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Santorum isn't the only candidate fielding questions that rarely focus on jobs. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, at a military museum in Wolfeboro Saturday, was asked about numerous other topics, including whether he would padlock the Environmental Protection Agency and Education Department. Gingrich said he probably would "order them to re-review every proposed regulation and keep them rope-a-doping for a while." A Harvard student asked Gingrich how he could govern while refusing to raise taxes to help close budget deficits. Gingrich drew nods of approval when he replied: "I'm happy to cooperate. I'm not willing to compromise. Compromise in Washington means sell-out." Romney, the favorite to win in New Hampshire, tends to draw more mainstream Republican audiences. Even he, however, has to field unexpected zingers. At a spaghetti dinner in Tilton, a woman said she was struggling financially. "I know you're a multimillionaire," she said. "I read this morning you have four houses. Would you be willing to give up some of that so that the people in America could get some tax cuts?" "That's a good idea," Romney said with a nervous laugh. "The best way I can help middle-income Americans is to become president of the United States, to cut taxes for middle-income Americans, which is what my proposal does, and to get jobs for middle-income Americans." For the record, Romney said he owns only three houses.
[Associated
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