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Romney Vows To Stay In Republican Race

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  • Romney Vows To Stay In Republican Race

    ROMNEY VOWS TO STAY IN REPUBLICAN RACE
    Andrew Clark in Boston

    Guardian Unlimited
    Wednesday February 6, 2008

    Mitt Romney shrugged off a gloomy mood among his supporters with a
    defiant promise to fight on despite a disappointing night in which
    he struggled to win more than a handful of states.

    The former Massachusetts governor was squeezed by an unexpectedly
    strong performance by Mike Huckabee, who snatched crucial votes from
    hard-line conservatives who dislike the frontrunner, John McCain.

    At Boston's convention centre, there was a sense of despondency among
    many of Romney supporters despite upbeat blasts of rock tunes such as
    "Don't Stop Believing".

    Flanked by his wife Ann and several of his five sons, Romney declared:
    "The one thing that's clear is that this campaign is going on."

    "There some people who thought it was all going to be done tonight,"
    said Romney. "But it's not all going to be done. We're going to keep
    battling, we're going to go all the way to the convention and we're
    going to win the White House."

    Cheers at the Romney rally were few and far between. The crowd perked
    up on news of victories in Massachusetts and Utah. But early hopes
    of victories in Georgia and Delaware faded. Romney did his best
    to improve the tempo - pledges to crack down on broken borders and
    illegal immigration won huge applause.

    Watching results appear on television, one Romney supporter complained:
    "He's being absolutely killed."

    There is anger among many of Romney's allies at Mike Huckabee's
    continuing presence in the race. Several Romney campaigners compared
    the Arkansas preacher to Ross Perot or Ralph Nader - no-hopers who
    only succeeded in wrecking others' chances.

    Jeffrey Davis Perry, a Republican representative in the Massachusetts
    assembly, said: "By the end of tonight, conservatives will really
    see their choices - a vote for Mike Huckabee is really a vote for
    John McCain."

    But Romney's strategists are holding out hope for a surprise victory in
    California and strong performances in other western states, providing
    sufficient momentum to keep their man in the presidential race.

    Romney earlier completed a 5,000-mile, coast-to-coast campaign dash
    in 37 hours, taking in California, Oklahoma, Georgia and Tennessee,
    as he hammered home his claim to be the conservative standard-bearer
    of the Republican party.

    He got back to his home in Belmont, an upmarket suburb of Boston,
    in time to vote at the ornate, 19th-century town hall this afternoon.

    Emerging from the polling station, Romney brandished a souvenir
    ballot paper and declared that it was a privilege to vote not only
    for himself but for his wife Ann and his oldest son, Tagg, who were
    standing for the local Republican committee.

    About 50 largely supportive local people gathered to catch a glimpse
    of the candidate.

    "He's a very intelligent man, he's a highly moral man, he's run a
    major organisation and the US is a huge organisation," said Eric
    Cosman, a physics professor waiting to cheer on Romney.

    Citing his Swedish and Armenian heritage, Cosman said he vehemently
    opposes McCain's softly-softly approach to illegal immigrants: "Most
    Americans, like myself, have grandparents who really had to struggle
    to get into the United States - and they did it the legal way."

    A successful businessman, Romney has spent $35m of his personal fortune
    on his two-year fight for the presidency. But he has been hampered by
    suspicion over his Mormon faith in the Republican party's Christian
    base - a difficulty which came back into focus over the weekend, when
    he broke off the campaign trail to attend the funeral of 97-year-old
    Mormon patriarch Gordon Hinckley in Salt Lake City.

    "There's still a certain degree of fluidity in the race," said a
    Romney spokesman. "It's still a two-person race between us and McCain
    because we can make an electability argument that Huckabee cannot."
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