It’s become fence-mending time for Romney
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Now is the time for Mitt Romney to mend his Republican fences and bring around those dubious voters who kept spurning him for Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich and others to the right. After a nasty primary battle, his challenge is to somehow excite the party’s staunchest conservatives without alienating the independent voters he’ll need to defeat President Barack Obama in the fall.
Romney predicted Wednesday that Republicans will naturally rally together against their common foe, Obama, and focus on their shared distress about the economy — an issue that resonates across the political spectrum.
To smooth the way, party leaders are moving quickly to close ranks, piling on more Romney endorsements after Santorum quit the field Tuesday. It’s unclear whether that will be enough to dispense with some voters’ worries, stoked by Romney’s primary season rivals, that he’s an “Etch A Sketch” conservative eager to shift to the center and abandon the conservative base.
While most primary voters surveyed in exit polls said they would ultimately be satisfied with Romney as the nominee, a significant chunk balked. Such surveys conducted in nine states during the primary season found 44 percent of GOP voters said Romney just wasn’t conservative enough.
In a close race, Romney couldn’t afford to have conservative stalwarts staying home on Election Day out of apathy.
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