You know what they say: close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades. Close doesn’t mean a thing in multimillion-dollar presidential elections. But you wouldn’t know that by listening to those behind the nation’s largest GOP super PACs. Some of those “PAC men” are using the close race to justify the hundreds of millions spent on the 2012 election.
The two largest GOP super PACs, Restore our Future and American Crossroads, came up empty despite spending $200 million supporting Mitt Romney and opposing Barack Obama, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
For American Crossroads, the losing streak extended to Senate races as well. Of the nine Senate races in which the super PAC invested heavily, it lost seven of them: Florida, Montana, Indiana, Wisconsin, Virginia, New Mexico and Missouri.
Those losses cost a combined $11 million. The only bright spot for Crossroads: Republican victories in Nevada (Dean Heller) and Nebraska (Deb Fischer).








