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Publicly, Romney and his senior team have offered no hint of financial stress. Fehrnstrom said that "we started March with more cash on hand than any of our opponents. Our fundraising continues to be healthy. We have all the resources we need to remain competitive in this race." Indeed, Romney scored narrow victories over Santorum in Michigan and Ohio in recent weeks, drawing on his financial advantage to outspend his opponents on the local airwaves. It was the same in Mississippi and Alabama this week. But in those Southern cases, Santorum overcame his cash deficit and scored twin victories that threatened to re-set the Republican contest. Henry Barbour, a Republican operative who is helping Romney's fundraising in the South, said money won't necessarily decide the nomination. "Cash is always a fundamental factor, but if it becomes a one-on-one, it becomes a little less important," said Barbour. "Romney has several structural advantages
-- cash is one. He also tends to have more staff, surrogates, party regulars and leaders who should make it easier for him to fight on multiple fronts. Santorum's back is still against the wall, but we need to close the deal." Santorum hopes to maintain momentum by defeating Romney Sunday in Puerto Rico's GOP primary, which offers candidates the opportunity to score points with Hispanic voters, while building a broad donor base with ties throughout Florida and New York. But after his two days of fundraising in New York, Romney arrives in Puerto Rico on Friday without any finance events scheduled. Aides were concerned that the trip might be portrayed as an ATM withdrawal. Instead, only a handful of deep-pocketed donors are expected to contribute the maximum allowed under federal law, $2,500. Illinois, which hosts a primary on Tuesday, is the next big test. And despite financial strains, Romney is showing little sign of abandoning his traditional paid advertising dominance, thanks in part to the Romney-aligned Restore Our Future super PAC working on his behalf. Romney and that group have been running Illinois television advertising that, combined, exceeds $2.4 million. Santorum's aligned super PAC is spending $400,000 there so far. And Romney super donor Johnson says the fundraising community is as engaged as ever. "You'd think you'd see some donor fatigue, but we haven't," Johnson said. "From the beginning, we said we'd be in this a long time and we planned accordingly."
[Associated
Press;
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