With Florida’s Republican presidential primary just a day away, it’s worth pausing to appreciate how it’s the mirror opposite of what we saw in South Carolina. A week ahead of the primary in the Palmetto State, Mitt Romney enjoyed a big lead, only to see it evaporate as the election drew closer. In Florida, Newt Gingrich was on top a week ago, and it now appears all but certain he’ll finish a disappointing second.
We have a fairly good sense of why Romney’s support fell in South Carolina — a couple of weak debate performances undermined his standing — but how did Romney bounce back quickly in the Sunshine State? Two words: his wallet.
Gingrich argued on ABC yesterday that Romney is likely to win this primary because he’s “carpet-bombing with negative ads,” financed “with Wall Street money.” This may sound like an excuse from a bitter candidate, but Gingrich has a point.
According to some final spending numbers shared with TPM by a Democratic media observer, Mitt Romney’s lucky number in the final push to the Jan. 31 primary here is five.
As in five-to-one: that’s the ratio — just about — by which Romney and his allies have outspent Newt Gingrich and his allies on TV in the Sunshine State. The narrative that Team Romney is pushing is that of a new-and-improved candidate, battle-hardened after his South Carolina woes, and sharpened as a candidate by having had to outsmart Newt Gingrich.








