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politics and politicians Title: Gingrich: Strong Florida Finish Needed to Save Campaign Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich said only a strong finish in Floridas primary election will save his totally unique campaign. With his campaign down to about $600,000 after his South Carolina primary victory, Gingrich said he trailed Mitt Romney among Florida voters who cast ballots early and he needs a large vote on election day to win the Jan. 31 primary. As fast as weve raised it, were spending it, Gingrich said in an interview yesterday. Later on ABCs This Week program, he predicted the contest for the Republican presidential nomination would continue until the partys national convention in August, saying that conservatives will decide they dont want a Massachusetts liberal to be the nominee. Romney, a former Massachusetts governor who has estimated his personal fortune at between $150 million and $200 million, has unending amounts of money, Gingrich said, while questioning the enthusiasm voters have shown for his rival. He always relied on just sheer machinery, Gingrich said of Romney. He has no message. There is no reason for a Romney presidency. Romney led Gingrich by 42 percent to 27 percent among likely Republican primary voters, according to an NBC News- Marist poll released yesterday. The survey of 682 likely Republican voters was conducted Jan. 25-27 and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.8 percent. A Quinnipiac University poll released today showed similar results, with Romney over Gingrich by 43 percent to 29 percent. The telephone poll of 539 likely Republican primary voters was conducted Jan. 27-29 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.2 percent. Gingrichs 12-percentage-point victory in South Carolina Jan. 21 initially translated into large audiences for the former U.S. House speaker in Florida. Those audiences have dwindled, including a group of about 70 at an Orlando town hall that was planned in a theater with triple the capacity. Gingrich said he needs to carry about 52 percent of the vote on election day to compensate for Romneys edge in early voting and absentee ballots. Were like Apple as compared to Microsoft, Gingrich said of his and Romneys campaign. Were very agile, were very organic, were very innovative, Gingrich said. And every once in a while we fray at the edges. Romney told voters in Naples yesterday that Gingrichs sinking fortunes in Florida stemmed from the fact that he worked for Freddie Mac, the federally tied home mortgage company, unpopular in a state that has been the site of one-quarter of the nations foreclosures. The people of Florida have had enough of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae and government interference in the housing market, Romney said at a rally at a square in the citys upscale downtown, surrounded by boutiques, restaurants and palm trees. Mr. Speaker, your problem in Florida is not that the audience is too quiet or too loud, Romney said in a reference to lackluster debate performances by Gingrich last week, which the former speaker later attributed in part to the responses of attendees. Your problem in Florida is you worked for Freddie Mac at a time that Freddie Mac was not doing the right thing for the American people. As Gingrich and Romney fanned out across the state, former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum, who is running third in recent polls, was at home in Pennsylvania, where his daughter Isabellas admission to a hospital in Philadelphia forced the cancellation of his events yesterday. Santorums campaign said in a statement that he would resume the campaign schedule as soon as possible. U.S. Representative Ron Paul of Texas isnt campaigning in Florida, instead focusing on Maine, which will hold caucuses in late February. Paul said yesterday on CNNs State of the Union program that the state is a real good place for us to break through and that the ups and downs of the nominating contest so far show the race remains up for grabs. The rough road is competing with, you know, establishment money, the big money, Paul said. Its a money game. And I think thats one of the things that frustrates a lot of people. Asked to name the best-run national campaigns hed seen or been a part of, Gingrich first named President Barack Obamas primary campaign in 2008. He added Richard Nixons in 1972, with the exception of the Watergate scandal, Ronald Reagans in 1984 and George H.W. Bushs in 1988. Gingrich refused to compare his campaign with those. Im totally unique, Gingrich said. My campaign resembles nothing that has ever been run. Its a very idea- oriented, Internet-based, constantly-evolving, he said. Its organic. Every week we absorb new energy, new people and we figure out five new things, he said. Its the most exciting thing Ive ever done. Gingrich offered an explanation for his performance in two nationally televised debates during the week leading to Floridas primary vote. I went into those two debates with one big goal: I didnt want to get mad enough to lose my poise, Gingrich said. I felt that the Romney people had a very deliberate strategy. Theyd all been talking about my temperament and they were looking for an excuse. So I just wanted to be very calm no matter what, he said. I spent a lot of my energy just staying disciplined. If he appeared tired, he said, he was simply staring in amazement at Romney in debate. Im standing there thinking to myself, You think you can lie your way to the presidency? You think its possible in America today, even to be this dishonest? Gingrich said. Gingrich said he held a conference call with his campaign team at 11:15 p.m. after the second debate on Jan. 26. By the next morning we had an ad up that begins to demonstrate and youre going to see more stuff like this, Gingrich said. Were going to demonstrate again and again this is not a man who can be honest, because if he is honest his campaign is over.
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