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"I'm coming out urging the voters of Wisconsin: `Let's lead. Let's show that this is the time to bring this process to an end so we can focus our attention on retiring President Obama,'" Johnson said on NBC's "Meet the Press." He later appeared at a pancake brunch with Romney and offered a message to "every conservative": "I've spoken with Mitt, I totally believe he is committed to saving America." The senator joins a growing chorus of prominent Republicans calling for the party to coalesce behind Romney's candidacy. Romney also scored former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and his father, President George H.W. Bush, in recent days. Ryan's endorsement was particularly painful for Santorum, who had been aggressively praising the congressman
-- a fiscal conservative hero in Wisconsin and across the country -- for much of the past week. That praise ended Saturday, when Santorum referred to Ryan as "some other Wisconsinite." Santorum's senior staff outlined an increasingly unlikely path to victory that depends upon hypothetical success more than a month away. "May is going to be a good month for us," Santorum campaign manager Mike Biundo said. "The race goes on." Biundo confirmed that Santorum is aggressively working the phones to sway delegates in states like Washington, Iowa, Minnesota and Missouri that have already voted. But he's having mixed success. "We have some (delegates) that have committed. I think most people seem to right now still be kind of waiting it out. There seems to be a lot of that that's going on," Biundo said. Santorum was publicly defiant Sunday. "Look, this race isn't even at halftime yet," he told "Fox News Sunday." He said Romney "hasn't been able to close the deal with conservatives, much less anybody else in this party. And that's not going to be an effective tool for us to win this election." But with losses piling up for in other industrial states like Ohio, Michigan and Illinois, Santorum acknowledged the results in Wisconsin Tuesday will send a "strong signal" about the direction of the Republican contest. And he appears to be in retreat. Having devoted more than a week to campaigning across Wisconsin, Santorum is scheduled to return to his home state, Pennsylvania, the day before the Wisconsin contest. Pennsylvania's primary is more than three weeks away. Santorum noted that he moved out of Louisiana -- where he won -- before that state's election day. But Santorum's team has demonstrated far less confidence in recent days about Wisconsin than Romney, who has predicted victory here. Trying to be upbeat, Santorum dismissed Romney's growing support as "panic" in the Republican establishment and said seeing "everybody sort of coming out of the woodwork to say the things they're saying today makes me feel like we're actually doing pretty well here in Wisconsin." Meanwhile, Romney hopes to score a knockout blow in Pennsylvania, which hosts its primary April 24. He already has an office in Harrisburg and four paid staffers in the state, and plans to shift additional resources there after Tuesday. With about half of the GOP nominating contests complete, Romney has won 54 percent of the delegates at stake, putting him on track to reach the threshold 1,144 national convention delegates in June. Santorum, who has won 27 percent of the delegates at stake, would need to win 74 percent of the remaining delegates to clinch the nomination.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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