Super Tuesday: Mitt Romney woos blue-collar voters in Ohio
Mitt Romney is locked in a tight GOP primary battle with Rick Santorum for Ohio, perhaps the biggest prize on Super Tuesday. On Monday he campaigned in blue-collar Youngstown.
Super Tuesday lead: Mitt Romney and his wife Ann greet patrons at the Montgomery Inn in Cincinnati, Ohio, Saturday. Mitt Romney stepped out to a solid lead over his Republican presidential rivals Saturday night in Washington state caucuses, a quiet prelude to 10 Super Tuesday contests next week in all regions of the country.
Gerald Herbert/AP
Youngstown, Ohio
The day before Super Tuesday, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney brought his message of job-creation and increased prosperity to a part of the state that doesn鈥檛 see many Republicans.
After courting a wealthier constituency in the Republican stronghold of Cincinnati over the weekend, Mr. Romney campaigned Monday in Youngstown, an embattled blue-collar city in dire economic straits that is trying to crawl back after decades of population loss and other forms of decline associated with the fading steel industry.
Among the 10 states holding presidential primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday, Ohio, with 66 delegates at stake and expected to be a swing state in the general election in the fall, is perhaps the most sought-after prize. On the eve of the primary Mr. Romney was locked in a tight battle with former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who has shown strength among blue-collar voters.
At a town hall meeting of factory workers and others held at manufacturing plant in Youngstown, Romney declared Monday that if he wins Ohio, he鈥檒l get his party鈥檚 nomination.
鈥淢y message to Mahoning Valley is pretty straightforward: I want to bring good jobs back here. I want to see rising incomes again,鈥 he said, referring to the surrounding region.
After securing a victory in his home state of Michigan last week, Romney is casting his eyes on Ohio, a state that 颅鈥撀爄n several ways 鈥撀爉irrors the manufacturing profile of its neighbor. Not only is the United Auto Workers alive and well here 鈥撀燝.M.鈥檚 Lordstown Assembly Plant is the largest employer in the region and is located down the road from where Romney was speaking 鈥 but the area is also home to many suppliers that directly service the Detroit industry.
鈥淭he auto industry is just as important in Ohio as it is in Michigan,鈥 says Paul Allen Beck, a political scientist at Ohio State University in Columbus. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the second leading state in terms of automotive employment in the country, so [manufacturing] is become an important issue here.鈥
Polls show Romney and Mr. Santorum in a tight race. A Quinnipiac University poll released Monday shows Romney and Santorum polling at 34 percent and 31 percent respectively while another poll by Suffolk University in Boston, also released Monday, shows Santorum at 37 percent and Romney at 33 percent.
In the battle for Ohio鈥檚 66 delegates, Romney already edges Santorum because of an organizational error: Santorum will not be in the ballot in three congressional districts and failed to file a full list of delegates in six other districts, making him ineligible for a third of the state鈥檚 delegates.
Both candidates crisscrossed the state Monday, talking with Ohioans in rustbelt communities where unemployment rates in some equal or are above state and national averages. In Youngstown, for example, unemployment hit 8.2 percent in December, slightly higher than the state rate but just below the national rate of 8.5 percent.
Many at the Romney town hall ceded that the economy trumped all other concerns.
鈥淛ob creation. Nothing more important than the jobs,鈥 says Robert Saffold, a former steel worker and now an advocate for minority-owned small businesses in his state. Mr. Saffold drove from Cleveland to hear Romney speak; he says he is still undecided but will 鈥減robably鈥 give Romney his vote because the former governor 鈥渉as the best chance to make [President] Obama talk more about jobs鈥 in the national debate.
Despite the assembly of Republicans 鈥 one woman, holding up Romney鈥檚 book, told its author she 鈥渕akes no apology for being a Republican鈥 in the area 鈥 Youngstown remains stoutly Democratic, having given two-thirds of the vote to Obama and Sen. John Kerry in the last two presidential elections. The national ties to the party are tight 鈥 last year, Obama appointed Jay Williams, Youngstown鈥檚 last mayor, to head the Office of Recovery for Auto Communities and Workers.
Romney, however, appears to be leaving no stone unturned in his battle with Santorum, and there were signs Monday that some voters no longer feel they owe an allegiance to either party, with some echoing Romney鈥檚 remark that Obama 鈥渉asn鈥檛, in three years, proposed any serious solutions鈥 to fix the troubled economy.
Michele Bolchalk, a registered nurse from nearby Warren, says she is a life-long Democrat who plans to vote Republican for the first time in her life this year. She says her family is straining to make ends meet and is dismayed at the rising national debt she says illustrates reckless spending by the administration.
Romney鈥檚 appearance at Taylor Winfield Technologies, a plant that manufactures automated assembly systems, convinced Mike Warner, a worker at the plant for 33 years, that the former governor deserves a try to reignite the economy.
鈥淚n the last three years, things have slowly gone downhill, and I think it鈥檚 time for a change to see if [Romney] can get things back on its feet,鈥 Mr. Warner says.
Denise Leone of Youngstown, a retired plant worker who describes herself as a 鈥渂lue collar 海角大神,鈥 says that her vote will go to Romney solely on the fact that he appears more winnable than the other Republican contenders for president.
鈥淚 like them all, but we need someone in there who will beat Obama, and Romney has the best chance,鈥 Ms. Leone says.