Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney suggested Monday that his new GOP rival, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, doesn't have the business experience needed to be president.
"Understanding how the economy works by having worked in the real economy is finally essential in the White House. And I hope people recognize that," Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, told reporters.
"I respect the other people in this race, but I think the only other person who has that kind of extensive private sector experience besides me in the Republican race is Herman Cain," the former Godfather's Pizza chief executive.
Romney noted his 25 years in the private sector when asked about job growth in Texas under Perry, who has not held a private sector job as an adult, and the Texan's impact on the Republican presidential contest.
The GOP front-runner in national polls, Romney did not mention Perry by name when he made that comment but the contrast he drew was obvious and provided a window into how he would address Perry's emergence as a serious contender in the GOP race.
"I'm not going to vary my speech and my vision for the American people based upon the political winds of the day," Romney told reporters during a campaign appearance at Litchfield Technology in New Hampshire. "I wish Rick the very best. As the process goes on, we'll see whose background and skill most fits the needs of the country at a critical time like this."
Romney also made what amounted to a verbal shrug at the weekend buzz over rival Michele Bachmann's first-place victory at the Iowa straw poll and Perry's formal announcement of a candidacy, saying that most voters simply aren't paying attention to politics in mid-August.
"For most Americans, the attention is focused on the election after Labor Day," he said.
Later, at the Common Man restaurant in Plymouth, Romney largely stuck to his strategy of assailing President Barack Obama on the economy. And following the lead of other Republican contenders, he encouraged the president to call Congress back early from its summer recess to address the fragile economy and high unemployment.
"The president this week is in three states on a bus tour. And he's going to be going on a vacation to Martha's Vineyard for 10 days. I wish the president were in Washington calling back Congress and dealing with the challenges we have," Romney said. "In some respects I think he's more concerned about keeping his job than spending the time necessary to help Americans get their jobs."
In less than a week, the slow-to-begin race for the Republican nomination has accelerated and undergone a dramatic shift, essentially becoming a three-way contest for the chance to challenge Obama next year.
Romney, who has been riding high for months while other Republicans have been struggling to emerge from the pack, now finds himself facing two significant foes in Perry, the Texas governor who formally entered the race only Saturday, and rising star Michele Bachmann, the Minnesota congresswoman who won the Iowa straw poll that same day.
"It's a wide-open race," Gov. Terry Branstad declared after a five-day stretch that saw every Republican presidential candidate show up in his state, where party caucuses kick off the GOP nomination fight next winter. While Perry entered the nomination battle, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, exited, further reshuffling the deck.
Over the next few months, Romney, Bachmann and Perry will try to win over a GOP electorate angry at the change Obama has brought and looking for a candidate who has the right mix of credentials to beat the incumbent Democrat.
Romney, who lost the nomination in 2008, hasn't been able to unite warring factions of the GOP electorate since entering the race earlier this year. Social conservatives and the tea party haven't warmed to his candidacy, and he has left some economic conservatives and Republicans in the party establishment underwhelmed.
He's focused heavily on New Hampshire and has downplayed his campaign in Iowa, but that may change given that Bachmann and Perry, both of whom have support among the tea party and Christian evangelicals, are competing hard in this state where social conservatives dominate.
By Monday, the three Republicans with the strongest chance of winning the nomination fanned out across early primary states, all looking for the upper hand just as Obama opened a three-day Midwest bus tour.
Romney, overshadowed for much of the weekend, re-emerged in Litchfield, N.H., and, during a conversation with reporters, quickly provided a window into how he would address Perry's entry into the race.
"Understanding how the economy works by having worked in the real economy is finally essential in the White House. And I hope people recognize that," Romney said, stressing his years of private business experience and drawing a contrast with Perry, Texas' longest-serving governor who never has worked in the private sector as an adult.
Even as his aides worked behind the scenes to assess the impact of Perry's candidacy, Romney suggested a strategy shift wasn't at hand. He said, "I'm not going to vary my speech and my vision for the American people based upon the political winds of the day."
A bit later, he returned to his strategy of assailing Obama on the economy, saying that the president should call for Congress to return from its summer break to deal with high unemployment, home foreclosures and Wall Street turmoil.
Halfway across the country, Perry made clear that he would try to undercut Romney's efforts to cast himself as the strongest candidate on jobs and that he would continue where Pawlenty had left off in questioning Bachmann's accomplishments — or lack thereof — during her three terms in the U.S. House.
"I respect all the other candidates in the field, but there is no one that can stand toe to toe with us," Perry told The Associated Press in an interview as he began his first full day of campaigning.
He didn't name either of his rivals, but he pointed to job growth in Texas and argued that Republicans needed a candidate who has achieved results.
Bachmann, for her part, prepared for a bus tour that starts Tuesday in South Carolina, a state set to hold the first primary in the South.
Since declaring her candidacy, she has shot to the top tier in GOP polling, has largely avoided mistakes, has logged two solid debate performances and has established herself as a far more serious candidate than her rivals had predicted. She's worked to broaden her appeal beyond the tea party and evangelical wings of the party.
She earned a widely publicized boost on Saturday, winning 4,823 votes, or 28 percent, of the die-hard activists who set aside a Saturday afternoon every four years for a political carnival at Iowa State University's campus in Ames.
The man they all hope to replace wasn't taking it sitting down.
In little Cannon Falls, Minn., Obama told audience members hard hit by the difficult economy, "As frustrated as you are about politics, don't buy into this notion that somehow government is what's holding us back." He noted that the government is responsible for the military that defends the nation and for many other programs people embrace. He said, "When you go to the National Parks and those folks in the hats, that's government."
A fellow Democrat, former President Bill Clinton, had something to say about the GOP's latest entrant. Perry is a "good looking rascal," Clinton allowed in New York, but he indicated he doesn't think much of the Texan's policies.
Both of Romney's freshly minted rivals face challenges.
Neither has run a national race, and both still are relatively unknown to the broad public.
By contrast, Romney is known nationally from his failed 2008 presidential bid and has been through the paces of a White House bid. He also is a known quantity in Iowa; he won the state's straw poll in 2007 before coming up short in the 2008 caucuses. Yet he didn't actively compete in Saturday's test vote in Ames and earned fewer votes than Perry, whose supporters wrote him in.
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