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Romney wins big in Nevada; Gingrich vows to fight on

Mitt Romney cruised to a comfortable win over his GOP rivals in the Nevada caucuses Saturday. Following strong recent debate performances and his big win in Florida, that gives him momentum going into the next presidential nominating contests.

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Rick Wilking/Reuters
Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney greets supporters at his Nevada caucus night rally in Las Vegas, Nevada, Saturday February 4, 2012. Romney won the Nevada contest by a wide margin.

In Nevada Saturday night, Mitt Romney won two big contests.

One was the Republican caucuses, where he cruised to a comfortable double-digit lead over Newt Gingrich. The other was the expectations game 鈥 doing as well as the polls had predicted, and in some ways better.

Romney swept most categories of voter, showing particular strength among evangelical 海角大神s, according to entrance polls taken as caucus-goers arrived for the speechifying and voting.

Entrance polls showed Romney won a wide cross-section of Nevada voters, capturing moderates, conservatives, tea party supporters. Perhaps most important, he won among those who said they were backing the man they thought had the best chance of beating Barack Obama 鈥 by a whopping 74-18 percent over Gingrich, reported CNN.

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For much of the evening, the more interesting race in fact was between Gingrich and Ron Paul for second place.

To be sure, Romney went into Nevada with a lot going for him: A state organization that鈥檚 been in place since he won the 2008 caucuses. Ninety percent support among the large Mormon population there, which makes up about a quarter of registered Republicans. And a campaign war chest (and an independent super Pac) that allowed him to run many more ads than his rivals, many of them negative.

As the evening wore on, several news sources reported that Sheldon Adelson, the billionaire chairman and CEO of the Las Vegas Sands hotel and casino, whose extended family has given $11 million to Gingrich鈥檚 super PAC, had quietly given the Romney camp assurances that he鈥檇 be backing the former Massachusetts governor if he wins the nomination.

In his victory speech Saturday night, Romney (who could be seen surrounded by Secret Service agents, a new feature as he wades into crowds) dwelt not on his GOP rivals but on Obama. In a state with the nation鈥檚 highest unemployment and home foreclosure rates, Romney hammered what he called 鈥渢he failed leadership of one man鈥 responsible for a US economy Republicans say should have been turned around long ago.

In a line sure to be repeated throughout his campaign, Romney said, 鈥淭his president began his presidency by apologizing for America. He should now be apologizing to America.鈥

For now, at least, Romney must have a bifurcated campaign strategy aimed at deflecting two lines of attack.

Gingrich and Rick Santorum are spending less time on Romney鈥檚 wealth and how he made it, instead emphasizing Romney鈥檚 time as the governor of Massachusetts. His record there, they say, was as a 鈥渕oderate鈥 (if not a 鈥渓iberal鈥) on such issues as abortion and government-mandated healthcare.

As Romney gains strength and delegates in the primary-caucus, the Obama team is taking a different tack: Asserting that the wealthiest presidential candidate in US history earned his money largely by shutting down business and putting people out of work, that he鈥檚 out of touch with most Americans trying to make it through tough economic times. Comments such as 鈥淚 like being able to fire people鈥 and 鈥淚鈥檓 not concerned about the very poor鈥 鈥 even though they were taken out of context 鈥 are likely to be repeated over and over.

In his Saturday evening press conference, Gingrich went after the front-runner, labeling Romney a 鈥淢assachusetts moderate鈥 who was 鈥減ro-abortion, pro-gun control, and pro-tax increase.鈥

鈥淚 will debate him one-on-one, any time, any place,鈥 Gingrich said. Unfortunately for the former House Speaker, there are no televised debates for the next several weeks.

But, he said, 鈥淚 expect this debate will continue for a long time. We will go on to Tampa [for the GOP convention]. I鈥檓 not going to withdraw; in fact I鈥檓 pretty happy with where we are.鈥

Romney now has won three out of five contests and two in a row. There are many more nominating contests, many more convention delegates to win.

But for now, at least, Romney has major momentum, which he hopes will power him on to this coming week鈥檚 contests in Minnesota, Colorado, and Missouri, then Maine, Arizona, Michigan, and Washington before 鈥淪uper Tuesday鈥 on March 6 when 10 states hold primaries and caucuses.

Gingrich聽said his goal was to "find a series of victories which by the end of the Texas primary will leave us at parity" with Romney by early April.

聽In Nevada Saturday night, returns from 14 of 17 counties showed Romney with 42 percent support, Gingrich with 25 percent, Paul with 20 percent, and Santorum with 13 percent, according to the Associated Press.

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