Gingrich says GOP race will go on another 6 months

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Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich meets with supporters during a visit to a polling place at Celebration Heritage Hall in Celebration, Fla., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich meets with supporters during a visit to a polling place at Celebration Heritage Hall in Celebration, Fla., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich campaigns outside a polling place at Celebration Heritage Hall in Celebration, Fla., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

(AP) ? Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich said Tuesday he expects the race for the GOP nomination will go on for six months no matter how the Florida primary turns out.

“Unless Romney drops out earlier,” Gingrich quipped about chief rival Mitt Romney during a campaign stop in Orlando, one of several stops in central Florida on his primary day schedule.

Gingrich was hoping for an upset in Florida but bracing for a loss. Polls suggested rival Mitt Romney was headed toward a substantial victory.

Gingrich’s campaign on Tuesday trumpeted news that he had raised $5 million in January, most of it coming after his decisive Jan. 21 victory in South Carolina. The details were not as positive: After raising nearly $10 million in the final three months of last year, the campaign was about $1.2 million in debt. Campaign finance reports show he ended the year with a little more than $2 million cash on hand.

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, raked in $24 million for the fourth quarter.

Following the announcement of Florida’s results, Gingrich planned to head to Nevada, which is set to hold its caucuses on Saturday. He has campaign stops scheduled on Wednesday in Reno, Carson City and Las Vegas.

Campaign spokesman R.C. Hammond said Gingrich won’t skip states as the races moves to seven contests in February.

“We will compete in every contest that the country has to offer,” Hammond said. “In a race where the media’s picked front-runner hasn’t broken 50 percent yet, that leaves a lot of math out there for the conservative side of the party to take up, which is how we’ll stay competitive in the nomination.”

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2012-01-31-US-Gingrich/id-e150d017a295440b9e61ae5dc6453619

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GOP field leaves SC’s religious right uninspired (AP)

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GREENVILLE, S.C. ? The Greenville-Spartanburg area, home to many of South Carolina’s evangelical voters, should be prime political ground for Rick Santorum, a longtime anti-abortion crusader who was embraced by a group of Christian leaders meeting last weekend in Texas.

Or maybe for former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who talks forcefully of his conversion to Catholicism and his hope for redemption for past sins, including infidelity.

It would have seemed ideal for Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who led more than 30,000 people in prayer in Houston last August.

Yet none of these candidates appears to have captivated this area’s religious conservatives ahead of Saturday’s Republican presidential primary. Perry fell so short that he was ending his campaign Thursday and endorsing Gingrich.

The unease and indecision among South Carolina evangelicals may help explain why former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a Mormon and former abortion-rights supporter, appears to be doing reasonably well, although politicians warn that the game isn’t over.

South Carolina’s religious conservatives are deeply worried about the country, and thoroughly convinced that President Barack Obama must go. But in interviews this week at several religious and political events, nearly all GOP voters expressed greater interest in God and the Christian community than in politicians and government. They exhibited only the vaguest hopes that this year’s elections will make a real difference.

“I’m concerned that we don’t have anyone that can fix this problem,” said Charlie Davis of Anderson, who carried a Bible into a prayer gathering that drew about 400 people to Greenville Tuesday night.

Like virtually everyone interviewed in the region, Davis, a 30-year-old elementary school physical education teacher, said he will vote Saturday. And like virtually all the others, he said he was undecided, and he showed little enthusiasm for anyone.

“I am standing back, watching,” said Dan Benham, 67, who also attended the prayer gathering, called “The Response.”

“I’m concerned about life in America,” he said, especially what he sees as an epidemic of abortions.

All the GOP candidates oppose legalized abortion, and Santorum is especially forceful on the issue. So it would seem that Benham, who owns a small auto parts assembly company, has a wealth of choices.

But when nudged on how democracy might improve the nation, Benham said: “I’m here to pray. I’m looking to ask the Lord.”

Even Perry, the only candidate to address the prayer group, two days before he dropped out, suggested that elections are not the answer. The nation’s hope, he said, “is not in government. That hope is in a loving God.”

God’s agenda, Perry told the crowd of 400, “is not a political agenda. He’s smarter than that.”

Organizers of “The Response” also seemed ambivalent about the proper role of religion and politics. They invited all the candidates to speak, and encouraged political reporters to attend.

But David Sliker of the International House of Prayer in Kansas City told the audience: “America’s solution isn’t coming through a politically brilliant idea. It’s going to come through the righteousness of its people.”

He said people should tell God “you’re the leader we want.”

Interviews with two dozen GOP voters over two days in no way constitute a scientific survey. But they give a flavor of political conversations in the campaign’s final days here in the home of the fundamental Christian Bob Jones University.

Time after time, religious conservatives expressed alarm and sadness at what they see as the country’s drift from righteousness and from taking responsibility for one’s self and one’s neighbors. Yet almost no one was able to point to a presidential candidate with enthusiasm.

“I’m hoping that whoever is in power will be the one that Jesus wants,” said Andrew Ratchford, 23, who studied political science in college and knows the campaign issues well.

Tian Ware, 45, of Prosperity, S.C., went to see Santorum on Wednesday at the Beacon Drive-In restaurant, a Spartanburg landmark.

She might vote for him, she said. Or maybe Gingrich. Ware said she would make her decision “on just a feeling. I get feelings about people.”

If Ware, who has three grandchildren, is lukewarm about the candidates, she is passionate about the issues.

“I’m offended that my children couldn’t pray in public schools if they wanted to,” she said. “If I say `Oh my God’ in front of the wrong person, I’ll get arrested.”

Standing nearby was Jim McCabe, who recently retired as chief information officer for Milliken, a major textile and chemical company. “I just came to see,” he said of Santorum. “I’m not really pleased with any of them.”

McCabe said he wants “an alternative to Mitt Romney,” and probably will vote for Gingrich or Santorum. He sounded underwhelmed.

McCabe and Ware are the type of socially conservative voters that one of Romney’s rivals needs to inspire, excite, set on fire. In exit polls from the 2008 South Carolina GOP primary, 60 percent of voters said they were evangelical.

Rep. Ron Paul doesn’t play well with these voters, largely because they see him as unwilling to defend Israel, a land that holds special meaning to many devout Christians. That leaves Santorum and Gingrich, both of whom can make legitimate arguments to the Christian right.

And they have tried. Along with Perry, they attended an anti-abortion forum Wednesday in Greenville, declaring their conviction that human life begins at conception.

Santorum, who endeared himself to many Christian activists in Iowa, seemed to catch a big break last week. A loose-knit group of prominent social conservatives voted in Texas to back him as the best alternative to Romney.

In this week’s interviews with Greenville-Spartanburg Republicans, however, no one mentioned the event.

Gingrich, meanwhile, seemed to get a bump from Monday’s debate in Myrtle Beach, according to polls and anecdotal evidence. But if there was a rising tide for Gingrich in the Spartanburg-Greenville region, it wasn’t obvious.

“I’m very concerned about this country,” said Blaine Nuckolls, 71, a retired police officer who lives in Greenville. “We need leadership, starting at the top,” he said.

He said he was trying to decide between Perry and Santorum. Nuckolls said he likes Gingrich, “but I don’t think he’s got enough backing to get elected.”

Bill Campbell, a retired minister from Greenville, said he fears for the nation’s future. Americans are crushing future generations with federal debt, he said.

“Most candidates seem not to have a grasp on how serious it is,” Campbell said. Paul comes closest, he said, although he hasn’t ruled out Santorum.

“Gingrich is interesting, but too insiderish,” Campbell said, and Romney is far too establishment.

“We need someone to make big waves in Washington,” Campbell said. He stared solemnly. He didn’t look optimistic.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120119/ap_on_el_pr/us_south_carolina_conservatives

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Evangelical leaders back Santorum

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By Reuters

Influential evangelical Christian leaders on Saturday endorsed Rick Santorum for the Republican U.S. presidential nomination, in an attempt to strengthen him as the more conservative alternative to front-runner Mitt Romney.

At a weekend meeting at a ranch outside Houston, the group of 150 conservatives agreed on the third ballot to support the former Pennsylvania senator.

They had not been expected to reach agreement on one candidate since evangelical support was splintered among Santorum, former U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Governor Rick Perry.

“What I did not think was possible appears to be possible,” said Tony Perkins, leader of the Family Research Council and spokesman for the group.

Perkins described a “vigorous and passionate” discussion about who would make the best president and said eventually people made concessions to their views in order to coalesce around one candidate.

Conservatives are desperate to find a viable alternative to Romney, who won the first two nomination contests in Iowa and New Hampshire and now leads the polls in South Carolina, which holds its Republican primary on Jan. 21.

In the 2008 election, about 60 percent of the voters in South Carolina described themselves as evangelical Christians. Santorum is a Catholic and father of seven who strongly opposes abortion and gay rights.

Despite Romney’s front-runner status, many conservatives mistrust him because of his record in relatively liberal Massachusetts, where he once supported abortion rights.

“Not a lot of time was spent on Mitt Romney. It was more about the positive. How to get America back on the right road. How to get America great again,” Perkins said.

Perkins said the group debated and prayed over who to pick but in the end chose the person they believed had the best social conservative and economic policies and was most likely to defeat Democratic President Barack Obama in the Nov. 6 election.

Santorum’s nearest rival was the twice-divorced Gingrich.

Gingrich’s campaign has begun airing TV ads in South Carolina that call Romney “pro-abortion,” and say that Romney – who says he now opposes the procedure – cannot be trusted to be reliably anti-abortion. In response, Romney began running a radio ad touting his anti-abortion views.

Perkins said all factors were taken into account at the Texas meeting and said that Romney’s Mormon religion “wasn’t even discussed.”

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://nbcpolitics.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/14/10157220-evangelical-leaders-back-santorum

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The Tim Tebow moment and other takeaways from last pre-Iowa GOP debate

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Rick Perry had a memorable line with his Tim Tebow comment, but Thursday’s GOP debate ? the last before the Iowa caucuses ? didn’t exactly offer an electrifying finish. Still, a few jabs hit their mark.

Tim Tebow has arrived. You know you?ve become a cultural force when a presidential candidate wraps himself in your aura and tries to, well, Tebow his way to the Republican nomination.

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The only problem for Rick Perry is that an unorthodox style and a lot of praying may not be enough to turn him into a winner. But in the 13th?and final GOP debate before the first nominating contest of the season ? the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses ? at least the Texas governor came out with a memorable line.

?Let me tell you, I hope I am the Tim Tebow of the Iowa caucuses,? said Governor Perry, relating to the criticism that the Denver Broncos quarterback is ?not playing the game right? but manages to win anyway.

Anyone hoping that Thursday night?s debate in Sioux City, Iowa, would feature hail Mary passes and an electrifying finish was probably disappointed. The discussion mostly reworked familiar ground. There were testy moments, but not between the front-runners ? former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

Mr. Romney played it safe and didn?t go after Mr. Gingrich or anyone else after the $10,000 bet Romney offered Perry in the last debate unleashed a flood of mockery. Romney is letting his surrogates, TV ads, the other candidates, and debate questioners go after Gingrich on his perceived weaknesses.

Chris Wallace, one of the Fox News moderators, obliged by teeing up questions to Texas Rep. Ron Paul, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum on Gingrich?s $1.6 million consultancy with controversial mortgage giant Freddie Mac. The result was not Gingrich?s best moment.

Gingrich has stated that he was an adviser to Freddie Mac, not a lobbyist. But Representative Bachmann zinged him on that.

?You don’t need to be within the technical definition of being a lobbyist to still be influence-peddling with senior Republicans in Washington, D.C., to get them to do your bidding,? Bachmann said. ?And the bidding was to keep this grandiose scam of Freddie Mac going.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/SeHZDYPRkg8/The-Tim-Tebow-moment-and-other-takeaways-from-last-pre-Iowa-GOP-debate

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