The GOP presidential field  apparently set, Republican primary voters are likely facing a choice  between an experienced, establishment candidate in Mitt Romney and an insurgent presidential campaign novice in Rick Perry.
This year, a segment of the party's conservative base has been eagerly rallying around candidate after candidate without finding a favorite. They flirted with real estate mogul Donald Trump; they backed Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann in a key test vote in Iowa; now they're driving a surge in polling for businessman Herman Cain.
Romney has a strong case to make. He has national name recognition and a top-notch national campaign staff. He has a national fundraising network. His weaknesses already have been vetted and he has been able to dispatch questions about them. He's built a strong campaign in New Hampshire and is quietly organizing in Iowa, where he learned from the mistakes he made last time and is working to keep expectations low. He's racking up endorsements in key states like Florida. And while he's had trouble winning over the restless conservative base, he can argue that his even-keeled campaign can take its well-honed economic message and use it to beat Obama.
With three months until voting begins, that's the dynamic that's starting to emerge now that former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie have said they won't run for president in 2012.
Their  decisions — announced over the past two days — mean it's all but  certain that the Republican nominee will come from the current crop of  candidates despite earlier hunger within the party for more options.
For  now at least, the race is focused on Romney, the former Massachusetts  governor who lost the Republican nomination in 2008 and in recent days  has started to shore up support among long-time party leaders, and  Perry, the Texas governor who has emerged as the top challenger despite a  rocky few weeks that have stoked concerns among GOP elders about  whether he's ready to take on President Barack Obama.
The dynamic is familiar.
In 2000, Arizona Sen. John McCain mounted an unexpectedly fierce challenge to George W. Bush,  who had the backing of much of the Republican establishment. McCain won  the New Hampshire primary but lost the nomination to Bush.
Eight  years later, McCain ran for the party nomination a second time and,  early on, struck a tone of inevitability and got many party leaders to  support his bid. He flamed out for a while and former Arkansas Gov. Mike  Huckabee, who hadn't run for president before, came out of nowhere to  win the Iowa caucuses. Huckabee briefly emerged as the alternative to  McCain, but the Arizona senator eventually won the nomination.This year, a segment of the party's conservative base has been eagerly rallying around candidate after candidate without finding a favorite. They flirted with real estate mogul Donald Trump; they backed Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann in a key test vote in Iowa; now they're driving a surge in polling for businessman Herman Cain.
Christie's  backers, who include many party elders and long-time donors, and  Palin's ardent fans had been waiting to see whether either of them would  run.
Now that neither of them are, those supporters are free to choose sides. It's unclear where they will turn.In  bowing out of a bid, Palin, whose unconventional style and sheer  celebrity would have been an unpredictable but unquestionable force in  the primary season, made clear she still would try to have a voice in  the 2012 race.
"You don't need a title to make a difference in  this country," Palin said Wednesday. She declined to endorse anyone but  indicated she would back the eventual nominee.It's unclear whether her backers will heed her advice. Many turned to social networking sites to assail her decision.
Romney,  meanwhile, is pursuing Christie's supporters, with some success.  Several high-profile figures backed him after Christie's announcement  Tuesday, including New York financier John Catsimatidis and Home Depot  co-founder Ken Langone.Romney has a strong case to make. He has national name recognition and a top-notch national campaign staff. He has a national fundraising network. His weaknesses already have been vetted and he has been able to dispatch questions about them. He's built a strong campaign in New Hampshire and is quietly organizing in Iowa, where he learned from the mistakes he made last time and is working to keep expectations low. He's racking up endorsements in key states like Florida. And while he's had trouble winning over the restless conservative base, he can argue that his even-keeled campaign can take its well-honed economic message and use it to beat Obama.
But  what Romney hasn't shown is that he can gain from Perry's stumbles. The  latest Washington Post-ABC news poll of Republicans found Romney's  popularity unchanged at 25 percent. Perry dropped to 16 percent from a  previous survey, tied with Cain, the former pizza executive who has  surged in recent weeks.
"Nobody  wants to put a candidate forward just because they happen to be the most  electable," veteran campaign consultant Terry Nelson said.
Perry  announced Tuesday that he had raised more than $17 million in the first  six weeks of his presidential bid. He has a third-party SuperPAC to  raise outside funds, so he potentially could match a similar effort by  Romney's team. On Tuesday, he earned the support of a prominent Christie  backer in Iowa. And much of his support comes from the tea party  Republicans — a group in part defined by their opposition to  establishment politics — who are driving Republican enthusiasm in 2012.  An August AP-GfK poll showed 74 percent of tea party backers viewed  Perry positively.More...

 
 
 
 
 
 10/06/2011 12:45:00 AM
10/06/2011 12:45:00 AM
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