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For example, more than 150 western Iowa and Omaha-area Republicans packed the meeting room in a pizza restaurant in Council Bluffs on Wednesday night to hear Gingrich. On Thursday, he was expected at an insurance company, an association meeting and a county GOP function in the Des Moines area. In Council Bluffs, Gingrich was asked to explain his immigration position, which has sparked criticism from some of his GOP rivals. He has called for allowing some established illegal immigrants to remain in the country
-- his opponents argue that he favors a type of amnesty -- and he described deporting all the millions of people in the United States illegally as unrealistic. "I don't want to start down the road toward policies that are hopeless," Gingrich said, prompting light applause. "There is a middle road that gets us to legality without citizenship." Such events are all he can do, given that there are only five weeks until the caucuses. And the approach fits with Gingrich's confidence that his appeal as a tested congressional leader with an array of post-congressional career policy hallmarks will attract Republicans searching for an alternative to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who has been a leader in national polls and in Iowa, despite a less aggressive Iowa campaign.
There's also a recent precedent for a successful, unconventional approach in Iowa. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee vaulted to the top of the polls in Iowa four years ago on a shoestring budget and little organizational structure. However, Huckabee, a former Baptist minister, made deep inroads with Iowa's conservative evangelical clergy and Christian home-school advocates, giving him key niches. Gingrich, on the other hand, is cobbling together a coalition of evangelicals, with supporters such as longtime social conservative Loras Schulte, and establishment Republicans such as the Iowa House Majority Leader Linda Upmeyer.
[Associated
Press;
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