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"The American people want the truth," Perry demanded. "They want to hear you say that you knew you had illegals working at your ..." Romney cut in: "Would you please wait? Are you just going to keep talking, or are you going to let me finish with my
-- what I have to say?" For Romney, it was a frustrating return to an issue that played out in his 2008 presidential campaign. At that time, and again Tuesday night, he said he had little control over whether a landscaping company he legally hired had illegal immigrants on the payroll. But the exchange provided one of the few moments in this presidential campaign in which the usually poised Romney showed flashes of anger. That anger was apparent in campaign rhetoric from both sides the day after the debate. "Gov. Perry is desperate to deflect from his liberal immigration record," Romney spokesman Ryan Williams said, calling Perry's launching of "a personal and untruthful attack" on Romney "unpresidential."
But don't expect Perry to back down from an issue that may have fueled his strongest debate performance. Perry spokesman Ray Sullivan said, "Mr. Romney has been demagoguing and distorting these immigration and border control issues for months now." Sullivan argued that Romney was "exposed as someone who had illegal immigrants working in his lawn and cleaning his tennis court." Sullivan would not say whether Perry might exploit the issue in television advertising, but he hinted that Romney has only seen the beginning of the new criticism. There is danger is pushing too hard on immigration. Polling suggests the issue may help the candidates score political points with Republican primary voters but could alienate the ballooning Hispanic population or hurt the candidates among independents in a general election matchup against President Barack Obama. Obama campaign manager Jim Messina seized on the issue Wednesday. "Romney's been taking hard-right positions on the campaign trail on immigration. He didn't object to having undocumented workers working for him because it's illegal; he objected because he thought it would hurt his political career," Messina said.
[Associated
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