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Analysis:
GOP
contenders
turn
fire on
each
other
By
CHARLES
BABINGTON
Associated
Press
WASHINGTON
- The
Republican
presidential
candidates
tore
into
each
other as
never
before
in their
latest
debate,
mindful
that
voting
starts
within
11 weeks
and many
GOP
voters
remain
up for
grabs.
Mitt
Romney
emerged
from the
two-hour
forum
Tuesday
night
still
the
person
to beat,
but he
was
considerably
scratched
up on
the
issues
of
illegal
immigration,
health
care and
jobs.
The
feisty
faceoff
in Las
Vegas
marked
the
first
time the
contenders
treated
Herman
Cain as
a
serious
threat,
and they
aggressively
ripped
his
9-9-9
tax
plan,
perhaps
inflicting
grave
wounds.
And
Texas
Gov.
Rick
Perry
snapped
out of
his
sleepy
debate
style,
criticizing
Romney
so
vigorously
that the
two men
seemed
close to
blows at
times.
Perry
was
forceful
from the
start,
battling
to end
his
campaign's
recent
slide
and to
re-establish
himself
as the
most
viable
alternative
to the
former
Massachusetts
governor.
Cable TV
viewers
who
watched
the
debate's
first 60
minutes
and last
10
minutes
saw
seven
contenders
make the
greatest
effort
yet to
distinguish
themselves
from one
another
and
expose
each
other's
weaknesses.
That
left
comparatively
little
time to
bash
President
Barack
Obama,
but
that's
something
they all
agree on
anyway.
Some
exchanges
were
personal,
almost
petty.
Romney
repeatedly
chided
Perry
and
former
Pennsylvania
Sen.
Rick
Santorum
for
talking
over
him.
Perry
accused
Romney
of
making
false
claims,
and
reminded
voters
that
Romney
had
employed
illegal
immigrants
to do
lawn
work a
few
years
ago.
Romney
said he
instructed
the
landscape
company
to get
rid of
illegal
workers.
Perry
said it
was "the
height
of
hypocrisy"
for
Romney
to
criticize
the
Texan's
immigration
record.
Romney
put his
hand on
the
scowling
Perry's
shoulder
and
demanded,
"Are you
just
going to
keep
talking?"
Romney
said
Perry
had
suffered
some
poor
debates,
"so
you're
going to
get
testy."
It was
one of
several
moments
that
bordered
on
condescension.
When
Romney
said 40
percent
of new
jobs in
Texas
lately
have
gone to
illegal
immigrants,
Perry
said
heatedly,
"That is
an
absolute
falsehood
on its
face,
Mitt."
Rebukes
of
Cain's
9-9-9
plan
dominated
the
debate's
first 15
minutes.
Cain, a
former
pizza
company
executive,
climbed
to the
top of
recent
GOP
polls by
touting
his
proposal
to scrap
current
income
and
payroll
taxes
and
replace
them
with a 9
percent
levy on
personal
and
corporate
income
and a 9
percent
national
sales
tax.
Virtually
every
rival
took a
shot at
it.
"That's
a tax
plan,
not a
jobs
plan,"
said
Minnesota
Rep.
Michele
Bachmann.
She said
a
liberal
president
and
Congress
might
push the
sales
tax to
90
percent,
and
consumers
would
blame
vendors.
Rep. Ron
Paul of
Texas
called
the plan
dangerous
and
regressive.
It's
good
that
nearly
half of
Americans
currently
pay no
federal
income
tax,
Paul
said,
adding
that he
would
replace
that tax
"with
nothing."
Several
candidates
cited a
new
report
by the
Tax
Policy
Center,
a
Washington
think
tank,
that
said
Cain's
plan
would
raise
taxes on
84
percent
of U.S.
households.
Cain, on
the
defensive
as never
before,
said
critics
were
misinterpreting
his plan
and
mixing
apples
and
oranges.
Romney
turned
the
phrase
against
him,
saying
Americans
would be
taxed on
apples
AND
oranges
because
they
would
pay
state
and
federal
sales
taxes in
most
states.
With
Cain's
9-9-9
plan
treated
like
road
kill,
the
candidates
turned
mainly
to
criticizing
Romney
and
watching
him and
Perry
spar in
ways
that
hinted
at real
animosity.
Santorum,
who lost
his bid
for a
third
Senate
term six
years
ago,
often
played
the
aggressor.
Noting
that
Romney's
Massachusetts
health
care
program
had
required
residents
to
obtain
medical
insurance,
Santorum
said,
"Your
plan was
the
basis
for
Obamacare,"
the GOP
epithet
for the
Democrats'
2010
health
care
overhaul.
Romney,
sometimes
struggling
to be
heard,
repeated
his
claim
that the
state
plan was
meant
for
Massachusetts
alone.
Perry
joined
Santorum
in
saying
Romney
at times
had
signaled
that
other
states
should
adopt
the
Massachusetts
model.
"The
people
of
Massachusetts
like it
by about
a 3-to-1
margin,"
Romney
said. He
added,
however,
"I
didn't
get the
job done
in
Massachusetts,
and
getting
the
health
care
costs
down in
this
country
is
something
I think
we got
to do at
the
national
level."
Former
House
Speaker
Newt
Gingrich
said it
wasn't
fair to
equate "Romneycare"
with "Obamacare."
However,
he said,
"There's
a lot of
big
government
behind "Romneycare
... more
than
your
campaign
is
admitting."
When
talk
turned
to
foreign
policy,
Cain was
pressed
to
explain
a CNN
interview
in which
he said
he might
consider
releasing
all the
terror
suspects
at the
U.S.
naval
prison
at
Guantanamo
Bay,
Cuba, if
al-Qaida
demanded
it as
the
price of
handing
over a
captured
American.
"No, I
said
that I
believe
in the
philosophy
of we
don't
negotiate
with
terrorists,"
Cain
said. "I
think -
I've
been
saying -
I would
never
agree to
letting
hostages
in
Guantanamo
Bay go.
No, that
wasn't
the
intent
at all."
Near the
debate's
close,
Santorum
took a
swing at
Perry
and
Romney.
"I
didn't
run as a
Democrat
in Texas
when it
was
popular,"
he said,
alluding
to
Perry's
pre-Republican
past. "I
didn't
run as a
liberal
in
1994,"
he said,
referring
to
Romney's
unsuccessful
bid to
oust
then-Sen.
Ted
Kennedy.
In that
campaign,
Romney
said he
would be
a more
forceful
proponent
of gay
rights
than
would
Kennedy.
Bachmann
got the
final
word,
saying:
"The
cake is
baked.
Barack
Obama
will be
a
one-term
president."
The GOP
crowd
loved
it, of
course.
Obama
certainly
faces
big
re-election
hurdles.
But
Tuesday
night's
forum
pointed
to more
GOP
bloodletting
ahead as
the
rivals
lunge
for an
up-for-grabs
nomination.
Romney
seems
certain
to
remain
the
chief
target,
at least
for a
while.
Perry
served
notice
he's
back in
the
game.
And
Cain's
rough
treatment
suggested
it's
possible
that
Bachmann,
Santorum,
Gingrich
or Paul
will
have
chances
to rise
in the
polls -
and then
face the
consequences.
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