17 JanSantorum backed by social conservative leaders (AP)

MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C. ? A week before the pivotal South Carolina primary, Rick Santorum’s quest to emerge as the chief alternative to Mitt Romney received a boost Saturday from a group of evangelical leaders and social conservatives who voted to back his candidacy in a last-ditch effort to stop the GOP front-runner’s march to the nomination.

About three-quarters of some 150 pastors and Christian conservative political organizers meeting in Texas sided with Santorum over a home-state favorite, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich ? an outcome that illustrated continuing divisions within the ranks of conservatives who make up the base of the GOP.

The gathering also reflected the lingering dissatisfaction with Romney over abortion rights and other issues, and the belief of conservatives that they need to unite behind one contender before the Jan. 21 South Carolina primary if they are to derail the former Massachusetts governor they view as too moderate. Romney leads narrowly in polls here after victories in Iowa and New Hampshire.

“There is a hope and an expectation that this will have an impact on South Carolina,” said Family Research Council president Tony Perkins, who attended the Texas meeting.

It’s unclear, however, whether conservative voters will heed the advice of these leaders and back Santorum particularly with other conservative candidates still in the race. The backing of a chunk of conservative leaders could help Santorum, who long has run a shoestring campaign, raise money and set up stronger get-out-the-vote operations.

But with the South Carolina primary looming Jan. 21, time may be running short for the nod to have a significant impact. It perhaps would have been more effective after the Iowa caucuses, before Romney gained steam with a second victory in New Hampshire.

Santorum, for his part, reveled in the development.

“It’s a validator,” the former Pennsylvania senator told reporters late Saturday while campaigning along South Carolina’s coast. “People who have been out there in the fields laboring for the conservative causes see us as someone who can not only fight for the causes but effectively fight and win.”

Still, he acknowledged the divisions illustrated in Texas: “I knew there were strong differences of opinion there, people who have strong support for their candidates.”

Indeed, the split-decision and frustration by some who attended the meeting punctuates the fissures that have vexed this powerful bloc of the GOP base throughout the campaign and continue to with a week left before the South Carolina vote. Social conservatives here are an influential force, but divided they would leave an opening for Romney as they did in 2008, when Arizona Sen. John McCain won the state en route to the GOP nomination.

This year, even Santorum’s backers concede time may be running out for conservative voters to rally behind their candidate.

“If that consolidation occurs, he will win this primary,” South Carolina state Sen. Chip Campsen said as he endorsed Santorum at the campaign office near Charleston. “And there are fewer options as time goes on.”

The meeting took place over two days at the Texas ranch of former state appeals court Judge Paul Pressler.

Surrogates for each campaign were said to have made presentations and answered questions. The goal was to determine whether conservative leaders could rally behind one alternative candidate to Romney, in hopes of ensuring one of their own wins the nomination instead of someone they consider more moderate. Many conservative leaders fear a repeat of four years ago when, in their view, a divided conservative base led the GOP to nominate McCain.

Meeting attendees said it took several ballots for 75 percent of attendees to agree on Santorum after winnowing down the field from three candidates: Santorum, Gingrich and Perry. They also said that there was some support for Romney.

“Santorum was the preferred candidate by a significant majority,” Gary Bauer, the former presidential candidate, said.

“They were all looking for the best Reagan conservative,” he said. “It came down to things like, who do you most trust.”

But David Lane, a California-based pastor who has set up candidate forums with ministers in Iowa, said he was frustrated with the outcome because he does not believe Santorum has an organization or fundraising capability to allow him to campaign deep into the primary season.

He said the choice to back Santorum projects political weakness.

“This country is going to hell, and the evangelical voice is meaningless,” Lane said.

Santorum downplayed the division, noting that he edged Perry in a group including many Texans, as well as longtime activists who have had long relationships with Gingrich.

“I can’t believe it was only 25 percent” who didn’t agree, he said, adding that he would not ask any candidates to consider leaving the race in order to consolidate the conservative vote.

The Gingrich campaign tried to downplay the vote, and insisted the former House speaker also had the backing of many in Houston.

“Newt had strong support in the room,” Gingrich spokesman R.C. Hammond said. “Our job now is to translate the strong showing we had in Texas into votes in South Carolina and Florida.”

Romney’s campaign didn’t weigh in. But the candidate countered the notion that he’s a moderate during a candidate forum in Charleston, S.C.

“I don’t know whether in a minute I can convince you, but I have a conservative record,” Romney told an undecided voter who suggested he governed as a moderate in Massachusetts.

Even with the backing of many conservative leaders, Santorum faces big challenges.

He surged late in Iowa, lifted by eleventh-hour endorsements by ministers, including some who had once considered asking the once overlooked former senator to quit the race to help conservatives coalesce.

Santorum ended up narrowly losing to Romney in Iowa before faring poorly in New Hampshire. He has aggressively campaigned in South Carolina, visiting almost 30 times and has networks of supporters in almost all of the state’s counties. He’s had an influx of cash, reportedly raising $3 million this week, but still woefully short of Romney’s war chest.

South Carolina’s Republican voters are some of the nation’s most conservative.

In exit polling from the 2008 Republican presidential contest, 60 percent of the state’s primary voters said they were born-again Christians. Romney, whose Mormon faith is not considered a Christian denomination by some in South Carolina, carried just 11 percent of their votes four years ago, fewer than his 15 percent tally nationwide. Mormons consider themselves Christians.

On Saturday, Santorum sought to capitalize on the momentum by making direct appeals to evangelical conservatives, like many of those at the Country Ham House in Greenville. Despite his efforts, concerns persisted about the strength of his candidacy.

“As far as his values and principles, he stands for everything I do,” said Brock Stevens, a Greenville Republican who left Santorum’s event there ready to support him. “But honestly, I worry about his viability against Obama.”

___

Associated Press writers Rachel Zoll, Charles Babington, Julie Pace and Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120115/ap_on_el_pr/us_santorum

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11 JanAnalysis: Romney still blessed by packed GOP field (AP)

MANCHESTER, N.H. ? Mitt Romney is cruising in the Republican presidential contest, blessed by five rivals who continue to attack each other and divide the anti-Romney vote rather than produce a single strong alternative.

That dynamic allowed Romney to stand and smile during long stretches of two televised debates this weekend, while the others ripped one another. With his opposition so diffuse, the former Massachusetts governor has a chance to do something that once seemed improbable: win the South Carolina primary Jan. 21, which would make him the prohibitive favorite for the nomination

Time is running out for staunch conservatives, who have viewed Romney with suspicion, to settle on someone. The crowded field helped Romney to a whisker-thin victory this past week in Iowa, although his plurality was modest.

He long has been favored to win Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary, so his critics hope South Carolina will stop his momentum. Romney’s Mormonism and past support of abortion rights might hurt him among South Carolina’s evangelical voters.

Iowa wasn’t considered an ideal fit for Romney, either, yet the stars aligned for him. It might happen again.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry flirted with dropping out after his poor showing in Iowa, but he stayed in. So did former House Speaker Newt Gingrich despite a disappointing fourth-place finish.

No one expected former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum to drop out after he essentially tied Romney in Iowa. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas runs a libertarian-oriented campaign that almost stands apart, drawing thousands of devotees who say they won’t support any nominee except the congressman.

Meanwhile, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, who skipped Iowa, is trying hard in New Hampshire.

The upshot is that the not-Romney sentiment remains dispersed among five rivals. The benefit to Romney was vivid in Saturday night’s debate, when Paul engaged in long, heated exchanges with Santorum and Gingrich, as if they had conceded the race to Romney and were fighting for second.

Perry seemed almost an afterthought.

“Romney did everything he wanted and got out of there without anyone giving him a hard time,” said a delighted John Sununu, the former New Hampshire governor who backs Romney.

In Sunday’s debate, Gingrich and Santorum seemed to realize that Romney had gotten off too easy the night before.

Gingrich asked Romney to stop the “pious baloney” of claiming he’s not a lifelong politician, noting that Romney extended his time in business by losing a Senate race in 1994 and a presidential bid in 2008. Gingrich, citing news reports, said a corporate takeover firm once headed by Romney “looted a company, leaving behind 1,700 unemployed people.”

Santorum attacked Romney’s conservative convictions. “We want someone who’s going to stand up and fight for the conservative principles,” he said, “and not run to the left of Ted Kennedy,” the late Democratic senator who beat Romney in 1994.

Romney defended himself and counter-punched a bit. But the fireworks soon moved to Santorum’s offensive against Paul. Romney watched contentedly, like a football coach running out the clock with a solid lead.

It’s still possible for Romney to lose the nomination. But it won’t happen unless one rival consolidates the opposition vote and sends the others home.

A group of evangelical leaders plans to meet in Texas to pursue such a strategy. There’s no guarantee of success, however, because Santorum, Perry and Gingrich all make strong claims on conservatives’ loyalties. They also have serious shortcomings.

Perry, who promotes a fiscally lean record in Texas, led an August “call to prayer for a nation in crisis” in Houston, which drew 30,000 people. He seemed poised to become the non-Romney champion when he entered the race that month, but he quickly faded after poor debate performances.

Many conservatives revere Gingrich for leading the 1994 “Republican Revolution,” which gave the party control of the House and began an era of partisan battles with President Bill Clinton and other Democrats. But Gingrich’s House career ended in ethics and political woes. His later deviations from conservative orthodoxy on climate change, entitlement cuts and other issues have angered some on the right.

Santorum was largely overlooked until his last-minute surge in Iowa. He is a longtime advocate of home schooling, anti-abortion efforts and other endeavors dear to many conservatives. But Santorum lost his 2006 bid for a third Senate term from Pennsylvania in a landslide. His ability to raise money and withstand the rigors of a nationwide race is unproven.

Romney doesn’t have to win in South Carolina to remain the front-runner. The next contest is Jan. 31 in Florida, a sprawling state where his campaign money and organization could help him tremendously.

While Romney watches his rivals batter each other, President Barack Obama leaves little doubt about which Republican he sees as his likely opponent. During Sunday’s GOP debate, the Obama campaign, under the president’s name and photo, tweeted: “Romney said during last night’s debate that he wants to give relief to the middle class. But his tax plan wouldn’t.”

Conservatives who don’t want a Romney-Obama matchup in November will have to act soon.

___

EDITOR’S NOTE ? Charles Babington covers politics for The Associated Press.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politicsopinion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120108/ap_on_an/us_gop_campaign_analysis

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01 JanAttacks hurt Gingrich in Iowa, no letup pre-caucus

Republican presidential hopeful U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., second from right, walks past an ornament on a Christmas tree as she speaks to local residents during a campaign stop at the Merry Bees coffee shop, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, in Hampton, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential hopeful U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., second from right, walks past an ornament on a Christmas tree as she speaks to local residents during a campaign stop at the Merry Bees coffee shop, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, in Hampton, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks during a campaign stop Global Security Services in Davenport, Iowa, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson)

Republican presidential candidate and former Massachussetts Gov. Mitt Romney, left, is interviewed by Bill O’Reilly, right, for his Fox News program “The O’Reilly Factor,” in New York, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. Romney told O’Reilly he’s the candidate who can best fend off Democratic attacks and defeat President Barack Obama in the election next November. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

Republican presidential candidate former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum speaks at a town hall meeting at Redman’s Pizza in Osceola, Iowa, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential hopeful and Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks to local residents during a campaign stop at the Pizza Ranch restaurant, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011, in Manchester, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? More than $1 million in negative advertising ? much of it bankrolled by Mitt Romney’s allies ? has eroded Newt Gingrich’s standing in Iowa and thrown the Republican presidential race here wide open two weeks before the first votes.

The former House speaker’s Iowa slide mirrors his newfound troubles nationally, and it has boosted Romney’s confidence while fueling talk that libertarian-leaning Texas Rep. Ron Paul could pull off a win in the leadoff caucus state on Jan. 3.

“It’s very disappointing to see so many of my friends who are running put out such negative junk, ” Gingrich said Monday as he arrived in Davenport, poking at his opponents even as he insisted he was running an upbeat campaign. “I really wish they would have the courage to be positive.”

Despite his chiding, attacks against him are all but certain to continue. For one, the Restore Our Future political action committee, made up of former Romney staffers from his failed 2008 bid, plans to spend $1.4 million more over the next two weeks, including on a new ad beginning Tuesday that’s expected to be aimed at Gingrich. That would bring to roughly $3 million the amount spent by the group against Gingrich.

Aides for several campaigns competing against Gingrich as well as outside independent groups aligned with the candidates say their internal polls find that he has fallen over the last week from the top slot in Iowa. And a national Gallup poll released Monday found Gingrich’s support plummeting: He had the backing of 26 percent of Republican voters nationally, down from 37 percent on Dec. 8. Romney’s support was largely unchanged at 24 percent.

Gingrich’s weakened position follows a barrage of advertising that cast him as a longtime Washington, D.C., power-broker. The ads, primarily financed by so-called super PACs, underscore the power of independent groups following a Supreme Court decision last year that allowed people, unions and corporations to donate unlimited amounts of money to outfits advocating the election or defeat of candidates. Since the ruling, groups have popped up to work on behalf of every serious Republican presidential candidate.

With the caucuses looming in two weeks, the race in Iowa is arguably anyone’s to win. And the results here will shape the rest of the state-by-state march to the GOP nomination.

Gingrich has acknowledged that the onslaught has taken a toll and tested his pledge to keep his criticism focused on Democratic President Barack Obama.

The Republican rushed back to Iowa on Monday after a three-day absence for several days of campaigning before voters tune out this weekend for the Christmas holiday.

He told about 200 people in the garage of a security company in Davenport that he would launch a 44-stop Jobs and Prosperity tour before the caucuses, and use those events to answer any charges put out there.

Gingrich also redoubled his appeals to conservatives, who make up the base of the GOP, with sharp criticism of the judiciary, saying he would have the Justice Department instruct the U.S. Marshal service to arrest judges who ignore subpoenas to testify in Congress about their decisions. And he tried anew to end accusations he lobbied on behalf of troubled Freddie Mac or other organizations.

“We should have had a much more coherent answer,” he said about charges that he earned a windfall from the federally backed mortgage giant.

He then offered his latest explanation, saying that his consulting firm, the Gingrich Group, was hired over a period of six years for strategic advice and he earned about $35,000 a year ? “less than I got per speech.” Gingrich said that when Freddie Mac was seeking a bailout in 2008, he told House Republicans “my position was to not give them money.” Altogether, Gingrich’s firm earned some $1.6 million from Freddie Mac.

As Gingrich tried to answer the criticism, Romney, his chief rival, was largely laying low, increasingly expressing optimism as he revels in a series of endorsements from establishment GOP figures such as Bob Dole, the 1996 GOP nominee, early-state leaders like South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, and newspapers including The Des Moines Register.

Paul, who has built arguably the largest get-out-the-vote organization in Iowa and has steadily been inching up in Iowa polls, spent the day in New Hampshire before returning to Iowa for a packed schedule later in the week. He’s been on the air here with ads assailing Gingrich.

Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum was among several conservatives canvassing Iowa in hopes of taking advantage of Gingrich’s slide and mounting a late-game surge.

Another, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, was in the midst of a bus tour when he slapped at two strong-running candidates Monday over their past support of the $700 billion Wall Street bailout while visiting a pizza buffet in Manchester.

“This Wall Street bailout is the single biggest act of theft in American history,” he said. “And, you know, Newt and Mitt, they both were for it. That’s one of the reasons I say that if you really want an individual who is an outsider, someone who has not been engaged in part of that process, I hope you’ll take a look at me.”

Most of the money lent to the financial institutions has been repaid.

On her own bus tour of the state, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, looking to peel off Paul supporters, sought to sow doubt about Paul’s opposition to pre-emptive military action in nations such as Iran and North Korea.

“Ron Paul would be a dangerous president,” Bachmann said in Grundy Center. “He would have us ignore all of the warning signs of another brutal dictator who wants to wipe Israel off the face of the earth. I won’t.”

Gingrich, indirectly but unmistakably, went after Paul, too, for wanting to close U.S. military bases abroad and bring all or nearly troops home. “I stand apart from some of our candidates in believing we need a strong defense,” Gingrich asserted.

That criticism aside, the vast majority of attacks over the past week have been against Gingrich, and not limited to television advertising.

An anonymous independent group calling itself Iowans for Christian Leadership is urging conservatives not to back Gingrich, in light of his two divorces and past marital infidelity. The group has issued fliers and posted a scathing online video aimed at Gingrich, but has not begun showing TV ads.

The pro-Romney group, meantime, has spent $1.1 million on Iowa advertising over the past two weeks with a spot referring to Gingrich’s “baggage,” including ethics charges that led to his departure from Congress.

Paul’s campaign has also run an ad pointedly attacking Gingrich’s work for Freddie Mac and his former support for a health care mandate, a position unpopular with conservatives. And Perry also has started to run ads against Gingrich.

All have painted Gingrich as a Washington insider who profited from his stature after leaving Congress more than a decade ago.

Paul is scaling back his advertising to $55,000 or so over the next two weeks but the pro-Romney super PAC is filling the void with roughly $1.4 million in ad time reserved for the rest of the Iowa campaign.

The group also is advertising in Florida, spending a modest amount, roughly $143,000 over two weeks. But the ad buy is significant because Florida, which holds its primary Jan. 31, is seen as a potential showdown for Romney and Gingrich.

____(equals)

Shannon McCaffrey in Davenport, Iowa, contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-19-Wide%20Open%20Iowa/id-9710cec5b3d94cfd8262960698acc525

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12 DecGingrich comes to debate with front-runner status

FILE – In this Dec. 5, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks in New York. Gingrich’s rapid rise has left veteran Republicans perplexed, given that the party’s newfound presidential front-runner is backed by voters who think he’s not particularly honest and doesn’t shares their values. Are Gingrich’s conservative, anti-Washington orations so convincing? Or, now that other conservative contenders have flamed out, are voters just desperate for a candidate who’s not named Romney? (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

FILE – In this Dec. 5, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks in New York. Gingrich’s rapid rise has left veteran Republicans perplexed, given that the party’s newfound presidential front-runner is backed by voters who think he’s not particularly honest and doesn’t shares their values. Are Gingrich’s conservative, anti-Washington orations so convincing? Or, now that other conservative contenders have flamed out, are voters just desperate for a candidate who’s not named Romney? (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

FILE – In this Nov. 9, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, speaks debate in Auburn Hills, Mich. Mitt Romney may have some help in Iowa: Ron Paul. The Texas congressman’s allies and others say that he drains support from the rising Newt Gingrich, and, if that turns out to be the case during the Jan. 3 caucuses and Paul manages to triumph here, the theory is that Romney would benefit in the long-run. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya, File)

FILE – In this Dec. 7, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney speaks in Washington. Romney may have some help in Iowa: Ron Paul. The Texas congressman’s allies and others say that he drains support from the rising Newt Gingrich, and, if that turns out to be the case during the Jan. 3 caucuses and Paul manages to triumph here, the theory is that Romney would benefit in the long-run. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

Republican presidential candidate, Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks to supporters on the U.S.S. Yorktown, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011 in Charleston, S.C. (AP Photo/Alice Keeney)

Republican presidential hopeful U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., waits to speak during the Five Seasons Republican Women’s Christmas Party, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011, in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? Newt Gingrich is facing his first debate as the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. Standing next to him will be Mitt Romney, whose campaign has launched an all-out offensive against Gingrich’s record and leadership style.

With less than a month to go before the Iowa caucuses, the debate at 9 p.m. EST Saturday will focus on the federal budget deficit. It also promises a political drama as Gingrich and Romney meet amid a sharp back-and-forth waged by their campaigns.

Gingrich rose to the top of polls largely because of how he’s performed in the other 10 debates this year. He’s expecting his new position in the race to mean his rivals will criticize him head-on this time, aides say.

If they do, aides say Gingrich knows how he hopes to handle it: Pause, step back and laugh.

That’s how Gingrich has responded in the past to what he’s often deemed “gotcha” questions from debate moderators ? before dressing them down, usually to much applause from the audience.

“I wish you would put aside the gotcha questions,” Gingrich snapped at Fox News anchor Chris Wallace during one debate. In another debate, the former House speaker told Politico editor John Harris, “I’m frankly not interested in your effort to get Republicans fighting each other.”

His challenge Saturday night will be maintaining that cool in the face of the kind of repeated, sustained attacks that he’s avoided in previous sparring matches ? and thus passing the temperament test. Responding the wrong way could reinforce critics’ charges that he’s too undisciplined to lead the country.

The criticism could come from any corner. As the days dwindle before voting begins Jan. 3 in Iowa, almost all of his rivals are piling on. Rep. Michele Bachmann has called Gingrich an “influence peddler.” Former Sen. Rick Santorum has criticized Gingrich’s record in Congress, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry has hit his support for a national insurance mandate in the 1990s.

Most likely to take a swipe at the front-runner are Texas Rep. Ron Paul and Romney, who are next in line in Iowa polls. Paul is running an ad accusing Gingrich of “serial hypocrisy.” Romney’s campaign has used Gingrich’s comments about Rep. Paul Ryan’s Medicare plan ? Gingrich once called it “right-wing social engineering” ? to accuse him of irrational decision-making and poor leadership.

Romney has been content to let surrogates and others backing his campaign provide the sharpest words against Gingrich. On Friday, in remarks to The Des Moines Register’s editorial board, he spoke more directly about policy differences with Gingrich and how their experiences separated them.

Romney spokeswoman Gail Gitcho said the former Massachusetts governor won’t step back from criticizing Gingrich’s record during Saturday’s debate. “He’s going to draw a contrast between his record and the other candidates. I think you’ve seen the beginning of that this week,” she said.

Romney’s strategy with Gingrich is beginning to mirror what his campaign did with Perry, who entered the race in August and immediately rose to the top of polls. Ahead of debates, Romney’s team rolled out new attacks on Perry ? first hitting some of the Texas governor’s comments on Social Security and then attacking him for his record on immigration. Romney also delivered those attacks himself in two debates.

Romney has turned in a series of strong debate performances. He’s made few mistakes and hasn’t been repeatedly attacked by his rivals.

“I think I’ve got the best ideas for our nation,” he said at a campaign stop Friday. “I think I’ve got some pretty good zingers. I think I will be able to best post up against the president, particularly if we’re talking about the economy.”

But it’s Gingrich’s performances that voters have noticed. In a Des Moines Register poll released in early December, 50 percent of likely caucus-goers said Gingrich is the best debater. Romney was a distant second with 14 percent.

Aides say his success is due, in part, to careful study.

Since May, Gingrich has been practicing speaking in one-minute intervals, the length of time required by the debates. He’s done it both in debate preparation ? originally with the help of campaign staffers who abandoned him in June ? and on the campaign trail, giving prepared speeches in one-minute pieces.

He’s specifically prepared by reading through almost all of Ronald Reagan’s debate transcripts from his 1980 presidential campaign, looking to learn from Reagan’s communication style.

Gingrich also specifically asked campaign staff for a transcript and video of the famous exchange between Reagan and a debate moderator, John Breen, because he viewed the New Hampshire primary debate where it took place as the first time Reagan was really being attacked by his Republican rivals.

When the moderator asked to have Reagan’s microphone turned off, Reagan responded, to great applause, “I am paying for this microphone, Mr. Breen!” That moment helped reinvigorate Reagan’s campaign.

Campaign staffers also sent Gingrich a transcript of Reagan’s debate with Sen. Robert Kennedy in 1967. Reagan, then governor of California, debated the Vietnam War with Kennedy, a New York Democrat.

But Reagan’s most salient lesson for Gingrich heading into Saturday night’s debate comes from his famous exchange with President Jimmy Carter.

As Carter launched into an attack on Reagan’s views, Reagan defused it with four words that came to define the campaign: “There you go again!”

Associated Press

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29 OctBachmann criticizes Obama’s student loan plan

FILE – In this Oct. 20, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn. speaks in San Francisco. It’s still ?drill, baby, drill.? After the nation’s largest offshore oil spill and a series of pipeline breaks, Republican presidential candidates are still pushing an aggressive policy of oil and gas drilling. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

FILE – In this Oct. 20, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn. speaks in San Francisco. It’s still ?drill, baby, drill.? After the nation’s largest offshore oil spill and a series of pipeline breaks, Republican presidential candidates are still pushing an aggressive policy of oil and gas drilling. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, File)

FILE – In this Oct. 7, 2011 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich speaks, in Washington. It’s still ?drill, baby, drill.? After the nation’s largest offshore oil spill and a series of pipeline breaks, Republican presidential candidates are still pushing an aggressive policy of oil and gas drilling. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

(AP) ? Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann criticized a directive by President Barack Obama to ease student loan debt as an “abuse of power” that will give people incentive to dodge debt.

The candidates reacted Thursday to a decision Obama announced a day earlier to cap required payments for some college loan borrowers at a lower percentage of their income and forgive payments for others after 20 years. He used executive authority to accelerate a law that wasn’t supposed to go into effect until 2014.

“I believe it is abuse of power from the executive to impose via an executive order a wholesale change in the student loan,” Bachmann, a Minnesota congresswoman, said during an education forum in New York put on by The College Board and News Corp.

Appearing by satellite from Minneapolis where she was hosting a fundraiser later Thursday, Bachmann said that the loan breaks could push costs onto other taxpayers.

Bachmann said the change creates a “moral hazard” when it comes to student debt.

“There is a morality in keeping our financial promises, and I don’t think we should push that off onto the taxpayer,” she said. “The individual needs to repay and be responsible for repaying their student loan debt.”

Another GOP candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, also took a dim view of Obama’s action, calling it a “Ponzi scheme.”

Gingrich said at the education forum that private loans should be reprivatized before the president “bankrupts the entire country by promising to every young person you will not have to pay your student loan as a student. However you will later have to pay off the national debt as a taxpayer.”

Obama’s plan will accelerate a measure passed by Congress that reduces the maximum required payment on student loans from 15 percent of discretionary income annually to 10 percent. The plan goes into effect in 2012, instead of 2014. In addition, the White House says the outstanding loan amount would be forgiven after 20 years, instead of 25. About 1.6 million borrowers could be affected.

The administration says the plan won’t cost taxpayers anything and could actually save as much as $2 billion. Borrowers would be allowed to consolidate a direct loan from the government with one issued under the Federal Family Education Loan Program. The savings come from no longer having to a pay subsidy to the lender, the administration says.

Obama said on Wednesday that the plan will help boost the economy. Debt-saddled graduates will have more money to spend on things like buying homes, he said. Student loans are the No. 2 source of household debt. Total student debt now exceeds $1 trillion and the average indebtedness is rising.

Changes approved by Congress last year moved student loans to direct lending by eliminating banks as the middlemen. Before that, borrowers could get loans directly from the government or from the Federal Family Education Loan Program; the latter were issued by private lenders but basically insured by the government. The law was passed along with the health care overhaul with the anticipation that it could save about $60 billion over a decade.

___

Associated Press Education Writer Kimberly Hefling in Washington contributed to this report.

.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-10-27-Bachmann-Student%20Loan/id-90e8e5d072ec445baf5c5b10ced25337

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