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Last week, he opened a new line of attack against Romney and Gingrich, pointing out their past support for requiring people to acquire health insurance, a mandate very unpopular with conservatives. Perry began airing an ad in Iowa attacking the two for the position, and jabbed at both on the issue during Saturday's nationally televised debate from Des Moines. Perry's back-and-forth with Romney on the health care mandate produced its most memorable moment, when Romney tried to bet Perry $10,000 that the Texan had misstated his position. Still, Perry has at times failed to press the attack on other Republicans. On Sunday in Iowa, he failed to remind his audience that Romney and Gingrich had supported a key principle of the health care law President Barack Obama signed last year. "I don't think you need to be forced to buy a product, a private product, like insurance. That is not government's role to demand that you buy that. That's one of the reasons I think this is an unconstitutional piece of legislation," Perry said, outlining the key objection conservatives have to Obama's chief policy accomplishment. Ames Republican Bill McCall, who came to see Perry, said the candidate seemed hesitant to make the sale. "He could have said: `Did you see the debate last night? Well, then you know what I told Romney and Gingrich,'" said McCall, a retired engineer who is undecided and considering Perry. "But it's like he didn't know how to handle the audience. We were ready, and he couldn't close the deal."
[Associated
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