Our Gift to You This Holiday Season
This Democrat Made a Huge Mistake When Celebrating Jasmine Crockett's Endorsement
British Citizens Are in an Abusive Relationship With Their Government
The Rules for California Stop at Gavin Newsom’s Driveway
BLM Co-Founder Arrested on Domestic Assault Charges
JD Vance Calls for GOP Unity, Touts Trump Agenda at AmericaFest 2025
America’s Food Stamp Program Mostly Runs on Outdated Technology
Coast Guard Intercepts Third Venezuelan Oil Tanker
Lawlessness in Seattle: Elderly Woman Blinded in Attack by Career Criminal
Hakeem Jeffries Dodges Question on Poll Showing Democrats at 18% Approval
7 Charged in $775K SNAP Fraud Scheme at Pennsylvania Convenience Store
Rand Paul Isn't Liking Trump's Decision to Seize Venezuelan Ships
Two Romanian Nationals Indicted in Oregon SNAP Fraud Scheme Allegedly Stealing Over $160,0...
USPS Chicago Employee Charged With Collecting $51K in Fraudulent Benefits, Feds Say
The Geese Are Being Stolen From Parks Again
OPINION

Is Romney Electable?

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

All day this past Tuesday, I crisscrossed Mississippi on the Rick Bus, a Susan B. Anthony List-led independent effort to turn out Rick Santorum voters who care about life, marriage and religious liberty.

Advertisement

On the long road from Jackson to Biloxi, I watched Fox News and CNN frame a victory for Mitt Romney in either Alabama or Mississippi, the end of Santorum and the coronation of Romney, proof-positive that he can win in the South and be embraced by the GOP core.

Instead, Romney lost in both Alabama and Mississippi.

Why?

As predicted, Gingrich and Santorum divided the anti-Romney vote. And yet the pro-Romney vote turned out to be even weaker than Romney had hoped, pundits predicted or polls suggested.

Romney is paying a price for his scorched earth tactics: Carpet-bombing your opponents with negative ads based on half-truths doesn't generate much enthusiasm for your own campaign among your own supporters.

With his losses in Kansas, Mississippi and Alabama, Romney is even beginning to take on the contours of a regional candidate -- one who runs well in the Northeast, which is not key to a Republican winning the presidency, as well as states with strong Mormon votes (Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada and Wyoming).

He can win in Southern states only where no other candidate has the ability to compete because of resources (Florida) or organization (Virginia).

Advertisement

He is able to pull out only the narrowest of victories in states like Ohio and Michigan, against a divided field, with humongous advantages in money and organization, and a 4-to-1 or more advantage in negative ads that he won't have against President Obama in the fall.

For a candidate whose strong suit is 'electability,' Romney's beginning to emerge as a very weak candidate to win in November, especially if the economy continues to nudge toward recovery.

Santorum, whose campaign began with strong support from Iowa evangelicals and other so-called "social conservatives," has now fought his way close to parity with Romney among economic conservatives, or at least among voters who say the economy is their main issue, exit polls confirmed on Tuesday.

In Alabama, among the 80 percent of voters who say they are 'very worried' about the economy, Santorum essentially split the vote with Romney (31 percent to 32 percent). In Mississippi, 56 percent of voters chose the economy as the most important issue, and Santorum picked up just as many of these voters as Romney (33 percent for each).

So, given Santorum's powerful lead among social conservatives, what is keeping Romney in this race? A short answer: Newt Gingrich. A slightly longer answer: the myth of electability.

Advertisement

In Alabama, among those who say the top quality they want in a candidate is someone who "can defeat Obama," Santorum lost 51 percent to 15 percent.

In Mississippi, 39 percent chose 'can defeat Obama' as the most important quality in a candidate, and these broke heavily as well for Romney, 46 percent to 22 percent.

Santorum has a real opening to explode the myth that Romney is the most electable candidate. Romney has revealed himself to be a front-runner with clay feet, running inside a glass house built on sand.

A third thing keeping Romney in the race? The argument made from despair, aka 'inevitability.'

All of these are very weak ground on which to stand for a presidential candidate who hopes to defeat Barack Obama in November.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement