actually award any delegates and was thus not seriously contested. But a Santorum victory in Michigan would make clear that Romney - whose extreme wealth (and how he made it) has already become an issue in the primary fight - has a serious problem connecting with Midwestern, blue-collar voters. It would also recast the race as a two-man battle between Santorum and Romney going into Super Tuesday.

That's when there's another crucial Midwestern contest: The Ohio primary, which polls suggest is very much up for grabs. The Santorum camp appears to be aiming for a one-two punch in Michigan and Ohio that could inflict mortal damage on Romney's campaign and leave Santorum as the improbable frontrunner for the nomination going forward.

Pulling that off, however, won't be easy. Romney has serious organizational and financial advantages over Santorum, and it's almost assured that he will hit his rival hard both on the Michigan and Ohio airwaves and on the campaign trail. (Restore our Future, the pro-Romney super PAC, tells CBS News it is already purchasing $640,000 in ads in Michigan alone.) For precedent, look no further than what happened after Gingrich won the South Carolina primary: Romney went aggressively negative on Gingrich, spent millions of dollars to bury him in negative advertising in Florida, and went on to a double-digit victory in the Sunshine State.

The other states to keep a close eye on come Super Tuesday are Tennessee, Oklahoma and Georgia. Georgia is Gingrich's home state, and if he loses there, he's going to have a hard time justifying staying in the race - particularly in light of his oft-stated argument that GOP voters want to coalesce around a conservative alternative to Romney. If Santorum wins all three states, he'll be able to claim a base of support in both the South and the Midwest - while Gingrich, who is focused on doing well in the Southern states, will have no base to claim at all.

Let's say this all goes as well as it possibly could for Santorum: He wins Michigan, Ohio and the Southern states, prompting Gingrich to leave the race. Santorum would then have a clear shot at the nomination - he might even be the favorite - but the race would be far from over. Only 755 pledged delegates are at stake through Super Tuesday, and most come in contests where delegates are awarded proportionately; even under the best possible scenario for Santorum, he won't be close to the 1,144 delegates he needs to win the nomination.

Meanwhile, Paul is widely expected to stay in the race over the long haul, and to keep winning delegates in low-turnout states where his passionate supporters can make a big impact. The possibility of a drawn-out battle between Romney and Santorum (and/or, potentially, Gingrich) - combined with the continued presence of Paul in the race - has many political watchers raising the possibility of no candidate having enough delegates to claim the nomination by the time the convention comes in August.

In the modern era, a contested convention is relatively uncharted territory, and it's far from likely to take place this time around. (Here's a detailed look at why.) In the unlikely event that such a circumstance does come to pass, the leading candidate could try to win over the 111 unpledged Republican delegates - members of the Republican National Committee - who can support any candidate they choose. (Think of those "super delegates" from the 2008 Democratic presidential race.) But that would only work if a candidate was very close to the magic number. If not, he would need to look to a rival for delegates, which raises the intriguing possibility of Paul adopting the role of kingmaker - in exchange for significant concessions in the party platform. 

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
47 Comments Add a Comment
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warren_currier says:
We do NOT want Paul as kingmaker.

We want Paul as President.
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signseeker1717 replies:
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Paul is essentially what used to be called a "spoiler" or a "protest vote".
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BOB-C says:
Great! Obama would trounce Santorum. Not that I'm that big on Obama but, considering the alternatives....

"Democracy is also a form of religion. It is the worship of jackals by jackasses." ~ H.L. Mencken
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longtree-2009 says:
not an obama fan but would vote for obama over santorum. there is something not right about a man who presents in a certain manner but on the other hand is wed to a woman who lived with, shacked up, an abortion doctor some 30+ years her senior. it just doesn't fit. no doubt some right wing types like santorum as some like newt. if either one of those end up facing obama as p or vp candidate, then would vote for obama.
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noloyalisti says:
Let's not take our eye off the ball. Let's also focus on taking back the House and getting at least 60 Senators. We can make the whole nasty Republicon Tea Bagger Party of failed clowns obsolete. Then get progressives in and delete the Top 1% corporate lobbyists from our government.
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jeannettelj says:
So, you mean that Rick," I don't believe in abortion under any circumstances (unless it is for my own wife)" Santorum is now the front runner? Go figure!
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erick_z says:
I just do not see Santorum doing well in the debates against Obama if he is the nominee. I know Gingrich will win the debates.
In regards to the economy Gingrich wins every time! There would not have been any federal balanced budgets and government surpluses without Gingrich. Also.. At that time there were millions of jobs created.
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moretruthnow says:
Republicans have caused so much harm to this country and people thinking that any of these GOP candidates are going to create jobs is a joke. Republicans have the House right now and have done everything but create jobs. They have attacked environmental regulations, and wanted to cut, cut and keep cutting benefits. When we have the GOP agreeing to spending cuts and added revenue we can solve some of our pressing issues. Until then the GOP owns the Bush tax cuts and wants them to never end regardless of how much that keeps adding to the deficit.
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bradkt1 says:
Keep dreaming! Rick Santorum has about as much of a chance of winning the GOP nomination as I do.

I wish he could though...so President Obama can mop the floor with this one-note Johnny.
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Fatesrider says:
I still have popcorn. I know Santorum's radical right-wing views appeal to the radicals (And it seems a bunch of radical "militia men" were recently put on trial in Michigan, so you can draw your own "where are the extremists" conclusions), but to us moderates, he's worse than the status quo. He's politically to the right of Bush, and Bush was a damn disaster for our country.

Bottom line: If Santorum wins in March, Obama will win in November.
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esq777 says:
Willard "mitt" Romney has way too much money and the backing of the GOP establishment. He isn't going to lose to Santorum. He can always tap inot his offshore loot if he gets desperate.
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