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  1. #1
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    Romney runs campaign's inaugural TV attack ad


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    Romney runs campaign's inaugural TV attack ad

    He criticizes his surging GOP rival Huckabee on illegal immigration. New polls show Giuliani is still leading.


    By Michael Finnegan
    L. A. Times Staff Writer michael.finnegan@latimes.com
    December 11, 2007

    http://www.latimes.com

    WASHINGTON --
    In a sign of the rapidly shifting dynamics of the Republican presidential contest, Mitt Romney on Monday became the first candidate to run a TV attack ad, slamming Mike Huckabee on immigration in a bid to brake his rival's sharp rise in the polls.

    Romney's assault comes amid new polls suggesting that white evangelicals -- a major Republican voting bloc -- have started rallying strongly behind Huckabee after months of wavering among candidates across the field.

    Huckabee's surge is especially threatening to Romney, a former Massachusetts governor who has long hoped his rightward tilt would appeal to evangelicals despite their often skeptical view of his Mormon faith.

    Romney's new ad, which began airing in Iowa, describes him and Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor and Southern Baptist preacher, as "two good family men."

    "Both pro-life, both support a constitutional amendment protecting traditional marriage," an announcer says.

    "The difference? Mitt Romney stood up and vetoed in-state tuition for illegal aliens, opposed driver's licenses for illegals. Mike Huckabee? Supported in-state tuition benefits for illegal immigrants. Huckabee even supported taxpayer-funded scholarships for illegal aliens."

    Responding to a similar Romney attack last week in a Florida debate, Huckabee defended his Arkansas policies on college aid for students whose parents were illegal immigrants. "In all due respect, we're a better country than to punish children for what their parents did," Huckabee said.

    Huckabee has also tried to bolster his conservative credentials on immigration with a new ad of his own, along with a new plan to toughen border enforcement. "Our government has failed us," Huckabee says in the ad. "Build a border fence. Secure the border, and do it now."

    Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom called the ad a fair comparison of the candidates' records:

    "I think what happens whenever a candidate moves up in the polls is that they attract more attention to their record, and what people will find with Mike Huckabee is someone who is soft on illegals and hard on the American taxpayer."

    Huckabee presided over both tax cuts and increases as governor. An offshoot of the Club for Growth, an anti-tax group, has been running television ads criticizing him for raising taxes.

    Even with attacks on Huckabee mounting, two polls released Monday found that he had rocketed into the top tier of Republican candidates -- not only in Iowa, which holds the nation's first nominating contest on Jan. 3, but nationwide.

    A CNN survey found former New York Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani supported by 24% of Republican voters nationally, followed by Huckabee at 22% -- a statistical tie. A CBS News/New York Times poll found Giuliani favored by 22% and Huckabee 21% -- also a virtual tie. Both surveys found Romney in third place with 16%.

    More ominously for Romney, who has spent millions on television advertising in Iowa, New Hampshire and other early-voting states, the CBS/New York Times poll found Huckabee strongly favored by white evangelicals. Election analysts viewed Romney's decision to risk a backlash from negative advertising as a sign of his heightened concern.

    "When you go to the attack ad, that shows you're getting nervous," said Dennis Goldford, a political science professor at Drake University in Iowa.

    Huckabee's ability to counterattack is limited by his campaign treasury. The most recent public finance statements show that Romney had raised nearly $63 million by the end of September, including $17.3 million from his own personal fortune. Huckabee had raised $2.3 million at the time, although aides say his fundraising pace has improved in recent weeks.

    Bob Wickers, Huckabee's chief media consultant, called Romney's move a mistake, saying it would turn off Iowa voters.

    "They want to hear the presidential candidates talk about what they're going to do and why they're qualified to be president of the United States, not why other people should be disqualified," Wickers said. "Mitt Romney hasn't been able to do that. He hasn't been able to connect."

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    Romney to Run Ad Against Huckabee
    By GLEN JOHNSON and LIZ SIDOTI
    Associated Press
    December 11, 2007

    BOSTON (AP) -- His shot at the Republican presidential nomination in jeopardy, Mitt Romney will begin running a TV ad against Iowa front-runner Mike Huckabee on illegal immigration starting Tuesday while weighing how much negative campaigning he can add to the methodical plan he's followed all year.

    The ad says the former governors have a lot in common -- but not on illegal immigration, an important issue in Iowa, which will lead off nomination voting with its caucuses on Jan. 3.

    ''Mitt Romney stood up, and vetoed in-state tuition for illegal aliens, opposed driver's licenses for illegals,'' the ad says. ''Mike Huckabee? Supported in-state tuition benefits for illegal immigrants. Huckabee even supported taxpayer-funded college scholarships for illegal aliens.''

    ''On immigration, the choice matters,'' the ad ends.

    With Huckabee surging in Iowa -- and showing strength nationally as well -- Romney offers positive as well as negative words on his rival.

    ''Two former governors. Two good family men. Both pro-life. Both support a constitutional amendment protecting traditional marriage,'' the ad says -- then it focuses on what it says are stark differences on illegal immigration.

    Romney's campaign characterized the ''contrast ad'' -- the first in which he names a rival -- as a reaction to Huckabee's own new TV commercial in which he touts his immigration proposal.

    The elevated rhetoric -- including the Romney campaign's mass e-mailing Monday of an anti-Huckabee Web column -- reflects a growing sense of urgency at Romney headquarters, where the game plan all year has been predicated on bowling over rivals with victories in lead-voting Iowa and New Hampshire.

    With Huckabee taking the lead in polls in Iowa and Sen. John McCain of Arizona coming on in New Hampshire, which votes Jan. 8, campaign officials have been debating whether to hit harder or simply take shots only as they present themselves.

    Huckabee also has moved up in national surveys that had long shown Rudy Giuliani leading. A CNN-Opinion Research Corp. survey has Giuliani and Huckabee essentially tied for the top spot, 24 percent for Giuliani, 22 percent for Huckabee. Just last month in this survey, Giuliani had 28 percent and Huckabee 10 percent.

    Romney officials are divided over how serious the threat is, noting that Huckabee is just beginning to face the same media scrutiny Romney has already encountered but also operating under the assumption that ''Huckabee is for real.''

    In Iowa, Romney has lost his monthslong lead to Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor and one-time Baptist preacher who is a favorite among religious conservatives who could be pivotal in the state's GOP caucuses.

    On Monday, Huckabee started running a TV ad in Iowa promoting his plan to fight illegal immigration.

    ''It ought to be at least as difficult to get across an international border as it is to get on an airplane in our own home town,'' Huckabee says in the ad. ''We need to make it clear that we will say no to amnesty and no to sanctuary cities,'' he says. ''Our government has failed us. Build a border fence. Secure the border and do it now.''

    For weeks, Romney's campaign has been wrestling over whether to run hard-hitting ads on what aides consider the former Arkansas governor's most vulnerable spots -- taxes, immigration, ethics and prisoner parole -- or go softer and gamble that Huckabee is an object of curiosity whose popularity will fade with scrutiny and wilt under the challenge of Romney's strong ground organization.

    As Huckabee has risen, Romney has assailed him, particularly on immigration, but his criticism hasn't seemed to slow Huckabee's rise. Iowa Republicans also have received literature in their mailboxes characterizing Huckabee and three other Republican candidates as soft on illegal immigration. The mail piece specifically describes Huckabee as committed to ''eligibility for state-supported college scholarships.'' Officials say more such direct mail pieces are planned along with the immigration TV ad.

    In the e-mail sent Monday, under the banner, ''Those who know him the best,'' the campaign quotes Arkansas Republican Jackson T. ''Steve'' Stephens Jr. lamenting that he did not mount a planned gubernatorial challenge to Huckabee in 1991.

    ''If I had it to do over again, I would probably challenge Huckabee,'' Stephens said in the column on TownHall.com, complaining about Huckabee's fiscal record.

    On the other side of the ledger, Romney is well aware of the Democratic race in Iowa in 2004, when Howard Dean and Dick Gephardt watched their strong standing in the state evaporate after running negative ads. They never recovered. John Kerry and John Edwards benefited.

    As he deals with Iowa, Romney also is carefully watching his standing in New Hampshire, where public polls show him leading by a wide margin as McCain and Giuliani duke it out for second place.

    But internal Romney surveys show McCain in a solid second-place position and inching up in the state, where he won in 2000 over George W. Bush, while Giuliani has slipped.

    Unlike Romney, McCain has the luxury of a strategy that lets him camp out in New Hampshire in the homestretch.

    He spent six days last week traversing the state after he secured the coveted endorsement of the New Hampshire Union Leader. Curt Schilling, the Red Sox pitcher beloved in the Northeast, joined him on the trail for a day, and filmed a TV ad for McCain. The candidate returns to the state Sunday.

    Other challenges creating angst within Romney headquarters:

    --He cast himself as the most hard-line conservative candidate on cultural issues from his campaign's outset, and, in doing so, watched as religion -- and his Mormon faith -- became a focal point of the race as he squared off against Huckabee.

    In a strategy shift, Romney gave a religion speech last week; it got mixed reviews.

    --Romney has sought to be seen as a firm opponent of illegal immigration, a salient issue in Iowa in particular, and made it a centerpiece of his campaign in this state.

    But his pitch was undercut last week when he learned for a second time that his landscaping company had allowed undocumented workers to labor at his suburban Boston home. Romney promptly fired the company after giving its owner a second chance last year.

    --Romney hasn't been able to shake the notion that he's inauthentic, given his record of reversing course on abortion rights -- he now opposes them -- and shifting to the right on various other issues as he embarked on his candidacy.

    http://www.gopusa.com/news/2007/decembe ... _ad1.shtml

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