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Dual Debates An Opportunity For Romney's Rivals

Sen. Rick Santorum campaigns in Nashua, N.H. on Friday. (WBUR/Dominick Reuter)
Sen. Rick Santorum campaigns in Nashua, N.H. on Friday. (WBUR/Dominick Reuter)

Republican rivals for the presidential nomination have a chance to knock front-runner Mitt Romney, who has a commanding lead in New Hampshire polls, off his perch in back-to-back weekend debates that could help define the contest.

In a race largely driven by 13 previous sparring matches, Romney has emerged mostly unscathed by the six or seven opponents who have flanked his debate position on center stage.

That could change with Saturday night's debate or the one scheduled Sunday morning, as rivals Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum seek to stop Romney's march to the GOP nomination. In particular, Gingrich is looking to keep his candidacy afloat while Santorum hopes to capitalize on his neck-and-neck performance against Romney in Iowa's caucuses.

There are fewer than 12 hours between an ABC News/WMUR debate Saturday and an NBC News/Facebook debate on Sunday's "Meet the Press."

"Two debates! One tomorrow night, one the next morning. Why even stop?" Romney declared Friday at a campaign stop in Tilton. "Why don't we just go right through? It's nonstop!"

Debates can have unforeseen impact. Just days before the New Hampshire primary in 2008, Democratic candidate Barack Obama used that venue to call rival Hillary Rodham Clinton "likable enough" - a dismissive comment that didn't sit well with her supporters. Obama, who had a significant lead in polls, lost the New Hampshire primary.

Romney's rivals have a serious gap to close in New Hampshire - and, recent polls show, in upcoming South Carolina. Two surveys out Friday show Romney up at least 20 percentage points over Texas Rep. Ron Paul, his next-closest opponent.

Paul visited the Windmill Restaurant in Concord Saturday morning where he shook hands and chatted with voters. He had planned to have breakfast there but was whisked out by staff who said they didn't want patrons' meals disrupted by the crush of reporters and camera crews.

Paul had no other events until Saturday's debate. Instead his son, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, will campaign on his behalf in Concord and Windham.

So far, Romney's rivals have been looking past the first-in-the-nation primary state. Santorum has campaigned here but has been peppered with hostile questions about his opposition to gay marriage and comments about homosexuality.

Gingrich has been talking of merely holding Romney's winning total under 50 percent in New Hampshire while Paul, who arrived in the state on Friday, has focused his criticism on Santorum.

"He brags about being for a balanced budget amendment but never did anything about it," Paul said of Santorum's time in the Senate. "He voted four or five times to raise the debt ceiling. He voted to double the size of the Department of Education."

Gingrich, who has made his mark during debates, has aggressively criticized Romney in recent days. He called Romney a "liar" and also said President Barack Obama would laugh at Romney if he were the nominee.

Santorum has also gone after Romney, seeking to undercut the former venture capitalist's record as a turnaround expert.

"Americans don't want someone to manage Washington," he said Saturday while campaigning in Goffstown, N.H. "They want someone who can fundamentally change Washington."

The former senator from Pennsylvania finished a surprisingly strong second in the Iowa caucuses, coming within eight votes of victory. But he has little time to try to convert that near-victory into a campaign organization in New Hampshire.

Recognizing he is unlikely to topple Romney here, Santorum instead cast himself as a strong challenger to Obama for November.

"Who are you, who are you to say that every child in America should go to college?" Santorum said of Obama during a forum at St. Anselm College near Manchester. "If one of my kids wants to go and be an auto mechanic, good for him. ... It's the kind of snobbery from those who think they know how to run our lives."

As of last month, New Hampshire had about 232,000 registered Republicans, 223,000 Democrats and 313,000 undeclared voters, who can vote in either primary. The state also allows same-day voter registration at the polls.

New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Gardner says he expects 250,000 ballots to be cast in Tuesday's highly contested Republican presidential primary. In 2008, when both sides had contested races, just over 241,000 ballots were cast in the GOP primary and 289,000 in the Democratic primary.

Looking ahead, a Time/CNN poll in South Carolina showed Romney leading Santorum with 37 percent of the vote.

Santorum is set to leave Sunday for South Carolina for a half-day of campaigning. Romney has events planned in New Hampshire through primary day on Tuesday.

This program aired on January 7, 2012. The audio for this program is not available.

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