WASHINGTON — Mitt Romney won a tight race against Rick Santorum in Ohio, where he heavily outspent his main rival, and posted victories in Massachusetts, Virginia, Vermont and Idaho.

Santorum broke through in primaries in Oklahoma and Tennessee and in the North Dakota caucuses, raising fresh doubts about Romney’s ability to corral the votes of conservatives in some of the most Republican states in the country.

On the busiest night of the campaign season, Ohio was the marquee matchup, a second industrial state showdown in as many weeks between Romney and Santorum. It drew the most campaigning and television advertisements of all 10 Super Tuesday contests and for good reason — no Republican has ever won the White House without carrying the state in the fall.

With votes tallied in 96 percent of the state’s precincts, Romney led by more than 12,000 votes out of more than 1.1 million cast.

Newt Gingrich had a victory in his column — his first win in more than six weeks. The former House speaker triumphed at home in Georgia, but a barrage of attack ads by a Super PAC supporting Romney helped hold him below 50 percent and forced him to share the delegates.

Paul pinned his hopes on Idaho and Alaska as he scratched for his first victory of the campaign season.

Romney was on track to pad his lead in the hunt for delegates to the Republican National Convention. Not surprisingly, given his mixed night, he focused on the delegate chase.

“This is a process of gathering enough delegates to become the nominee, and I think we’re on track to have that happen,” he told reporters as he arrived home in Massachusetts to vote in the primary.

Later, he told supporters, “I’m going to get this nomination.”

Yet Santorum’s multiple victories, coupled with Gingrich’s win, provided fresh evidence that Romney’s conservative rivals retain the ability to outpoll him in certain parts of the country despite his huge organizational and financial advantages.

Santorum waited until Oklahoma and Tennessee fell into his column before speaking to cheering supporters in Ohio. “This was a big night tonight,” he said. “We have won in the West, the Midwest and the South, and we’re ready to win across this country.”

In all, there were primaries in Virginia, Vermont, Ohio, Massachusetts, Georgia, Tennessee and Oklahoma. Caucuses in North Dakota, Idaho and Alaska rounded out the calendar.

Some 419 delegates were at stake in the 10 states.

In the Idaho caucuses, with 64 percent of precincts reporting, Romney had 69 percent of the vote, well ahead of his challengers.

Romney picked up at least 129 delegates during the evening, Santorum 47, Gingrich 42 and Paul at least 10.

That gave the former Massachusetts governor 332, more than all his rivals combined, a total that included endorsements from members of the Republican National Committee who automatically attend the convention and can support any candidate they choose. Santorum had 139 delegates, Gingrich 75 and Paul 35. It takes 1,144 delegates to win the nomination at the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., this summer.

Ohio Republicans were a party divided, based not only on the popular vote but also interviews with voters as they left their polling places.

Santorum outpolled Romney among Ohioans with incomes under $100,000, while Romney won among those with six-figure incomes and up. Romney won among working women; Santorum among women who do not.

Santorum won among self-described conservatives, while Romney outpointed his rival among those who said they are moderate or liberal.

Santorum was preferred by the half of the electorate that is born-again. Romney was the favorite among the half of the electorate that said it is not.

In interviews in all the primary states, Republicans said the economy was the top issue and an ability to defeat Obama was what mattered most as they made their Super Tuesday choices.

They also indicated nagging concerns about the candidate they supported, even in Massachusetts, There, one-third of all primary voters said they had reservations, and about three-quarters of those voted for Romney.

Massachusetts is a reliably Democratic state in most presidential elections, but in Ohio, 41 percent of primary voters said they, too, had reservations about the candidate they supported. No Republican has ever won the White House without capturing Ohio.

Gingrich’s victory was his first since he captured the South Carolina primary on Jan. 21, and he said it would propel him on yet another comeback in a race where he has faded badly over the past six weeks.

Obama, the man they hope to defeat in November, dismissed the almost-constant criticism of his foreign policy efforts and accused Republicans of “beating the drums of war” over Iran. “Those folks don’t have a lot of responsibilities. They’re not commander in chief,” he said. Unopposed for the Democratic nomination to a second term, he stepped into the Republican race with a Super Tuesday news conference at the White House, then attended a $35,800-a-ticket fundraiser a few blocks from the White House.

Ohio was the day’s biggest prize in political significance, a heavily populated industrial state that tested Santorum’s ability to challenge Romney in a traditional fall battleground. Georgia, Gingrich’s home political field, outranked them all in the number of delegates at stake, with 76, a total that reflected a reliable Republican voting pattern as well as population.

Romney, the leader in the early delegate chase, flew to Massachusetts to vote and said he hoped for a good home-state win.

He also took issue with Obama, saying, “I think all of us are being pretty serious” about Iran and its possible attempt to develop nuclear weapons.

Gingrich effectively acknowledged he had scant Super Tuesday prospects outside Georgia, where he launched his political career nearly three decades ago. Instead, he was pointing to primaries next week in Alabama and Mississippi, and he told an audience, “With your help, by the end of next week we could really be in a totally new race.”

The polls show the president’s chances for re-election have improved in recent months, as the economy has strengthened, unemployment has slowly declined and Republicans have ripped into one another in the most tumultuous nominating campaign the party has endured since 1976.

The former Massachusetts governor campaigned into Super Tuesday on a winning streak. He captured the Washington state caucuses last Saturday, days after winning a little-contested primary in Arizona and a hard-fought one in Michigan. He won the Maine caucuses earlier in February.

The victories helped settle his campaign, which was staggered when Santorum won a pair of caucuses and a nonbinding Missouri primary on Feb. 7.

Santorum and Gingrich have vied for months to emerge as the sole conservative alternative to Romney, and they battered him as a moderate who would lead the party to defeat in November.

But Romney, backed by a heavily financed super PAC, countered Gingrich’s victory in the South Carolina primary with a comeback win in Florida. Last week, it was Santorum’s turn to fall, as Romney eked out a win in Michigan after trailing by double digits in some polls 10 days before the primary.

Santorum’s recent rise has translated into campaign receipts of $9 million in February, his aides announced last week.

Even so, Romney and Restore our Future, the super PAC supporting him, outspent the other candidates and their supporters on television in the key Super Tuesday states.

In Ohio, Romney’s campaign purchased about $1.5 million for television advertisements, and Restore Our Future spent $2.3 million. Santorum and Red, White and Blue, a super PAC that supports him, countered with about $1 million combined, according to information on file with the Federal Election Commission, a disadvantage of nearly four to one.

In Tennessee, where Romney did not purchase television time, Restore Our Future spent more than $1 million to help him. Santorum paid for a little over $225,000, and Winning our Future, a super PAC that backs Gingrich, nearly $470,000.

In Georgia, where Gingrich acknowledged he must win, the pro-Romney super PAC spent about $1.5 million in hopes of holding the former House speaker below 50 percent of the vote, the threshold needed to maximize his delegate take.

While the day boasted more primaries and caucuses than any other in 2012, it was a shadow of Super Tuesday in 2008, when there were 20 Republican contests.

There was another big difference, a trend away from winner-take-all contests to a system of allocating delegates in rough proportion to a candidate’s share of the popular vote.

Sen. John McCain won eight states on Super Tuesday in 2008 and lost 12 to Romney and Mike Huckabee combined. But six of McCain’s victories were winner-take-all primaries, allowing him to build an insurmountable delegate lead that all but sealed his nomination.

In other political news from Ohio, veteran Democratic U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich conceded to longtime congressional colleague Marcy Kaptur in the battle for a newly drawn Ohio congressional district.

Kucinich made his concession speech just past midnight Wednesday as the sometimes nasty contest ended. He said Kaptur “ran a campaign lacking in integrity, filled with false truths.”

Kaptur was leading by more than 24 points with 84 percent of precincts reporting.

Kucinich was ahead in his home county, Cuyahoga, but Kaptur was ahead in four other counties that make up the sprawling, newly drawn district.

Joseph “Joe the Plumber” Wurzelbacher was holding a slight lead over Toledo real estate agent Steve Kraus on the Republican side.

The winner of the Democratic primary is favored to win the congressional race in the fall.

Julie Carr Smyth reported from Columbus.

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16 Comments

  1. I’ve always had one major concern about Mr. Romney. What happens when his batteries run out? Can we buy new ones at Wal-Mart or do we have to go all the way back to his home planet for an original set of “Robot Batteries?” One thing for sure, I bet that they’re really, really big and expensive. Probably takes two Cadillacs just to get them home.

  2. When you put The Gang That Can’t Shoot Straight into a circular firing squad, you get Mitt as a result.

  3. As the clown show rolls from state to state my only hope is Rick and Newt hang in there till the bitter end. These three, Mitt, Rick and Newt are the poster boys for that’s wrong with the Republican Party. By proclaiming to the nation just how extreme their views are, by the end of the show, those who are willing to vote will be only the fringe.

    1.  Newt is the Nader of 2012.Hard to believe anyone not from the 15th century would vote for “Taliban Ricky”

      1. I don’t know about Newt and Nader, but I’m sticking to the clown metaphor, Crusty, Bozo and Happy.   Rick is a founding father of the “American Taliban,” I still prefer to think in terms of clown, than armed and dangerous.

    2. oh they will flip flop the other way then to swing more imaginary votes.To bad Ron Paul won’t make it even our troops support him. He got more donation’s by our military men and woman then anyone else.Since they are the ones who have paid the price for the last decade of bad decision’s you think some1 would follow their lead.

  4. I’m really starting to like Romney, especially after his wife went on tv and stated she doesn’t feel wealthy. Truly, they’re just like the rest of us. So endearing!

    1. I find it humorous how some resent other peoples success and insist on trying to bring them down to their level.  Conservatives on the other hand want to raise everybody up by giving them the opportunity to better themselves.

      1. Lol, that’s what you got from my comment? I’m not trying to bring anyone down. I just think it’s ridiculous that after Mitt keeps mentioning his vast wealth and claiming that we’re jealous of it and they are then now trotting out his wife for damage control. I don’t hate success and I don’t hate rich people. I want everyone to be able to succeed, but there has to be a chance for that to happen. So you don’t get to say that I am envious of your superfluous wealth and then at the same time try and maintain that despite your wealth you’re just like me. You have to pick one, it can’t be both.

      2. I don’t resent success I resent how he keeps his money in of shore accounts you don’t do that unless your trying to evade paying your share.He’s just a new face supporting the rich tax breaks can’t tell me all them tax breaks have netted American’s more jobs,more like sent more jobs away.So is it true he made his money dismantling American company’s I read that somewere and can’t remember were now.

    1. Nobody is as bad as Obama!  He is without a doubt the worst president ever, even eclipsing Carters record of futility.  He should be impeached for violating the oath of office when he swore to uphold the constitution and has done everything in his power to tear it and our once proud country down.  He acts like he is some third world dictator.

      1. I wont vote for anyone that is anti 2nd Amendment, pro park and supports a governmental mandated healthcare program

        So I wont be voting for either Rotten RINO Romney, or Obama

        I’m done voting for the lesser of two evils, and a lot of people feel the same way

      2. What about the guys who swore an oath to the norqoust guy and put it above the oath they gave to the American people should they be impeached or just straight up held for treason?

  5. I was curious to see if Mass Republicans would punish Mitt for Romneycare on Super Tuesday.
    He won Mass with 72% of the vote!  Obviously not punished.  State-based healthcare reform, anyone? Just saying…

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