This year, 2012, Conservatives really did not want Romney as their candidate. As a conservative I myself didn't want him. I wanted Newt Gingrich or Rick Santorum or even Rick Perry from Texas. But not Romney. He is a good man with a lot of ability but he could never have his heart the effort to campaign as a conservative. The high point was the first debate. The campaign went down hill from there as Romney then tried to stake out a centrist position; 'hands across the aisle' and all that. Conservatives gagged, but they had gone along once the race for the nomination had been decided in favor of Romney. The determination to defeat Obama trumped everything else. What happened at the end was that Hurricane Sandy diverted the nation's attention from the race for about five days. When Romney returned he just couldn't put up the front any more. The fire was gone and he decided to let the clock run out, hoping that he would would win by lying low, avoiding controversy and watching the clock tick the hours away.
Even then he might have pulled it off, but then it all fell in when the Republican keynote speaker, Governor Chris Christie of Jersey embraced Obama and seemed to endorse his candidacy. He did not, but you had to listen very closely to what he said to conclude that. Then the voters, tired of the race, tired of wind and floods, tired of trying to tough it out with a sick economy, decided that maybe Obama wasn't the indecisive non-leader that they had been told and nearly believed. It only required a slight shift of votes, just a few more Republicans staying home and a few more fence sitters voting for Obama, and it all fell in --- not by much, but enough.
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