(VERNON HILLS, Ill.) —
Mitt Romney's increasingly confident campaign is intensifying calls — publicly
and privately — for his Republican opponents to concede defeat in the
presidential nomination battle, even before Illinois voters have their say
Tuesday in the campaign's next big contest.
Romney extended his
delegate lead Sunday in Puerto Rico, where he trounced rival Rick Santorum and
scored all 20 of the Caribbean island's delegates. Romney has collected more
delegates than his opponents combined and is poised to win the delegate battle
in Illinois, even if he loses the popular vote, thanks to missteps by
Santorum's shoestring operation.
Romney's wife, Ann,
declared Sunday night in suburban Illinois that the time has come for her
husband's rivals to quit the race.
"We need to send a
message that it's time to coalesce," she said, Mitt at her side.
"It's time to get behind one candidate and get the job done so we can move
on to the next challenge, bringing us one step closer to defeating Barack
Obama."
Brushing aside
skepticism from the party's right flank, Romney aides have been emphasizing
their overwhelming mathematical advantage in the race to 1,144 delegates — the
number needed to clinch the GOP presidential nomination and face President
Barack Obama in the fall.
Santorum has all but
conceded he cannot earn enough delegates to win, but claimed he was in contest
for the long haul because Romney is a weak front-runner.
"This is a primary
process where somebody had a huge advantage, huge money advantage, huge
advantage of establishment support and he hasn't been able to close the deal
and even come close to closing the deal," Santorum said Sunday. "That
tells you that there's a real flaw there."
Yet, Santorum
sidestepped when asked if he would fight Romney on the convention floor if he
failed before August to stop the former Massachusetts governor from getting the
required number of delegates.
Romney aides privately
likened the situation to the Black Knight in "Monty Python and the Holy
Grail" who loses his arms and legs in battle with King Arthur but insists
he has only a flesh wound. The Romney camp suggested that Tuesday's performance
would extend Romney's delegate advantage, even if he loses the popular vote.
Santorum cannot win at
least 10 of the state's 54 delegates because his campaign failed to file the
paperwork.
One Romney aide recently
said it would take "an act of God" for Santorum to earn enough
delegates to prevail.
"Mitt's going to do
well," said Romney's Illinois chairman Dan Rutherford, the state
treasurer. "I think he will do better than the other three people. ... But
my focus is on the delegates because that's really what the game is all
about."
Polls suggest the Illinois
race is close. And even at a Romney campaign stop Sunday, voters were divided.
"I'm leaning toward
Santorum, but I wanted to hear him in person," said Nichole Warren, a
32-year-old stay-at-home mom from nearby South Beloit. "I hear (Romney)
talk and I hear a lot of Obama in him, and that scares me."
But Sid Haffenden, a
61-year-old retired toll-way worker, said, "Santorum has too much
baggage." He added, "I want a businessman."
Santorum is not giving
up. He will spend Monday and Tuesday courting Illinois voters. Santorum plans
to host four rallies Monday.
While offering a
confident front, Romney cut short campaign plans in Puerto Rico over the
weekend to spend more time in the state. He arrived Saturday night and plans to
stay in the state through Tuesday night.
At this rate, Romney is
on pace to capture the nomination in June unless Santorum or former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich is able to win decisively in the coming contests.
Both have said they
would stay in the race and perhaps force the nomination to a fight at the GOP's
convention in Tampa if Romney doesn't amass enough delegates to arrive with a
mandate. That would turn the convention into an intra-party brawl for the first
time since 1976.
Including Puerto Rico's
results, Romney has now collected 521 delegates, compared to Santorum's 253,
Gingrich's 136 and Paul's 50, according to The Associated Press count.
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