DES MOINES, Iowa/MANCHESTER, N.H., (Reuters) – Michele Bachmann was out, Rick Perry was back and Rick Santorum was up in the most volatile Republican presidential nominating contest in decades yesterday, as conservative Republicans searched for an alternative to frontrunner Mitt Romney.
Bachmann, a U.S. congresswoman from Minnesota, stepped down after a dismal sixth place finish in the first Republican nominating contest in Iowa, which was decided by a margin of 8 votes out of the 122,000 cast. Perry, the governor of Texas, stayed in the race despite earlier hinting he would drop out.
Frustrated at conservatives’ failure to unite behind a single candidate, Christian conservative leaders planned a Texas meeting this weekend to thrash out strategy.
Their candidate may turn out to be Santorum, a former U.S. senator from Pennsylvania, who came in a close second to Romney in Tuesday’s Republican Iowa vote, which kicked off the 2012 presidential election cycle.
“Our country needed someone to step forward who had a little different perspective on what this country needs than the other Republican candidates who were going to be in the race. It was a gratifying moment that the people of Iowa recognized that,” he told CNN.
A CNN poll yesterday showed Santorum doubling his level of support to 10 percent in New Hampshire, although he remained far behind Romney, who was the governor of the neighboring state of Massachusetts.
Distrusted by conservatives, Romney has struggled to break above the 25-percent level in national polls of Republicans in the race to choose a challenger to President Barack Obama for November’s presidential election.
He has a solid campaign infrastructure and is favored to easily win the Jan. 10 New Hampshire primary. Romney picked up the endorsement of Senator John McCain, who was the party’s nominee in 2008.
“I’m really here for one reason and one reason only, and that is that we make Mitt Romney the next president of the United States of America,” McCain said at a rally in Manchester, New Hampshire. “And New Hampshire is the state that will catapult him on to victory in a very short period of time.”
SANTORUM PROBLEMS
An afterthought in the race until now, Santorum could have difficulty scaling up his campaign to compete in other states. On Wednesday, his Web site apparently crashed under a deluge of traffic.
Santorum has escaped close scrutiny so far, but rivals have plenty to work with if they want to attack him as a Washington insider in a year in which anti-government anger runs high. As a congressional leader, Santorum led an effort to link Republicans closely with lobbying interests before voters threw him out of office by an 18-point margin in 2006.
His career out of public office could come under attack as well: his million-dollar-plus income in 2010 included substantial payments from a lobbying firm and a hospital group that was hit with two lawsuits for allegedly defrauding the federal government.
Conservative voters have boosted nearly every other candidate in the race to the top of opinion polls over the past six months.
Another hopeful who has seen his support crumble, Perry decided to stay in the race after earlier saying he would reassess his campaign after a fifth-place finish in Iowa.
“We are going to go into places where they have actual primaries and there are going to be real Republicans voting,” Perry told reporters, referring to New Hampshire and South Carolina.
The unsettled nomination race – which pollster Gallup said was the most topsy-turvy in 50 years – also leaves an opening for former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich or Perry if Romney can’t connect with more voters.
South Carolina’s Jan. 21 primary is shaping up to be a crucial test.
“Iowa picks corn, New Hampshire picks campaigns’ pockets and South Carolina picks Republican presidents, and it is far from settled in South Carolina,” former state Republican Party chairman Katon Dawson, a Perry supporter, told Reuters.
Perry, a steady leader in the money stakes, has $3-4 million on hand to fund a multi-state campaign, according to a knowledgable source.
Gingrich, who led opinion polls in December on the strength of his television debate performances, can look forward to debates on Saturday and Sunday in New Hampshire as he tries to return to the top tier.
At the end of September, Romney’s campaign had $14.7 million cash on hand while Santorum’s had $189,556, according to the candidates’ Federal Election Commission filings.