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Republicans who want to be president compete for big bounty on Super Tuesday
Get set for the largest day of voting so far in the Republicans' topsy-turvy presidential primary race. With contests in 10 states and 419 nominating delegates up for grabs, the day called Super Tuesday could be a turning point for the two leading candidates – Mitt Romney, a former Massachusetts governor, and Rick Santorum, an ex-senator from Pennsylvania who hasn't won in any state since Feb. 7. Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul also have meaningful support. Romney and Santorum are in a close race in Ohio, a large industrial state with 66 delegates. It's seen as the main prize March 6, when voting also takes place in Virginia, Massachusetts, Oklahoma and as far west as Alaska. Gingrich, who represented Georgia in the U.S. House for years, leads in polls there and could earn most of its 76 delegates. Santorum's scrappy campaign faces its biggest test yet. He lacks the paid staff and local offices of his three rivals and is being greatly outspent. "We need someone who can go out and make the case, not with the most money, but with the best ideas," Santorum (pronounced Saant-ORE-rum) said this past weekend in Bowling Green, Ohio. Romney leads in national convention delegates with 182 after winning primaries last week in Michigan and Arizona and caucuses Saturday in Washington state. To be nominated at the party convention in Tampa this August, a candidate needs 1,144, so the fight definitely stretches past this week. That's what party leaders wanted then they set up an extended primary season, intended to give more states and more Republicans a say in picking the nominee. "We wanted to give every candidate a fair shot to make their case to the Republican base," says former party chairman Michael Steele. "We wanted to make it competitive. The members were tired of the nomination fight being over in six weeks."
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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