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"Look,'" he said he told the service, "you can't have any illegals working on our property. I'm running for office, for Pete's sake! I can't have illegals!" The line went viral immediately, drawing plenty of guffaws and renewing criticism of Romney as lacking core principles. Reluctance to make a mistake carries its own pitfalls, according to Andrew Rasiej, the founder of Personal Democracy Forum, which studies the intersection of politics and technology. "A fish never gets in trouble if it doesn't open its mouth, but there can be backlash against that," Rasiej said. "The candidate that recognizes the environment and is willing to engage in it authentically has the most potential to take advantage of it and manage the negative effects." The debates have also helped boost momentum for once-struggling candidates like Cain, whose campaign caught fire after he promoted his 9-9-9 tax plan. But Cain's debate performances became noticeably more careful after rising poll numbers made him a target for his rivals and after he was forced on the defensive over evidence he may have sexually harassed female subordinates when he was president of the National Restaurant Association in the late 1990s. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has also seen his fortunes improve thanks to several well-received debate performances, and polls now show him running roughly even with Romney. But Gingrich has acknowledged his new position means he will be more heavily scrutinized in debates and elsewhere. His campaign took the unusual step of setting up a new website, "Answering the Attacks," which seeks to pre-emptively respond to criticisms. "The potential army of detractors or amplifiers has expanded exponentially, which makes the candidates more sensitive," Rasiej said. "Now, everyone's a publisher and everyone's a distributor. It makes the candidates realize there is no safe harbor anymore."
[Associated
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