Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum almost joined forces to try and derail Mitt Romney’s procession to the Republican presidential nomination in 2012. What stopped them? The two couldn’t agree who would be top dog on the ticket.
Joshua Green of Bloomberg Businessweek revealed the juicy details of one of the “great untold stories of the 2012 presidential campaign,” one which could have conceivably produced a different nominee on the Republican ticket. With Mitt Romney’s candidacy flailing heading into the Michigan primary, a “unity ticket” between the two insurgent challengers was discussed, but never materialized.
“That’s why this eventually fell apart, because even when Gingrich was losing steam and Santorum was winning, Gingrich still envisioned himself as the top dog on the ticket,” Green told Chris Matthews on Hardball Friday. “[Newt’s] always viewed himself as an executive, as this kind of grand figure, historical figure who lead his party to the majority and can do so again. I think at the time, he viewed Santorum as a junior partner even when he was losing badly, he still viewed Santorum as a junior partner.”
Gingrich and Santorum certainly never hid their disdain for Romney’s past moderate streak as governor of Massachusetts, an agent which bonded the two together and almost created the unlikely alliance. At the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) last year, when Santorum’s fate as the runner-up to Romney was all but sealed, Santorum drew a clear line of where he thought the party should head.
“We won in 2010 because conservatives rallied. They were excited about the contrast [with Democrats],” Santorum said. “We always talk about well how are we going to get the moderates? Why would an undecided voter vote for the candidate of a party, who the party’s not excited about?”








