Romney weighs in on differences with Gingrich

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP) - Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney dived into his campaign's full-scale critique of rival Newt Gingrich on Friday, standing by top supporters who described the former House speaker as self-serving and mocking some of his ideas about science and technology.

In return, top Gingrich backers described Romney's criticism as a sign of panic less than four weeks until the Iowa caucuses begin the 2012 nominating contest. Gingrich has risen to the top of Iowa polls in the past two weeks and is leading in some other states, too.

While Gingrich kept to his pledge not to criticize his GOP rivals, he reignited criticism for being a loose cannon by referring to the Palestinian people as being an "invented" people.

Romney said in Des Moines that he stood by former New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu, who described Gingrich on Thursday as "self-serving" and "anti-conservative" for criticizing a Medicare provision in House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan's budget.

"I fully support John Sununu," Romney said when asked about the comments during a meeting with The Des Moines Register's editorial board. The former Massachusetts governor noted their differences on immigration and environmental policy and poked at Gingrich's futuristic ideas.

"He talked about putting a permanent colony on the moon to mine rare materials from the moon. He even talked about a series of mirrors that we could put in space that would light our highways at night," Romney said. "I think we have some other priorities before we do that. I have some better ideas for our resources."

Romney also hinted at their larger career differences, a theme that could come up during Saturday's nationally televised debate in Des Moines and in television ads before the Jan. 3 caucuses.

"We're very different people, my background and his. We followed very different paths," he said. "And someone who has spent their time in the private sector has by far the best chance of defeating the president."

It was Romney's most thorough critique of Gingrich since the former Georgia congressman leaped past him to the top of national GOP preference polls and to the top of surveys in Iowa in the past two weeks.

Gingrich's top backers in Iowa attributed Romney's comments to worry that Gingrich could beat him and weaken his chances of winning in the must-win New Hampshire primary, which comes a week later.

"What we're seeing from Mitt Romney in Boston is desperation and panic and I think that's going to be very frustrating to people moving forward," said Iowa state Rep. Linda Upmeyer, Gingrich's Iowa campaign chairwoman. "That isn't what wins you caucuses or elections here in Iowa."

The back-and-forth was the latest in a quickly intensifying two-candidate race for the nomination.

On Thursday, Romney's campaign dispatched former Sen. Jim Talent of Missouri as well as Sununu to remind voters of Gingrich's tendency to stir controversy with provocative statements.

Romney's comments to the Register were sharply different from those he used during a campaign stop earlier Friday, when he gently critiqued Gingrich and stopped short of endorsing Sununu's words. "I can't write a script for Gov. Sununu or anybody else," Romney told reporters after meeting with Republicans at a grain products plant in Cedar Rapids.

On Friday, the Romney campaign released an Internet video criticizing Gingrich for his statements about the Ryan plan and quoting conservative pundits who questioned Gingrich's discipline. The campaign also released a list of statements from congressional and statehouse leaders from around the country saying Gingrich has been a poor leader.

"One of the concerns I have about Speaker Gingrich is he is often off-message," Iowa state Rep. Renee Schulte told reporters. "I believe that is a difference between him and Gov. Romney."

As if on cue, comments Gingrich made about the Palestinian people that challenge U.S. policy emerged.

"We've had an invented Palestinian people, who are in fact Arabs and were historically part of the Arab community," Gingrich said in an interview recorded this week with The Jewish Channel. "And for a variety of political reasons we have sustained this war with Israel since the 1940s. And I think it's tragic."

U.S. presidents in different political parties have supported a Palestinian state. Gingrich has said in the past he is open to supporting Palestinian statehood, but questioning the legitimacy of the Palestinian people puts him in league with conservatives who are not.


Associated Press writer Kasie Hunt in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed to this report.