The state in which handshakes and door-to-door conversations are still part of the campaign plan will have its say in reshaping the GOP presidential landscape. After numerous debates, countless advertisements, and endless speeches, the caucus voters of Iowa will get the ball rolling with a real election. Will it be Mitt Romney or Rick Santorum? Maybe Ron Paul will pull a surprise? What about the other candidates?
Gingrich: 'I don't think I'm going to win' Iowa
INDEPENDENCE, Iowa (AP) - Republican presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich conceded defeat in Iowa on Monday, a day before caucus-goers weighed in. The former House speaker, who tumbled from front-runner to also-ran in recent weeks, said he's learned a few things from the rough-and-tumble presidential campaign in Iowa: Don't let an attack go unanswered.
Republican Voters' Choices
No one seems to be really happy with this year's field of Republican candidates for that party's presidential nomination -- except perhaps the Democrats. The sudden rise, and equally sudden fall, of a succession of Republican front-runners is just one sign of the dissatisfaction of the Republican voters with this field of candidates
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