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Romney's tepid support from tea partyers and other strong conservatives means that, at best, he will have to labor to win the nomination and then would enter the general election with a restless base. Romney did well in Iowa, "but in Santorum, the right now has what it's been looking for: a conservative who is viable in a fight for the nomination," said GOP consultant Terry Holt. "Those Paul, Gingrich and Perry supporters have to go somewhere eventually," Holt said, "and it still doesn't look like any of them are ready to embrace Romney." The further right Romney has to move to win their backing, the harder it will be for him to woo independent voters next fall. It's unclear whether the tea party can match the influence it has wielded in congressional elections. Romney's even-tempered style clashes with the House GOP firebrands who see compromise as a weakness. They pushed the government to the brink of default in last summer's showdown over the debt ceiling. And they have caused massive headaches for Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, on a payroll tax cut and other issues. It's hardly the first time Republicans have struggled for their identity. A clash between Northeast moderates and Sunbelt conservatives led to Barry Goldwater's nomination for president in 1964. He lost in a landslide to Lyndon Johnson. But Goldwater redefined the GOP as a solidly conservative force ready to stop the march of New Deal and Great Society liberalism. He paved the way for Ronald Reagan and more sharply defined philosophies in both parties.
"It's not new," said Mickey Edwards, a former House Republican from Oklahoma. He predicted that most Republican voters eventually will gravitate to Romney, as the desire to oust Obama will trump the desire for a more ideological party leader. "Now they're looking for who's not Mitt," Edwards said. "Next they'll look for who's not Obama." Such thinking might yield a party identity that disappoints staunch conservatives who want a new era of dramatically stripped-down government spending, taxation and regulation. For them to prevail, however, they'll have to find a way to unite anti-Romney sentiment behind one candidate who can go the distance.
[Associated
Press;
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