Santorum: We Have a ‘Guerrilla Campaign’ - East Idaho News
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Santorum: We Have a ‘Guerrilla Campaign’

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GETTY P 020812 SantorumMOWin?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1330681675783Whitney Curtis/Getty Images(ATLANTA) — Rick Santorum defined his campaign, which he says has none of the frills or trappings of Mitt Romney’s, as a “guerrilla campaign” Thursday.  He raised $9 million in February alone, but the candidate believes as the race approaches Super Tuesday, he will be outspent by his rival.

“Look, I don’t have billionaires giving me tens of billions of dollars to super PACS,” Santorum said.  “We raised $9 million in the last month.  We’re converting a lot of that into television ads, but also a lot of other things that we’re doing. … We’re not going to be able to go out and use a sledge hammer on television, but we’re connecting with voters, social media, all sorts of volunteer calls and activities that we’ve got going on in every state.”

Santorum says he has “a great organization” in Georgia, the state with the biggest delegate haul when 10 states vote this coming Tuesday.  He also, like the three other candidates in the GOP presidential race, has a superPAC, but it hasn’t invested in Georgia yet.  Romney’s superPAC, meanwhile, has already spent more than $1 million in the Peach State, but its ads are just attacking Newt Gingrich.

Santorum told reporters after a rally at an airplane hangar in Atlanta that his website had 130,000 donors last month and two thirds were low-dollar donors.  He added that he thought the Romney campaign and his superPAC’s negative ads in Michigan actually helped him in the state.

”When he started to run those ads, we won voters,” said Santorum.  “Gov. Romney’s M.O. of going out and trying to beat up another opponent is wearing thin among Republican voters.”

“Compared to Gov. Romney, nine percent of his donations were small dollar donations,” Santorum went on to say.  “We have the base of the Republican Party, we have the activists who are excited about our campaign who are contributing.  There’s only so many times, there’s only so many people you can go for maxed-out contributions, but you can go back to that $50 donor again and again throughout the course of this campaign.  And 130,000 people at a time, you can run a campaign based on that.”

Santorum said he’s done fewer than 30 fundraisers while campaigning — a stunningly low number.  The campaign relies on frugality and takes a stripped-down approach to make the money last longer — there’s no national headquarters and a small paid staff.

“We’re just not going around meeting with CEOs and in the big cities,” Santorum said.  “This campaign is living off the hard work of average ordinary people across this country who want to see a fundamental change, not on folks who have a — well, let’s say a special interest in electing their candidate…. The folks who are giving $50 are the folks who want to see a free and prosperous America, and someone who is going to stand up for the values that made it that way.”

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