Political Hotsheet
By

John Dickerson /

CBS News/ February 29, 2012, 5:48 AM

Mitt Romney stays alive with Michigan win

Mitt Romney greets supporters after winning the Michigan primary

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, greets supporters at his election watch party after winning the Michigan primary in Novi, Mich., Feb. 28, 2012.

/ AP

This post originally appeared on Slate.

In the state where Mitt Romney was born, his campaign did not die. Despite his many advantages in Michigan, the race was a nail-biter. In the end, Romney won 41 percent of the vote to 38 percent for Rick Santorum. "We didn't win by a lot, but we won by enough but that's all that counts," said Romney at his victory party, looking relieved to have survived another near-death experience. In Arizona, he clobbered the former Pennsylvania senator 47 percent to 26 percent. By the end of the night, Romney captured more than 30 new delegates. On that score, he is now well ahead of his rivals.

Although Michigan was the 10th contest of the 2012 Republican primary, it was the first two-man race to test the fault lines of the Republican Party: a battle between the establishment candidate, Mitt Romney, and the populist candidate, Rick Santorum. In the end, both men weakened themselves. Romney underscored his fundamental vulnerability: He struggled to win party stalwarts in a head-to head fight despite superior finances, a vast organizational advantage, and local roots. Santorum's opposition to everything from college to contraception frightened Republicans who think his values-laden and ideologically strident tone would not only cost him the presidential election but hurt House and Senate Republican candidates, too.

Why Mich. was so close, and how Romney won
Santorum upbeat despite Michigan loss
Analysis: Romney avoids Michigan disaster

In another election season, Romney's victories in Arizona and Michigan would suggest he has momentum. Perhaps it will this time. It didn't after he won in New Hampshire or Florida. In this race, candidates have shown bursts of speed, but just as someone seems poised to break away, they run out of breath. So the race continues: one runner with emphysema (Santorum), the other with asthma (Romney). For the moment, Romney is back in the lead, lungs open and face rosy. But if past is prologue, he might soon feel a tickle in his throat.

The future for Romney is unclear because his party is so openly divided. It was evident in the exit polls. Thirty-two percent of the voters said defeating Obama was the most important quality they looked for in a candidate. Of that group, Mitt Romney beat Rick Santorum handily, 61 percent to 24 percent. On the other side of the party were those who voted based on character and ideology. Twenty-five percent picked strong moral character as their No. 1 quality. Of those, Santorum was dominant, swamping Romney by 41 points, 57 percent to 16 percent. Of the 17 percent who voted based on who was the true conservative, Santorum beat Romney by an almost identical 40-point margin. One party, two worlds.

Full Michigan results
Michigan exit poll
Complete coverage: Election 2012

Romney won in Michigan with a familiar coalition of older and wealthy voters. Fifty-five percent of voters said the economy was the most important issue in helping them determine their vote. Romney won that group by 17 points with 47 percent of the vote. There was also good news for Romney in that voters valued his time in the private sector, preferring a candidate with business experience over government experience 57 percent to 31 percent. This was the only large group that Romney won with a majority.

Santorum did very well with evangelical voters and those who identified themselves as "very conservative." He won both groups by double digits. He also scored well with die-hard Tea Party members, but Romney was able to split the vote among the 52 percent who say they support the Tea Party. Romney showed that outside of the Party's ideological purists, he could find support. Romney also won self-identified Republicans by 10 points. In the final days, he was able to grow his vote into Santorum's territory more than Santorum was able to do the opposite.

Romney's organization paid off the way it had in Florida. He identified his voters and encouraged them to vote by absentee ballot. CBS estimated that 22 percent of them did and Romney won that group 41 percent to 35 percent. He also won among independent voters and moderates.

Santorum did not benefit much from Democratic mischief-makers, though the pranksters did show up in the exit polls. Democrats voted overwhelmingly for Santorum, with 53 percent picking the former senator vs. the 17 percent who chose Romney. Among those self-identified as "somewhat liberal," Santorum beat Romney 32 percent to 27 percent. But there just weren't enough of them to change the outcome. Nine percent of the voters identified as Democrats, hardly more than the 7 percent who participated in 2008.

Now Rick Santorum faces the questions of viability that Mitt Romney once did. Does he have the discipline, the money, and the skill to win beyond his ultraconservative base? After conceding Michigan, Santorum immediately began a course correction. Speaking to his election night party, he opened by talking about his mother, who earned more money than his father. He talked about work-life balance. He retained his attacks on the Obama administration's overreach but kept his emphasis on his plans for the economy.

Now the landscape changes again. There are 10 contests on the March 6 Super Tuesday. Ohio is the biggest prize. Santorum has been ahead in several Ohio polls, but more than 40 percent of those surveyed have said their support is soft. Romney will get a bump, but he won't have a home state advantage in Ohio, a state that has more evangelical voters than Michigan. Romney--unlike Santorum and Newt Gingrich--also had his act together enough to get on the Virginia ballot. But the other big states--Tennessee, Georgia, and Oklahoma--don't look good for Romney at the moment.

For the last several weeks, Santorum has been inching toward becoming the conservative alternative to Romney. If that holds, the party split Romney barely survived tonight could continue to bedevil him. However, Super Tuesday will widen the race, and with it could mark the return of Gingrich, who believes he will do well in Southern states. If Gingrich rises again and keeps splitting the vote with Santorum, it could be a long summer with Santorum winning the Midwest, Gingrich the South, and Romney the states of any true size. If that's the case, then this may not be the last time Mitt Romney's campaign is born again.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
37 Comments Add a Comment
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daffy64 says:
Romney is the only Republican "liberal" enough to stand a chance of winning against Obama.
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varigdc10 says:
Well, this guy has not lived in Michigan the last 40 years, but what the heck he was at least born there, but, to win in a state where you were born and had a father who was governor there by only 3% is very inconclusive. Don't think its presidential material at all !
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RandallRichard replies:
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Especially when you have to outspend your opponent more than 2 to 1 to do it.
cambone2 replies:
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Perhaps it had something to do with the robo calls Santorum made asking Dems to vote for him to beat Romney. They estimate if the Dems had not voted for Santorum, another 3-4% would have been added to Romeny's win.
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involved_indi says:
I love the way the liberals at CBS try to influence the election by even how they title an article. "Stays alive"... right.
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daffy64 replies:
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So are you going to vote for liberal Romney with his Romenycare/Obamacare and so on?
userjohna replies:
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GOP is weak. 7.2 million registered voters as of 2/29/12 and 972 thousand voted in Michigan.
Lack luster candidates or no interest in GOP or both. I vote both.
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endrepubs says:
Romney the "Corporate kiss..a.s.s" will push major tax cuts for the wealthy and the big corporations. That much you can be sure of. If you are not in the top 5% of earners....you will be punished by a Romney White House. You can also be sure of that.
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RandallRichard replies:
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I am in the top 5% and I still don't want him in the White House. Don't forget his sabre rattling on Iran. What is that likely to do to gas prices and the stock market in the long run. His only economic policy seems to be doubling down on Bush. I don't know about you, but I am a lot better off than I was in January 09 and I don't want to take us back to those days.
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kevjustice says:
mitt, the biggest flip flopper in political history, makes john kerry look consistant-lol! mitt stands for everything and he also stands for nothing! mitt is the politician of change-he changes his opionion every 10 minutes!
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elbamba says:
Misleading title. Romney has been in the lead almost the entire primary. Romney also received more votes this year in MI and AZ than he did in 2008. He will be the Republican candidate no matter how long Santorum and Gingrich stay in the race. Romney will win at least 5 states on Super Tuesday and then biased articles like this will blast him for not winning all 10.
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daffy64 replies:
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But then, has Obama ever even had a "real" job?

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Maybe not. But we know "rich kid" Romney hasn't.
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thebob-bob says:
Romney won't ever get the Santorum voters because he's a college grad and, therefore, an elitist snob. But wait, Santorum went to college and law school and business school so that makes his a elitist snob too! But wait, He's a "real" Christian who hates abortion and teen sex and public school education so he must be OK. But wait, Romney is a family man, a man of faith, involved in his Church's leadership BUT, he's the wrong religion ... a cult ... so he's not OK. But wait, Santorum is the wrong religion too, he's a papist who will take orders from the Vatican .. unless he goes before Protestant Leaders and insists that there's a separation of Church and State , just like the only Catholic President we ever had did. But wait, that speech by JFK made Santorum want to puke ....

I'm confused. All I want is a President who knows how to bring people together, and run the government effectively so that we can fix the mess the haters, the dividers, the fear-mongers, the distorters and the distractors have made.

Obama 2012!
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LtSmily replies:
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????? Oh I get it, sarcasm. I can understand the first paragraph, and the second paragraph is really reasonable. But then you closed with your version of a joke? Not sure what your intent was here, humor?
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RandallRichard says:
There was an editorial in our paper this morning from Rob Portman saying that Mitt would "Turn the economy around". Does that mean turning us from job gains and improving stock market back to the massive job losses and tanking stock market at the end of the Bush Administration? Since Romney's economic "policy" is to double down on Bush's I assume so.
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LtSmily replies:
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... or do you mean the economic bubble the current policies are creating that will make us wish it was 2008 again?
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starving1968-3 says:
by Molly-Pchr February 29, 2012 7:58 AM EST
With Obama using old crypt sheets left behind by Bush instead of the "change" he promised, the economy will take an even deeper dive thanks to gas prices, and Wall Street's favorite son will be prez. Okay by me. Anything is better than another four years of Bush.







The economy has been improving for 25 straight months, yet you claim it's going to "take an even deeper dive"?
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nfission says:
I hope this means that we don't have to hear the name Santorum any longer nor all his crazy ludicrous blatherings about social issues and religion. Gracious sakes alive America! we are better than this... surely!
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