Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, seeking to salvage his
bid for his party's nomination, stressed his local roots and business
credentials as he campaigned across Michigan ahead of the state's
Tuesday primary.
Romney, a wealthy businessman and former Massachusetts governor,
sank millions of dollars into the first contests in Iowa and New
Hampshire, but came in a disappointing second in both states, behind
Baptist preacher and former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee and Arizona
Senator John McCain respectively.
Polls showed Romney and McCain in a close race in the Midwestern
state that has been hit hard by an ailing US auto industry, with an
average of several polls in the state showing the candidates less than
1 percentage point apart. Huckabee was polling third.
Romney grew up in Michigan, where his father led a now-defunct auto
manufacturer and served as governor, and he hopes to translate his home
field advantage into a win that would further shake up the unsettled
Republican field.
In campaign stops Monday, he stressed his business credentials as
head of a venture capitalist firm and president of the Salt Lake City
Olympic committee and said he would work to turn around the state's
economy.
He evoked Detroit's former manufacturing prowess, now gutted by
international competition that has left the state with the highest
unemployment rate in the country - 7.4 per cent in November, according
to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.
"I want to bring Michigan back," Romney said. "I'm not willing to
sit back and say, 'Too bad for Michigan. Too bad for the car industry.
Too bad for the people who've lost their jobs; they're gone forever.'"
McCain, a vocal supporter of the Iraq war who long supported an
increase in the number of troops, came back to win last week's contest
in New Hampshire. National polls now show him leading the Republican
field after his campaign had been declared dead by analysts over the
summer.
The Vietnam war veteran and former prisoner of war won the Michigan
primary in 2000 when campaigning against George W Bush, who went on to
defeat him for the Republican nomination.
At a campaign event Monday, he touted his plan to revive the auto
industry through investments in green technology and other advances.
"I will herald a new day for Michigan, and I will do everything I
can to make sure the heartland of America, the state that saved the
world during World War II will again resume its rightful place in our
economy and in our nation and in the world," said McCain, who was to
attend the Detroit auto show later in the day.
Romney was also to visit the event.
Leading Democratic contenders have shunned Michigan altogether
after the state defied national party leaders and moved its primary
forward in the schedule of state-by-state nominating contests. States
across the country have rushed to bump up their primary dates as far as
the parties would allow, in order to have a greater say in the decision
making process.
The Democratic National Committee stripped the state of all its
delegates to its August convention, where the party's candidate will be
officially named ahead of November 4 general elections.
The top Democrats have not campaigned in Michigan and will instead
focus on a debate in Las Vegas Tuesday ahead of the Nevada primary on
Saturday.
Hillary Clinton was the only leading Democrat to even appear on
Michigan's ballot, and long-shot Dennis Kucinich was the only member of
the party to hold campaign events there Monday.
The Republican National Committee stripped Michigan of just half its delegates to its convention in September.