THE NOTE: Mitten for Mitt?

Romney hopes hinge on native Michigan, while Dem cease-fire gets Vegas test.

ByABC News
February 9, 2009, 3:09 PM

Jan. 15, 2008 -- Michigan voters on Tuesday take their turn sorting through the Republican presidential field, with a battered state economy providing the backdrop for a primary that could thin the ranks of the GOP contenders.

With the first three contests of the Republican race having produced three different winners, Michigan is almost certain to hand a second victory to one of them. Either a native son -- Mitt Romney -- or a defending champion -- John McCain -- will sputter into South Carolina's Saturday primary in a jalopy of disappointment.

On this snowy primary day, polls close at 9 pm ET -- just as the Democratic candidates debate in Las Vegas, testing a tenuous truce. (The split-screen moment for political junkies will quite possibly star Dennis Kucinich as the little candidate who couldn't be kept away.)

Fred Thompson may already be the Packard of the race -- grandpa's favorite, but not much to brag about under the hood. Rudy Giuliani could very well be the Hummer -- looking tough and guzzling cash, but not getting great mileage.

But with inspiration from the campaign event formerly known as the Detroit Auto Show -- it's like the Iowa State Fair, only shinier and better for you -- Michigan will answer:

Will Mitt Romney be more Oldsmobile or Mustang? (He's got a great name, sure, but he could just as easily be discontinued as he could come in for a redesign.)

Will John McCain be more Buick or Corvette? (He's an oldie but a goodie, though he'd rather have some pick-up in the engine.)

Will Mike Huckabee be more Taurus or F-150? (Not as pressing a question, since we trust he'll still have a Jesus fish on the bumper and Chuck Norris in the passenger seat when he cruises into South Carolina.)

(And the question that could subsume the previous three: Will Michigan Democrats and independents ram a Mac truck into the Republican race?)

Polls indicate that the race is between Romney, R-Mass., and McCain, R-Ariz., with Huckabee, R-Ark., perhaps also in the mix (at least for second place), owing to a sizeable evangelical base in the state. It's a battle between "a native son, a returning champion and a Southern wild card," David Jackson writes in USA Today.

Their paths crossed at the Detroit Auto Show on the final full day of campaigning in Michigan, with each offering his own brand of fixes. It was Mitt Romney -- Washington Outsider, Turnaround Artist, and Michigan Native -- delivering a jab or two at McCain in a speech Monday at the Detroit Economic Club.

"A lot of Washington politicians are aware of the pain in Michigan, but they haven't done anything about it," Romney said. Per the Detroit Free Press' Todd Spangler:

"When he stood in front of Michigan crowds, he spoke as if he had known them all his life."

For McCain, it was about Straight Talk to the end: "Anybody who says those old jobs are coming back is either naive or not being straight with the people of Michigan and America," McCain said, the Detroit News' Gordon Trowbridge reports.

"The candidates' divergent approaches highlight the degree to which Romney and McCain are counting on different segments of an undecided electorate to deliver them a win," write Juliet Eilperin and Michael Shear of The Washington Post.

Your wild card: "Most Democratic candidates are skipping their party's primary because no delegates are at stake, leaving Democrats and independents free to vote in the GOP contest."

(So it is that the DailyKos-backed call for "America's mitten to take off the gloves" -- and for liberal Democrats to support Mitt -- is only half a joke.)

Romney -- who is resuming his South Carolina advertising -- "has the most riding on Tuesday's result after successive setbacks in Iowa and New Hampshire," Michael Luo writes in The New York Times.

"Though he left the state decades ago, in the last week Mr. Romney has repeatedly played up his personal ties to it, often sounding more like a candidate for statewide office. His father, George W. Romney, was chairman of American Motors before becoming a three-term governor of Michigan, and the candidate has pledged to make the state a special focus if elected."

If Romney pulls it out in Michigan, he's back in the hunt -- and running like he once suggested he would, Jonathan Cohn writes for The New Republic. "In Michigan, at least, Romney has mostly campaigned like the candidate he promised to be," Cohn writes. "He does at least offer the Bain Capital/Winter Olympics/passing-health-care-in-Massachusetts resume that's relevant to the discussion. The contrast with the image McCain has promoted lately couldn't be more striking."

But the primary is so unpredictable that the secretary of state won't even release a turnout estimate. "With this Democratic thing, we don't have the vaguest idea," Chuck Yob, McCain's Michigan campaign cochairman, tells The Boston Globe's Sasha Issenberg. http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/01/15/in_michigan_primary_anything_can_happen/

This much is clear: Michigan has been heard. The state's primary "is this election year's first clear referendum on who voters think can best manage -- and revive -- the slumping economy, which has hit this state harder than most," McClatchy's David Lightman writes.

"Romney, whose dad ran American Motors before becoming governor of Michigan, has been the most passionate about rescuing the industry and bringing manufacturing back to prominence," Detroit Free Press columnist Stephen Henderson writes.

"McCain has taken a near-opposite approach, emphasizing a sharp turn away from reliance on manufacturing jobs that he says won't come back. . . . The truth is that Michigan probably needs a little of what all of them propose, and maybe even a lot."

The Democratic race in Michigan sets up an odd contest: It's Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., vs. "uncommitted," since Clinton is the only first-tier candidate not to have had herself removed from the ballot.

The contest is meaningless -- per the DNC's rules, no convention delegates are stake -- except to those who would impart some meaning on it. Clinton will win, "but that has not stopped her opponents from trying to cut into Clinton's vote total by mounting a last-ditch push for Democrats to vote 'uncommitted,' " Francis X. Donnelly writes in the Detroit News.

Democrats get their own two-hour clash Tuesday night in Las Vegas, in a last round before Saturday's Nevada caucuses. It will be the first chance for Clinton and Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., to have a nice little chat about all of those racially tinged comments that have been lobbed back and forth in the week (has it really only been seven days?) since New Hampshire.