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But Bill Cathey, a lifelong Republican in Oklahoma City, said he thinks the right's hostility toward Obama will heal any wounds inflicted in his party's nomination contest. "It's like wrestling matches. You have to wrestle a few to win the championship," he said. "If our guys are so weak that they can't get through this little patty-cake fight here, well Obama's machine will come at them hammer and tong." There are several reasons why this race could continue well into midyear. Republicans invited a drawn-out battle this year after switching party rules for winning convention delegates. Most state now are awarding delegates proportionally, meaning all four candidates can make the argument that they're winning even if they're not. At the same time, the emergence of "super" political action committees that are running ads on behalf of candidates they support has meant that even if a campaign's money dries up, a candidate can continue to compete. Saturday's Washington caucuses and the 10 contests Tuesday might provide more clarity to the contest. Poor showings could doom one or more of the candidates, particularly Gingrich. The former House speaker raised his stakes by essentially sitting out February's contests to focus on Super Tuesday states. Still, Gingrich
-- along with Santorum and Paul -- have suggested they'll compete all the way to the convention, a notion that doesn't concern some. "The party is so concerned that we beat Barack Obama, the process doesn't matter," said North Dakota state Rep. Wes Belter, a farmer who attended Romney's town hall in Fargo on Thursday. He also dismissed the fissures in the party, saying, "Once the candidate is nominated we will stand behind him." Indeed, voters in this week's primaries in Arizona and Michigan were largely on board to support the eventual GOP nominee. But there are signs that the broader Republican Party and the public in general have grown weary of the contest. The latest AP-GfK poll showed that just 40 percent of Republicans had a "great deal" of interest in following the campaigns, down 8 points from December and about on par with the level last summer when the campaign was in a far sleepier phase, while satisfaction with the field of candidates is static.
[Associated
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