Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on
 

Santorum hails delayed Iowa victory as 'huge upset'

By the CNN Wire Staff
updated 8:54 PM EST, Thu January 19, 2012
Iowa caucus count unresolved
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Santorum says he learned of the revised result before dawn Thursday
  • Santorum finishes with a 34-vote advantage over Mitt Romney in Iowa
  • Romney calls Santorum, but campaigns differ on whether it was to concede
  • Romney was thought to have won the caucuses by eight votes

Tune in at 8 p.m. ET Thursday for the CNN/Southern Republican Presidential Debate hosted by John King and follow it on Twitter at #CNNDebate. For real-time coverage of the South Carolina primary, go to CNNPolitics.com or to the CNN apps for iPhone, iPad and Android or CNN mobile site.

(CNN) -- Rick Santorum finished the Iowa Republican caucuses 34 votes ahead of Mitt Romney, but results from several precincts are missing and the full actual results may never be known, according to a final certified tally released Thursday by the Iowa GOP.

The new numbers show 29,839 votes for Santorum and 29,805 votes for Romney, according to the party.

The initial returns from Iowa gave Romney a razor-thin eight-vote margin of victory over Santorum, reinforcing the former Massachusetts governor's frontrunner status and giving him a major momentum boost heading into the New Hampshire primaries.

Romney went on to win New Hampshire easily, seemingly making him the first non-incumbent Republican in modern history to win the first two contests of the cycle.

Romney mum on final Iowa results
Santorum rep: Iowa results 'big win'
One county off by 20 votes in Iowa

Now history is being rewritten, casting a shadow over the first-in-the-nation caucuses and potentially shaking up the GOP race two days before the critical South Carolina primary.

Santorum said on CNN's "The Situation Room with Wolf Blitzer" that the victory, while delayed, was sweet.

"We feel very, very good that we not only won, but that we .... pulled off a huge upset," the former Pennsylvania senator said in the interview to be broadcast later Thursday.

Romney called Santorum after the revised result came out, according to both campaigns. However, they differed on whether Romney called to concede, as claimed by Santorum spokesman Hogan Gidley.

A top Romney staffer disputed that any concession occurred, while campaign spokeswoman Andrea Saul said: "Gov. Romney called Sen. Santorum to congratulate him on the Iowa results."

In the CNN interview, Santorum said he got an e-mail before 5 a.m. Thursday informing him of his 34-vote victory in the certified results. He also said his margin of victory would be higher if uncertified results from other precincts were included.

"Either way you tally it, we were successful. And we feel very good about that," Santorum said, adding his campaign is working to "continue that momentum and take it here to South Carolina now and off to Florida."

Eventually, he said, the Republican presidential race will narrow to a lone conservative contender against the more moderate Romney. Asked if he was disappointed that the Iowa results took so long to certify, possibly denying him momentum in last week's New Hampshire primary, Santorum said: "I don't blame Iowa."

"If you think about it, it moved from eight votes to 34. Usually in an election, that kind of change is insignificant," he said.

Gidley earlier told CNN that the revised result was "exciting because the narrative for a long time has been that Mitt Romney was 2-0."

"That's not the narrative anymore," Gidley said. "There have been two states, two different victors."

Romney's eight-vote win was seen as "a huge victory," Gidley said. "By that standard, I guess 34 votes is just about a landslide in Iowa."

While Santorum had a slight advantage in the certified tally, results from eight precincts were missing and will never be recovered -- a fact that leaves the question of who actually finished first in the caucuses unanswered.

"I congratulate Sen. Santorum and Gov. Romney on a hard-fought effort during the closest contest in caucus history," Iowa GOP Chairman Matt Strawn said in a written statement. "Our goal throughout the certification process was to most accurately reflect and report how Iowans voted."

Romney said in a written statement Thursday morning that the new results show a "virtual tie" between the two candidates.

"The results from Iowa caucus night revealed a virtual tie," Romney said. "I would like to thank the Iowa Republican Party for their careful attention to the caucus process, and we once again recognize Rick Santorum for his strong performance in the state."

"The Iowa caucuses, with record turnout, were a great start to defeating President Obama in Iowa and elsewhere in the general election," Romney added.

One week after Iowa's January 3 caucuses, Romney won the New Hampshire primary with nearly 40% of primary votes. In that contest, Santorum, a former Pennsylvania senator, finished in fifth place with 9%.

The South Carolina primary is scheduled for Saturday. The Palmetto State has picked the winner of every GOP nomination fight since 1980. Romney currently appears to be clinging to a dwindling lead there over former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

A Republican debate will be held Thursday night in Charleston, South Carolina.

"The bottom line is, it's really going to make a boost to our campaign today and remind people just that we've been able to tackle and take on Mitt Romney head-on," Gidley said. "We are the alternative to him, and we plan on taking this into South Carolina and beyond and showing folks that we've got the message and the messenger that can beat the guy who's just writing checks, trying to buy a state."

Gidley said he can "understand how the Romney campaign is out there trying to marginalize the victory. I can understand he doesn't want that narrative out there, but it's a big win for our campaign and we're really excited about it."

CNN Chief Political Correspondent Candy Crowley said she doesn't believe the Iowa development will change the big picture for the prospective nominees.

"I think it does give Rick Santorum bragging rights," she said. "Any time you can grab the headlines, that's a good thing." But, she said, the results are not that different from the close margin seen just after the caucuses.

CNN's Dana Bash and Rachel Streitfeld contributed to this report.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
Get all the latest news in Campaign 2012 at CNN's Election Center. There's the latest news, a delegate counter and much more.
updated 3:41 PM EDT, Wed May 23, 2012
Dark theories about President Barack Obama's citizenship show no signs of fading away. But "birthers," as those skeptics of Obama's heritage are known, no longer seem relegated to tinfoil hat fringes of American politics.
updated 1:10 PM EDT, Fri May 25, 2012
Wanted: A political attack dog ready to tear into President Barack Obama. Must play by team rules, be able to withstand the pressure of a presidential campaign and pass a rigorous vetting process.
updated 5:30 AM EDT, Fri May 18, 2012
Brinksmanship tactics from both major parties are not new -- in fact, they are all too commonplace on both sides in this Congress as the value of the compromise among moderate voices has all but disappeared. And it appears many voters want it that way.
updated 11:02 AM EDT, Thu May 24, 2012
Over the next several generations, the wave of minority voters -- who, according to the Census, now represent more than half of the nation's population born in the past year -- will become more of a power base in places like Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia.
updated 11:33 AM EDT, Wed May 23, 2012
Obama and Romney are two very different candidates joined by similar, yet hollow, attacks on their faith. Those attacks illustrate the intense mix of identity politics simmering just beneath the surface of the presidential race.
With the Republican presidential race all but over, the focus shifts to presumptive nominee Mitt Romney's choice of a running mate. Here's a list of those who have generated some buzz.
updated 10:57 AM EDT, Mon May 21, 2012
They had the money. They had the organization. They had the ballot access. What they were missing, however, was a candidate.
updated 8:06 PM EDT, Thu May 10, 2012
If you weren't lucky enough to win a seat at the table for dinner tonight with George Clooney and President Barack Obama, fear not. You may still have a chance to party with the president and a celebrity or two in the near future.
updated 12:23 PM EDT, Fri May 11, 2012
With Mitt Romney's victories in the April 24 Republican primaries, a new phase of the campaign began at Obama re-election headquarters in Chicago. After a year spent hiring staff and building an organization, Obama for America finally had what it had been waiting for: an opponent.
updated 8:42 PM EDT, Tue April 24, 2012
With student loan rates set to double in July, President Obama is using the issue to try to recapture the elusive youth vote.
Steps by both political parties to court younger voters proved it's the youth voting bloc's turn to come under the national spotlight, attention that will continue through the November general election.
Famed pastor Joel Osteen reiterated his position that Mitt Romney is a Christian, saying as long as the likely GOP presidential nominee believes that Jesus is the Son of God then he subscribes to the Christian faith.
updated 2:52 PM EDT, Mon April 16, 2012
This presidential election tells us something unexpected about American politics. It appears that both parties will have pragmatic problem-solvers at the top of their tickets.
updated 2:36 PM EDT, Fri March 30, 2012
Another major conservative figure backs Mitt Romney, adding to chorus calling for the divisive GOP nomination battle to come to an end.
Mitt Romney win
Track who's up and who's down with the freshest national polls on the CNN Polling Center.
ADVERTISEMENT