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Once viewed as a sideshow to the race, Cain's plain-spoken approach has provided a simpler alternative to others such as the approach of Romney. "Can you name all 59 points in your 160-page plan?" Cain pushed Romney on his detailed economic plan. Cain has run a non-traditional campaign. He is on a national book tour now, hawking his latest volume. He is a frequent guest on television programs. Yet so far, Cain hasn't laid the groundwork for a traditional get-out-the-vote effort in the critical early nominating states. He shrugs off that criticism. "And just to set the record straight: when you run for president and you move into the top tier ... you get this bull's-eye on your back," Cain said last week. "And people take potshots left and right. But I don't want you to be unclear about where I stand on certain things."
[Associated
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