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    Iowa up for grabs 2 months before GOP caucuses

    WILTON, Iowa (AP) — Iowa's presidential caucuses are any Republican candidate's to win.

    Just two months before the GOP nomination voting begins, Iowa Republicans aren't surging toward former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney even though he's essentially been running for president since losing in the state in 2008.

    This time, none of his opponents has emerged as the consensus candidate of conservatives to become his main rival, as former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee did four years ago.

    As Tamara Scott, an undecided social conservative leader who backed Huckabee in that race, says: "It's anybody's game right now."

    That could change soon.

    Sensing an opening, Romney is stepping up his Iowa campaign and talking about winning the state after months of taking a more low-key approach. He probably will return to Iowa in November and hold a conference call with thousands of Iowa GOP caucus-goers.

    "I'd love to win Iowa, any of us would. I will be here again and again, campaigning here," Romney said recently in Sioux City.

    Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who is casting himself as the more conservative option, is starting to confront Romney. With $15 million in the bank, Perry started running a TV ad last week that, without mentioning Romney challenges Romney's efforts to portray himself as the strongest candidate on the economy.

    "I'll create at least 2 1/2 million new jobs, and I know something about that," Perry says in the ad that highlights Texas job creation.

    Businessman Herman Cain, a political outsider enjoying a burst of momentum, is starting to focus more on Iowa, adding campaign staff and visiting the state recently for the first time in 10 weeks. But he trails both Romney and Perry in fundraising by the millions.

    For now at least, the race in Iowa is wide open.

    Saturday evening's results of a Des Moines Register poll showed Cain at the head of the pack, with the support of 23 percent of respondents. Romney came in just behind him at 22 percent.

    Texas Rep. Ron Paul, a libertarian-leaning Republican, placed third at 12 percent, followed by Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann at 8 percent. Perry and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich polled 7 percent each, and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum got 5 percent.

    Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, a moderate on some issues that Iowa Republicans hold dear, was supported by only 1 percent of those participating in the poll.

    The up-for-grabs nature of the Iowa race matters nationally because the outcome on Jan. 3 will shape what happens in the states that vote next — New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida — and beyond.

    As it stands now, Iowa reflects the Republican Party's lack of clarity when it comes to the crowded GOP field and its increasingly urgent search for a candidate who can defeat Democratic President Barack Obama next fall.

    "This is the first time I've waited this long to decide," said Linda Allison, an Iowan who recently attended a Perry event. "I am still waiting to be convinced."

    Many factors are adding to the volatility.

    Large numbers of Iowa Republicans are undecided and just starting to tune into the race in earnest. Fewer than 20 of Iowa's 76 Republican legislators have publicly declared their support for a candidate, and no single candidate has a clear edge among those who have picked sides. At this point four years ago, nearly all lawmakers had endorsed someone.

    Consider state Rep. Jeff Kaufmann, for whom Perry raised money at a recent event in eastern Iowa.

    "Perry may not be the best debater, but he can really work an audience like this," said Kaufmann, who endorsed former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson four months before the 2008 GOP caucuses. "And while Romney is well prepared, and campaigns well, I'd like to see him out in this area more."

    Critical groups of activists also are waiting to rally behind a candidate, too.

    Iowa's evangelical pastors, influential among a part of the GOP base, are divided. So are home-school advocates. Both groups pushed Huckabee to victory four years ago.

    "None of these home-school families are calling me and asking me about the candidates," said Susan Geddes, a Des Moines-area Republican and top organizer for Huckabee in 2008. "Nobody's excited about them."

    All this explains why many candidates are returning to Iowa in the week ahead for a series of events. Most of the 2012 candidate, but not Romney, courted Christian conservatives at a forum on values last weekend.

    The all-out effort to court social conservative is partly why Romney is recalibrating his approach toward Iowa, where he's only made three visits this year.

    He has been reached out quietly to past supporters and working to cast himself as the candidate with the strongest economic credentials. Unlike in 2008, he's not overtly competing for the love of social conservatives. These voters, a potent bloc in the caucuses, have had doubts about his Mormon faith and his reversals on several social issues.

    So while he's stepping up his Iowa activity, he's also picking his spots.

    He's the only major candidate who hasn't committed to appearing in Iowa at Tuesday's forum on manufacturing hosted by Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad in Pella or the state GOP dinner Friday in Des Moines.

    Perry plans to attend both.

    He has little choice given that he's lagging in state polls, facing challenges from the right and fighting with rivals for the backing of social conservatives. The former Texas agriculture commissioner and Air Force officer is trying to broad his appeal, reaching out to veterans and farmers as he looks to cobble together a winning coalition and stop Romney.

    Bachmann, whose support has cooled since her victory in the state GOP's August test vote, is popular with Christian conservatives and tea party activists. She has heavily sought the support of evangelical pastors and recently named a veteran GOP campaign operative to stabilize the campaign for the stretch run.

    Santorum is working hard in Iowa and was expected to have stopped in all 99 counties by week's end, even though he has little money and manpower. He shows no sign of going away and recently began airing his first radio ads in Iowa.

    Cain is a bit of a wild card.

    He's popular for his business background and plain-spoken speaking style. But he's far behind in building an Iowa campaign and he's under attack by conservatives for referring recently to abortion as a choice. Still, tea party activists adore him and his campaign has recently begun conducting automated phone calls.

    500 comments

    • Christy  •  Lakewood, United States  •  3 hours ago
      10/29/2011 Iowa straw poll. Romney nearly took the win with 0% of the votes. Herman cain, a much better choice came in second with a strong 14.7%, his chances are looking better. Ron Paul came in first with 82% of the votes. Don't expect the corrupted news to even report it.
    • Rebecca 7 hours ago
      Where are the media articles on Rons win? I hope he goes strait for the hand that feeds this media machine when he becomes president.
    • tayronachan 10 hours ago
      Ron Paul has been consistantly placing well in polls and gets almost no mention? He has been elected several times as a Texas Rep. Oh, yea, It must be that crazy stuff he says about getting back to the Constitution. How dumb is that. I want more Government!! It seems to be working out so well, NOT! Ron Paul 2012.
    • dusty  •  Killeen, United States  •  11 hours ago
      Why do I keep reading about Ron Paul ahead in both Iowa Straw polls but the news doesn't report that I will tell you why he hasn't been bought out!
    • jarel 9 hours ago
      Ron Paul has my support, I'll vote for him, and will tell everyone I know about him.
    • lele  •  Monroe, United States  •  9 hours ago
      Beware the lies of the bought out bias media and ignorant people, and vote for a peace president RON PAUL
    • Horse Woman 2  •  Atlanta, United States  •  10 hours ago
      Didn't Ron Paul just win another straw poll in Iowa today? (NFRA)....by a substantial margin (82% Paul, 14% Cain).
    • no-spoof 10 hours ago
      Ron Paul 'announced' that all he will take for salary as President is $39,000.00 a year, which is what the median income is in this country. What other so called 'front runner' would do that? Ron Paul isn't taking the pension when he retires from his present position; which of these other butt head would say that? Ron Paul drives his own car to work...what other member does that? Ron Paul does NOT go on junkets...who else does not. CAIN was working within THE FEDERAL RESERVE who created this economic collapse with Monopoly money backed by nothing but air...and people want to vote for him??? Business man without cooth? Nahhh...I'll take the only honest person in this race...Ron Paul!! 2012
    • G. P. 3 hours ago
      Except for Ron Paul, it's McDonald's vs. Wendy's vs. Burger King vs. Jack in the Box. They may taste a bit different, but in the end they're all establishment cronies.
    • Eric 7 hours ago
      The powers that be do not want Ron Paul because they know he will go strictly by the constitution and that is what they want to destroy.
    • Emanon  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  13 hours ago
      Funny, RON PAUL won the Iowa Straw poll today and there is NO mention of it in the news.. Why is the media, which is mostly owned by banking interests and military contractor interests soooo worried about Ron Paul.... because their fleecing of the american public would end. RON PAUL WON THE IOWA STRAW POLL TODAY IN A LANDSLIDE!
      RON PAUL 2012!
    • James Palmer 10 hours ago
      Ron Paul 2012 - Mainstream media rarely gives him the time of day. You wonder why? Read, "The Creature From Jekyll Island," (Edward Griffin) and get a feel for the corruption that Ron Paul is calling out. END THE FED
    • dozerconn 7 hours ago
      Ron Paul wins both tallies at GOP straw poll in Iowa
      Posted by
      CNN Political Reporter Shannon Travis

      Des Moines, Iowa (CNN) - Ron Paul has won two separate tallies for the National Federation of Republican Assemblies Presidential Straw Poll.

      Paul won both the Iowa-voters-only count at the Saturday convention in Des Moines as well as a tally of non-Iowans who participated.

      In the Iowa voters result, Paul took 82%. Following him were Herman Cain with 14.7%, Rick Santorum with 1%, Newt Gingrich with 0.9%, Michele Bachmann with 0.5%, Rick Perry with 0.5%, Gary Johnson with 0.2%, with Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman 0%.

      The total number of votes cast in that tally was 430.

      In the tally of non-Iowans who voted, Paul won 26% followed by Cain at 25%, Perry and Santorum tied at 16%, Gingrich at 11%, Bachmann at 6%, Romney at 1%, and Huntsman and Johnson with 0%.

      The total number of votes cast in that count was 101.

      Though Paul won both tallies, the NFRA has not yet officially endorsed a candidate. Delegates to the convention will decide that later Saturday.
    • BILL FOLD 9 hours ago
      How dumb is this,,,when Ron Paul ran his doctors office, if women came in that couldn't afford medical care, in stead of billing Medicare or Medicaid, Ron Paul gave them their care for free. He never mentioned that in the debate when people claimed he would let a man die if he didn't have insurance. Funny someone would pass up the chance to make money off the government. And stranger still that the media ran the story , but never mentioned the part about free care to those less fortunate.
    • Rebecca 8 hours ago
      October 29, 2011
      National Federation of Republican Assemblies Presidential Straw Poll
      1.Ron Paul (82%)
      2.Herman Cain (14%)
    • FERAL 9 hours ago
      Ron Paul!! or continue with the corruption in the goverment!
    • Vegas Yoda  •  Las Vegas, United States  •  22 hours ago
      That was biased and unfair.
      Say Yes to Dr. No! Ron Paul 2012
    • James  •  St. Louis, United States  •  8 hours ago
      Ron Paul wins Ohio Straw poll, Wins the CPAC straw poll, wins Nevada, South Carolina, New Hampshire, almost ties in Iowa for first, wins in California and they canceled the straw poll in Texas because they were afraid Ron Paul would win there too. They said there was "A lack of interest" Yeah right because no one wants to know what the biggest state in the country thinks.
    • mikem  •  Orange, United States  •  23 hours ago
      watch "RON PAUL AD" on the youtube.... WOW.. RON PAUL HAS GREAT ADS... now showing on IOWA TV
    • Loni  •  Dayton, United States  •  8 hours ago
      .....The Question is will The Banking Mafia and the BIG MEDIA THEY OWN Bring in an Army of U.N. "Peace Keepers" as Iowa...and the Rest of the Country...slowly sides with...Ron Paul..and the Constitution Of the United States Of America??
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