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Both programs require people to obtain health insurance, a key goal in trying to provide everyone with medical care and preventing insurers from refusing to cover those with existing health problems. Romney says his plan was right for Massachusetts, but Obama's "one-size-fits-all" plan for the 50 states is wrong and intrusive. He has vowed to repeal it. Several RNC members find the argument hard to follow. "Health care may be his Achilles' heel," said South Carolina Republican Party chairman Chad Connelly, whose state holds its primary shortly after New Hampshire's. "He's going to have to explain that." North Carolina GOP chairman Robin Hayes said Romney's effort to explain the differences between his health care policies and Obama's is too complex and long-winded. "He's going to have to clarify the health care bill," he said. The harshest assessment of Romney in Dallas came from pollster Whit Ayres, who is aligned with Huntsman. He gave a closed-door presentation to RNC members on political messaging. "There is a huge anybody-but-Romney contingent in the party," Ayres said in an interview. He said the discontent centers on the health care issue and Romney's shift from liberal to conservative positions over the years on abortion rights, gun control and gay rights. But some of Romney's strongest supporters skipped the Dallas meeting. Massachusetts Republican national committeeman Ron Kaufman said RNC members tend to be neutral at this stage of a presidential contest, and Romney is doing well among grass-roots groups that will be vital in the primary. "I'm very comfortable with where we are," Kaufman said in a phone interview. Perhaps most frustrating for Romney is that his remarkable one-day fundraising push didn't attract more support at a gathering of Republican leaders from all 50 states. "People feel like he is the most qualified guy in the race at the moment," Hayes said. "But it's a long time before the green flag drops."
[Associated
Press;
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