Santorum Sweeps Three States

Rick Santorum won all three Republican voting contests Tuesday night, breaking Mitt Romney's winning streak and denying him the image of an unstoppable front-runner.

Based on ABC News projections, Santorum won the Missouri primary and the Minnesota caucus. The Colorado GOP also tells ABC News that Santorum won that state's caucus.

In Missouri, Romney came in second, though he didn't do as well in Minnesota, where he got third.

Ron Paul placed second in Minnesota and third in Missouri. Newt Gingrich wasn't on the Missouri ballot, and he finished in fourth in Minnesota.

At a victory rally in Missouri, Santorum predicted that Romney would be denied his oft-noted massive campaign organization come the fall. And he said of his own supporters' cheers that "in Massachusetts, they were heard particularly loud tonight."

"We doubled 'em up here and in Minnesota," Santorum said to cheers he hadn't heard since his resurgent finish in Iowa a month ago.

Romney, meanwhile, didn't have a chance to give a victory speech. Speaking in Colorado as he trailed Santorum in the vote count there, the former Massachusetts governor said that "the race is too close to call in Colorado at this point, but I'm pretty confident we'll come in number one or number two."

"This was a good night for Rick Santorum," said Romney, who called Santorum after the results in Missouri and Minnesota were reported, though he left a message because he didn't get through to him. "I want to congratulate Senator Santorum. I wish him the very best."

Exactly four years ago, Romney gave a different speech — the one in which he dropped out of the 2008 Republican primary to support John McCain. On Tuesday night, Romney spoke of 2008 only in terms of the promises Barack Obama made when he was elected president.

In the past week, Romney had been the undisputed front-runner after wins in Florida and in Nevada. He had expected strong showings in Minnesota and Colorado, having won both states' caucuses in 2008. Now he's lost both states tonight. His campaign had already tried to lower expectations by arguing that no candidate can win them all.

"Of course, there is no way for any nominee to win first place in every single contest -- John McCain lost 19 states in 2008, and we expect our opponents to notch a few wins too," Romney's political director Rich Beeson, wrote in a memo for reporters.

After most of the votes had been tallied, Romney adviser Stuart Stevens told reporters that "we had to make tough choices and really focus on the delegates." The actual delegate count for the states that voted Tuesday won't be determined until later.

"There will be the same amount of delegates today as there are tomorrow," Stevens said. "You have to make these tough choices. We made these choices to focus on states that are going to be critical for delegates, and everyone's got to run their own campaign."

While the four candidates are competing for delegates -- 76 between the two caucuses (none in the Missouri primary) -- the real prize is the evolving media narrative that accompanies a surprise victory, or a better-than-expected finish, which Santorum appears to have clinched.

This is the first day this year when there are contests in more than one state. Santorum and Paul skipped last week's Florida primary to campaign elsewhere, and that strategy paid off for Santorum. His efforts in Minnesota and Missouri caught the attention of the Romney campaign, which put Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty on a conference call to talk trash about the former-senator from Pennsylvania.

And once again, Gingrich may have been a spoiler for Romney. Even though he abandoned hope in all three states and moved on to Ohio, his absence potentially freed up conservative voters to side with Santorum, who has been itching for a good headline since his surprise victory in Iowa, the first state to vote in the GOP primary.

"Santorum probably resonates well with many Republicans here," said John Petrocik, the chairman of the political science department at the University of Missouri. "This is a culturally conservative place. Conservative religious groups, they're certainly a factor in Missouri, so I could imagine him doing fairly well."

The previous voting contests were all scheduled in a cluster, but after today's races there is a lull, which will allow the story of the outcomes in these three states to linger for weeks before another primary. Maine has a week of caucuses that ends Feb. 11, but after that the next voting isn't until Feb. 28, in Arizona and in Michigan.

It's also unlikely that any of the candidates will drop out of the race after Tuesday's votes. Gingrich, who dethroned Romney as the front-runner after a South Carolina win, has vowed to contest every state; Santorum got enough votes to prove that he can stay competitive; and Paul hasn't shown signs that he'd quit despite not yet winning a single primary or caucus.

All of which is unpleasant news for Romney, who has been forced to respond to venomous attacks from his rivals instead of focusing his attention on President Obama. Four years ago, Romney ended his 2008 bid for the GOP nomination shortly after losing to McCain on "Super Tuesday," which was Feb. 5 that year. This time around, "Super Tuesday" isn't until March 6.

ABC News's Elizabeth Hartfield and Emily Friedman contributed reporting.

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19 comments

  • Audrey De Shields  •  3 months ago
    Santorum is an evil man.. his concerns are not in the interest of all people only the evangelical
    groups that think they have a direct line to God with daily memo's to them. People should keep in mind where he comes from and his true feelings about Blaaaa people.
    His revealing comments show what he really feels. The remark about not wanting to give blaaa people other peoples money is telling...there are more whites on welfare than blaaaa
    people. this unreasoning hatred for blacks is still here even in the face of some progress.
    Saying you want to help them work to earn their money is also revealing,blacks have al ways
    worked and probably cleaned your nasty house and your grandparents nasty house. The idea
    that blacks don't want to work is rediculous,they don't want to clean your filthy house,but do aspire to opportunity's that are systematically shut off to them because the supposedly right
    ones have decided to reman the right people and them only. This man will damage the progress made and turn back to Jim Crow days
    Audrey DeShields
  • Tiger  •  Concord, California  •  3 months ago
    If Santorum won in all 3 of those states, we are in deep crappola. It shows that there is no ONE good candidate to replace Obama. This win is making Obama getting re-elected for one more term.
  • TropicalTrooth  •  3 months ago
    Santorum? Republitards have gone MAD!! That man is seriously ill.
  • Tekla  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
    Don't the Republican Party have a better candidate other than those who are running right now?...Gingrich, Romney,Santorum???? They are not exactly great choices...you might as well put Sarah Palin back? Sorry but I cannot vote for any of these guys.
  • Kate  •  3 months ago
    What is happening in this election cycle?? It's madness!!
  • nicky  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Urkel man rises again.
  • bendaticus  •  Hillsboro, Oregon  •  3 months ago
    Missouri has traditionally hated Mormons. I'm not surprised Romney lost there.
  • Isabella  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Mitt Romney Vs Santorum = Alien Vs Predator
  • oldskool  •  Richmond, Indiana  •  3 months ago
    could the repukes look any worse
  • O.Smith  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    If Santorum will abolish the corrupt Federal Reserve bank, then he may win more supporters.
    • Dangerous 3 months ago
      If he said he would, I still couldn't believe he would pull through with it. I don't trust him one bit!
  • George  •  Reseda, California  •  3 months ago
    He should thank Donald Trump for endorsing Romney
  • Maria C.  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    good for obama. keep voting for santorum. people with brains won't vote for him.
  • Brittany  •  3 months ago
    I am not a fan of Santorum but I am glad he came out on top, maybe it will knock Romney off his high horse.
  • Dangerous  •  3 months ago
    Are you tired of complaining about the government and the economy and feel there is nothing you can do about it?
    .
    Vote Ron Paul and you can play a major roll in getting America back on track from Our runaway government!
    .
    See! There IS something you can do about it!
  • Maria C.  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    santorum is another hypocrite religious nut. they don't practice what they preach.
  • Kver  •  3 months ago
    Does this really matter? Our congress has gone almost a thousand days without a budget. Our debt grows by 3 million dollars a minute. Democrat or Republican, the nation will fail in 2017 when the debt hits the "runaway" point at which time we can NEVER pay it off (the interest payment is so large that it exceeds the federal budget). Our government can't even pass a budget, what makes anyone think they can stop spending all this money. Thank you Republicans for the most expensive military in the world. Thank you Democrats for making everyone dependent on government handouts. Together you doomed the USA to fail. YOU SPENT TOO MUCH MONEY. Idiots. RIP the American Empire (1945 - 2017), it joins the list of failed empires.
    • munzsy 3 months ago
      actually - it's the Democrat-controlled U.S. Senate under Harry Reid that has failed to pass a budget for 1,000 days.- NOT congress.
  • Bennett  •  3 months ago
    Let’s Be More Like Russians ©2012 Bennett HammondI wanna go to Saudi, they don’t like liberals there.Women ain’t allowed to drive, or even show their hair.No lefties, and no lesbians, and nice white sheets to wear, yeahI wanna go to Saudi - they don’t like liberals there.Let’s be more like Russia, they don’t like liberals there.Lines in all the food stores, but all the shelves are bare.With roadblocks on the highways and agents everywhere, yeahLet’s be more like Russia -they don’t like liberals there.What about North Korea - they don’t like liberals there.Just patriotic marches on the muzak everywhere.Oh all the pegs fit in, ‘cause all the holes are square, yeahLet’s be North Korea - they don’t like liberals there.Well, where else can we look for a model, where else have they escaped the liberal scourge that makes us so unhappy?Should we be more like China?Or how about Cuba?We could take after Sudan...I’ve got it! Let’s be like Iran - #$%$ few liberals there!Or we could be like Saudis, they sure hate liberals there.Women ain’t allowed to drive, or even show their hair.No lefties, and no lesbians, and nice white sheets to wear, yeahI wanna be like the Saudis - they sure hate liberals there.
  • Esteban  •  3 months ago
    I'm starting to think that the GOP is facing more than an Obama victory... more like a 65%-35% supernova result in the general election. Interestingly enough, I don't think Obama will have much coattail for Congress or state house races. Of course, I wouldn't be so depraved or stupid as to vote for Obama or the GOP.
    • jane h 3 months ago
      if you are not voting then you should keep your mouth shut!
  • John  •  3 months ago
    I don't care who wins as long as hes white....