Romney hopes to avoid Michigan bear-trap

29 Feb, 2012

Mitt Romney hopes to avoid an embarrassing slip-up in his native Michigan on Tuesday as he looks to wrest the momentum back from surging rival Rick Santorum in a key Republican presidential nominating contest. Two polls released Tuesday showed the men in a dead heat in the economically hard-hit midwestern state and even a narrow loss there would weaken Romney despite an expected double-digit win in Arizona, which also votes Tuesday.
Romney sought to temper expectations as he lashed out at Santorum's "dirty tricks" in Michigan's open primary, but expressed confidence that voters would favour his economic plans over Santorum's "incendiary" focus on divisive social issues. "The hardest thing about predicting what's going to happen today is whether Senator Santorum's effort to call Democratic households and tell them to come out and vote against Mitt Romney is going to be successful or not," Romney said in a morning press conference.
Democrats have also been urging supporters to head to the polls in order to prolong the negative, gaffe-ridden slug-fest which is providing ample fodder for President Barack Obama ahead of the November 6 general election.
"I think Republicans have to recognise there's a real effort to kidnap our primary process," Romney told reporters. A pugnacious Obama waded into the race Tuesday, tearing into his Republican opponents for their vehement opposition to his efforts to save the Michigan-based auto industry.
In a barn-storming speech to auto workers gathered in the US capital, Obama accused Romney and his fellow Republicans of being on the wrong side of history and of flagrant pandering to conservative voters. Romney has frequently accused Obama of engineering the bailout of General Motors and Chrysler to help his union supporters, but Obama said Romney's charges of crony capitalism is a "a load of you-know-what." "They're still talking about you as if you're some greedy special interest that needs to be beaten," Obama said without naming names.
"To borrow a line from our old friend Ted Kennedy: what is it about working men and women they find so offensive?" The Republican opposition to the bailout and focus on divisive social issues "has probably cost them Michigan in the general election," said Michael Traugott, a political expert at the University of Michigan.
"We don't have many auto workers left, but it's symbolic for general attitudes about workers in the state of Michigan," he told AFP. The attack on unions could also undermine Republicans in rust belt states like Ohio and Pennsylvania which are key battlegrounds in the general election, especially if Obama succeeds in framing Republicans as a party of social extremists who sell out working people while pushing huge tax cuts for the rich.
Tuesday's votes come at a pivotal phase in the state-by-state nominating process that will decide which of the four remaining Republican contenders will face off against Obama. Santorum is hoping for a major upset that will prove his surprise wins in Minnesota, Colorado and Missouri on February 7 were no fluke and could cement his position as a genuine alternative to Romney.
A staunch Christian conservative who strongly opposes abortion and gay marriage, Santorum advanced in the polls by painting himself as the authentic conservative and his multimillionaire opponent as out of touch. But Romney put in a strong debate performance when it mattered on Thursday and has used his financial muscle to successfully portray Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, as a Washington insider.

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