Mitt Romney's disputed CPAC and Maine wins: What they mean

Rick Santorum and Ron Paul are claiming foul play in their respective losses to Romney. How much will charges of cheating detract from Mitt's victories?

Mitt Romney won the Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll with 38 percent of the vote Saturday, though second-place finisher Rick Santorum is crying foul.
(Image credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Mitt Romney won the much-watched Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) straw poll on Saturday, beating top rival Rick Santorum 38 percent to 31 percent. On Sunday, Santorum cried foul. "I don't try to rig straw polls," Santorum told CNN's Candy Crowley, explaining that for years, Ron Paul paid for supporters to come to CPAC, vote, and leave. "You have to talk to the Romney campaign and how many tickets they bought, we've heard all sorts of things." The Romney campaign accused Santorum of "making statements that aren't grounded in the truth," and noted that Romney also won the Maine caucuses on Saturday — he beat Paul by 194 votes, with 84 percent of the votes counted. Not so fast, said Team Paul: Maine won't be decided for a week because a local GOP official postponed the voting in a Paul-friendly county, supposedly because of the weather. How much should we make of Mitt's disputed victories?

CPAC barely matters, and Maine is suspect: CPAC losers always complain that the victor bought his win, says Libby Spencer at The Impolitic. Though it's never clear why anyone would bother buying a victory at the conservative activists' conference: The poll is "about as predictive as a coin toss." On the other hand, Paul's "alleged loss in Maine... smacks of establishment GOP manipulation." Postponing a caucus in a Paul stronghold over three inches of snow is "inarguably suspect."

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