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Aides acknowledge that the Super Tuesday fight
-- waged in almost all regions of the country, in 10 states where buying a heavy week's worth of ads costs about $5 million, industry experts estimate
-- is tougher because of Romney's rough time in February. He won in Nevada on Feb. 4. But he lost three states to Santorum on Feb. 8, including Colorado
-- a situation aides now acknowledge was a miscalculation. To hear the campaign tell it, Romney didn't compete aggressively in that state, which he won in 2008, because advisers wrongly assumed that winning several states in January would give him enough momentum to win there. The campaign also underestimated Santorum, who had struggled for relevance in South Carolina, Florida and Nevada and appeared less of a threat than Gingrich. The three victories gave Santorum steam, and the former Pennsylvania senator became an immediate threat in Romney's native Michigan. That month fed doubts about Romney's ability to close the deal with voters. Romney has said he's made his problems worse by making remarks that draw attention to his own personal wealth. And aides acknowledge he's been plagued by the perception that he can't connect emotionally with voters even though those who know him well say that the candidate isn't awkward or out-of-touch at all. "The candidate sometimes makes some mistakes," Romney told reporters Tuesday ahead of the Michigan primary, "and so I'm trying to do better and work harder and make sure that we get our message across." One day later, he created a new headache for himself when he told an Ohio TV station that he opposed Republican Senate legislation that critics say would limit insurance coverage of birth control. The comment riled some conservatives. Romney aides quickly sought to fix the mistake and the candidate reversed himself in a second interview, saying he misunderstood the question. Despite the campaign's quick damage control, the flap highlighted anew Romney's struggles to win over conservatives who make the base of the Republican electorate
-- and the candidate's challenges ahead.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
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