SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

Nation/World

March 11, 2012

GOP hopefuls look South for next contests

WASHINGTON — The raucous Republican presidential contest rolls into the Deep South this week with a pair of suddenly pivotal and tight races in Alabama and Mississippi.

The twin primaries on Tuesday follow a pair of weekend contests in the long, bruising fight to pick an opponent to President Barack Obama this fall. Setting the stage Saturday were Rick Santorum's romp in the Kansas caucuses and front-runner Mitt Romney's win in Wyoming.

Polls show a close race in the two upcoming contests, particularly in Alabama, where Romney, Santorum and Newt Gingrich all added to their TV advertising for the race's closing days.

Gingrich, whose campaign is struggling for survival, can ill afford a loss in either Mississippi or Alabama. Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts, is seeking a Southern breakthrough to show he has the ability to win the support of evangelical voters.

Santorum hopes to knock Gingrich out of the contest and finally emerge as Romney's sole challenger from the right. The former Pennsylvania senator lashed out at Obama and Romney simultaneously in a campaign appearance Saturday.

"We already have one president who doesn't tell the truth to the American people," he told voters in Kansas. "We don't need another."

A Gingrich aide has said the former House speaker must win both Southern primaries to justify continuing in the campaign. But Gingrich strongly suggested otherwise on Friday as polls showed a tight contest in Alabama.

"I think there's a fair chance we'll win," he told The Associated Press about the contests in Alabama and Mississippi. "But I just want to set this to rest once and for all. We're going to Tampa," sight of the GOP's national convention this summer.

Romney had no campaign appearances Saturday. He won six of 10 Super Tuesday states earlier in the week.

Final returns in Kansas showed Santorum with 51 percent of the vote, far outpacing Romney, who had 21 percent. Newt Gingrich finished with 14 percent and Ron Paul, the libertarian-leaning Texas congressman, trailed with 13 percent.

Santorum picked up 33 of the state's 40 delegates at stake, cutting slightly into Romney's overwhelming's advantage.

In Wyoming, Romney won seven of the 12 delegates up for grabs, Santorum three, Paul one. One delegate was uncommitted.

The contests in Kansas and Wyoming left Romney with 454 delegates in the AP's count, more than all his rivals combined. Santorum had 217, while Gingrich had 107 and Paul had 47.

Romney's totals included 22 that he picked up in the Virgin Islands, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands.

A candidate must win 1,144 to clinch the Republican presidential nomination at the national convention in Tampa next August.

___

Associated Press reporters David Espo and Stephen Ohlemacher in Washington, Thomas Beaumont in Alabama and Phil Elliott, John Hanna and John Milburn in Kansas, and David Lieb in Missouri contributed to this report.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Nation/World

Local News
  • National Grid underground cable project in Salem will avoid Derby Street

    SALEM — National Grid announced today that it has changed the preferred route for its underground transmission project and will not be going down Derby Street.

    June 18, 2013 2 Stories

  • School's longer year all but gone

    SALEM -- School Committee member Janet Crane did something extraordinary last night. She was the most important person at a meeting she did not attend. Crane, who had a long-scheduled absence, is expected to break a 3-3 school board deadlock on the e

    June 18, 2013 4 Stories

  • Soldier admits role in $1M cocaine deal PEABODY -- A staff sergeant in the Arizona National Guard admitted yesterday that he acted as the "bag man" in a $1 million deal to move 11 kilograms, nearly 25 pounds, of cocaine from Mexico to Canada in December 2011. Gerardo Flores, 29, of Tucso

    June 18, 2013

  • psapienza1 Sapienza reflects on his tenure PEABODY -- Ed Sapienza took the job of principal six years ago, at a time when Peabody High School had been roiled by stories of drug-abusing students and fierce turf battles among administrators. He's retiring now -- for a second time -- under far d

    June 18, 2013 1 Photo

  • Child molester denied permission to travel to NH IPSWICH -- An Ipswich woman who admitted to molesting her own two children for years, in what a veteran prosecutor said might be the worst case of sexual abuse he had ever seen, now wants permission from a judge to vacation in New Hampshire with her

    June 18, 2013