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Rick Santorum has surged back in opinion polls - leading Barack Obama's campaign team to refocus their energies on battling the former Senator instead of Mitt Romney. Al Behrman/AP
US 2012

Rick Santorum's surge in polls forces Obama campaign to shift target

With Rick Santorum surging back in Republican polls, Barack Obama is readying an attack on an opponent it hadn’t expected.

HAVING LONG EXPECTED to be facing Mitt Romney this autumn, Barack Obama’s campaign team has shifted gears in recent days to consider the possibility his GOP opponent will instead be Rick Santorum.

Campaign officials confirm Obama’s Chicago-based organisation has begun combing through the former Pennsylvania Senator’s background looking for possible lines of attack.

It also emailed Obama’s Pennsylvania supporters this past week asking for material that could be used against Santorum in upcoming speeches and ads.

The move reflects Santorum’s sudden surge in nationwide opinion polls and spate of recent primary-season victories over Romney.

“Circumstances have changed,” explained Obama’s deputy campaign manager, Stephanie Cutter.

Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, still leads the delegate race with 123, compared with 72 pledged to Santorum and 32 to former House speaker Newt Gingrich, according to the most recent AP tally.

Revival

But after capturing Republican caucuses in Minnesota and Colorado and a non-binding primary in Missouri on February 7, Santorum has enjoyed a burst of attention — and fundraising.

Moreover, in high-stakes Michigan, where primary voters cast ballots on Tuesday week, several polls in the past week give Santorum a lead – even though it’s Romney’s native state. The margin has ranged from four points in a Detroit News poll to nine in a Mitchell/Rosetta Stone survey.

“I mean, who’d have guessed?” Obama’s Pennsylvania campaign director, Bill Hyers, asked in an email to supporters. He said it’s up to Pennsylvania to make sure “the rest of the country sees Rick Santorum’s true colours.”

“Here’s someone … whose extreme-right social views are as out of touch as they are memorable,” Hyers wrote.

Until now, Obama’s strategists have mostly been focused on Romney as the candidate with the most organisation and staying power. That was true even when Gingrich was surging. The Chicago team’s emails and postings took sharp jabs at Romney’s wealth and venture capital background, and his opposition to Wall Street regulation and upper-income tax hikes.

Press Secretary Jay Carney recently shot back at Romney’s criticism of the mandate for church-run organizations to cover birth control. “The former governor of Massachusetts is an odd messenger on this,” Carney said, noting the state enforced a similar rule under Romney.

Obama himself has sometimes seemed to target Romney, though without using his name — as when he derides those who, like Romney, opposed his auto bailout.

However, with all the attention on Santorum now, Obama’s campaign, at least, is reconsidering.

Cutter said it’s simply a reflection of “the way the Republican race is unfolding.”

- Mark S. Smith

Read: Surge in support for Santorum puts him up front with Romney

More: Romney back on track after narrow win in Maine caucuses

Author
Associated Foreign Press
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