BEDFORD, N.H., Jan. 8, 2008
Second-Place Romney Vows Long Fight
GOP Hopeful Says He'll "Fight To Be Back Here In November" After Disappointing Showing In N.H.
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Play CBS Video Video Meet The Romneys Mitt Romney took second in Iowa after Mike Huckabee and now faces off with John McCain in New Hampshire. Romney and his wife Ann speak with Harry Smith.
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Video Romney On McCain-Obama Matchup Claiming "Washington is broken," and it can't be fixed by an "insider," Mitt Romney says John McCain would lose a general election to Barack Obama. Romney: "It will be a tsunami for Barack Obama."
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Republican Presidential hopeful former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and his wife Ann greet voters at a polling station in Derry, N.H., Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2008. (AP)
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Photo Essay Mitt Romney He turned around companies, and the Olympics and ran for president pledging to turn around the country.
In between was a weekend win for Romney in the Wyoming caucuses, which the former Massachusetts governor said was testimony to his 50-state strategy.
"There have been three races so far. I've gotten two silvers and one gold - thank-you Wyoming," Romney said in a spartan seven-minute address conceding the race.
"On to Michigan and South Carolina and Florida and Nevada," Romney added. "I'll fight to be back here in November in those states and others."
Earlier in the day, the former Massachusetts governor said he expected the nomination fight to continue through Feb. 5, when 22 states vote. "I don't think the Republican Party wants to have only one person in this contest until the very end. I expect to be one of the two that's in it to the very end," he said.
During the final 24 hours of the New Hampshire campaign, Romney and his aides largely shed their recent inhibitions, openly predicting a come-from-behind-victory against McCain. They claimed independents were breaking their way based on Romney's performance in a pair of weekend debates.
Nonetheless, Romney chided McCain and Huckabee for cherry-picking contests, with Huckabee having focused on Iowa while McCain focused on New Hampshire. Romney spent more than $7 million on advertising in each state, and held as many, if not more, events in both places than any of his GOP rivals.
He conceded the primary to McCain in a phone call placed less than 20 minutes after the polls closed, said Romney spokesman Kevin Madden.
Madden said "we were running essentially against an incumbent here," referring to McCain's 19-point victory in the 2000 GOP primary.
Romney, 60, is a former venture capitalist who made hundreds of millions before taking over the scandal-ridden 2002 Winter Olympic Games and returning them to profitability. He failed in his first bid for elective office, a 1994 effort to oust Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass. But in 2002 he rode his wave of Olympic glory to a four-year term as the Bay State's governor.
A Mormon, Romney aggressively courted Christian conservatives - some of whom consider Mormons members of a cult - and in doing so brought the issue to the fore in the 2008 campaign.
Romney traveled to the George Bush Presidential Library in Texas last month to deliver a speech spelling out his views on faith in American politics.
Interviews Tuesday with voters exiting their polling places showed that about a fifth of New Hampshire GOP voters said they were born again or evangelical voters, compared to the six in 10 who said so in last week's Iowa Republican caucuses and boosted Huckabee to victory there.
Most New Hampshire Republicans said the top quality they were seeking in a candidate was someone who shared their values and is authentic. Romney was the big leader among those naming values, McCain among those seeking a candidate who says what he believes. About a quarter named experience, an area where McCain had a slight edge.
McCain was viewed as the strongest leader and most qualified to be commander-in-chief.
Romney, who aired ads critical of Huckabee and McCain in Iowa and New Hampshire, was seen more than the others as having waged a negative campaign, the exit survey found.
New Hampshire was a pivotal state for Romney, who predicated his campaign on starting fast with wins here and in Iowa and using that momentum to steamroll his opponents in later contests in Michigan - his birth state - and South Carolina, Florida and the two dozen states voting on Feb. 5.
Romney warned Republicans that with Barack Obama surging against veteran senators on the Democratic side, Republicans would make a mistake to nominate another Senate veteran in McCain.
"I don't have years and years of favors I have to repay, lobbyists who've raised all sorts of money for me, deals I've worked out in the cloak room," he told New Hampshire voters. "I come in from the outside."
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- Mitt Romney can spend the most money because he receives more donations then the other GOP candidates who have very little support, McCain, Huck, Rudy.
Mitt''s also leading all other Republicans in the race for delegates.
We have had three primaries with three different winners. Mitt won Wyoming in case you didn''t catch that in the news.
The race for the GOP nomination is wide open where no "one" candidate has a clear path to the nomination..............GO MITT! - Reply to this comment
- Yeah, Romnuts can buy a lot of $hit with those hundreds of millions he piled up helping the uber-rich avoid paying their fair share of taxes!
Still can''t buy courage, tho''. Romnuts is a coward who had his rich daddy buy him his way out of Vietnam. - Reply to this comment
- If a Republican were to be ''elected'' president in 2008 I truly think there would be a revolution - ''cause it just ain''t honestly possible.
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- A fight, quotha? Conventional or Nuclear? Your place or mine?
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- While I''m not a supporter of any particular candidates yet, I would urge Romney''s campaign to avoid deliberate distortions in their attack ads, where, for example they accuse McCain of supporting social security for illegal immigrants. In fact, McCain''s position is ... after they register, pay a fine, and then complete the normal process to become U.S. citizens. I realize that the game is about emphasizing one''s own positives and opponents negatives, but that particular Romney ad is just a total distortion of an opponent''s position and the kind of dirty politics that reflects poorly on the Romney candidacy.
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- His parents both ran well in Michigan- of course his dad was anti-war and his mom was pro-choice...
His mom was last one on the ballot there in 1970 and she lost to guess what a Liberal Democrat - Reality check to Mitt: that''s 38 years ago-
These hacks will do anything to claim a relation to a state... - Reply to this comment
- Run Mitt Run- spend your whole fortune please...
The only reason he won Wyoming is because it''s heavy Mormon- part of the old unrecogonized State of Deseret proposed by Mormon''s to Congress in the 1800''s- get it? - Reply to this comment
- Doesn''t matter either way. After the disaster and madness that has been the Bush admin, no Republican will be siting in the White House for the next four years at the very least.
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- If he stays in the race for the "long fight" he might have trouble affording that special underwear he has to have. I think the anti-mormon vote will outweigh the mormon vote. Now religion shouldn''t be an issue, but when your religion tells you what underwear to wear... well, the freaky factor makes it become an issue I guess. 8-)
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- Governor Romney is the real winner so far. He placed a close second place in Iowa, overwhelmingly won Wyoming (which has more votes than New Hampshire, 14-12), and had a close second in New Hampshire.
Even though they won the first couple of races, Senator McCain and Governor Huckabee still aren%u2019t serious contenders for the white house, and they wouldn%u2019t stand a chance against the Democrats. The race is going to come down to Romney and Giuliani nationally. And considering how well Romney has done thus far, and that both Michigan (his home state) and Nevada (high percentage of Mormons) are coming up, I think he stands a pretty good chance in this election.
In fact, I would say his losses in 2 of the first 3 states is an advantage for him. If he would have swept the first three he would have been a huge target. Now he has the underdog advantage, and from these past few elections we know how much Americans enjoy voting for underdogs. - Reply to this comment

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