By Philip Rucker and Amy Gardner, HANOVER, N.H. A comfortable and confident Mitt Romney solidified his front-runner status on Tuesday night in the battle for the Republican presidential nomination, navigating 90 minutes of tough questions on the economy from his rivals and debate moderators.
All eight Republican hopefuls who shared an intimate roundtable on the debate stage at Dartmouth College clamored to blame Washington for the countrys economic ills. In turn, they pointed fingers at President Obama, the Federal Reserve and the government in general, although they sparred over the details of their plans to grow the economy.
During The Washington Post-Bloomberg GOP presidential candidate debate at Dartmouth College, the candidates talk about a trade war with China and what the United States can do to even the trade deficit facing the country.
The participants uniformly criticized Obama and official Washington for, in their view, not reviving the economy and for stunting its growth with too many regulations, overreach by the Federal Reserve and inadequate tax relief.
This time, the candidate with whom Romney had to share the spotlight was Herman Cain. The businessman has soared in opinion polls but faced a crush of scrutiny in Tuesdays debate on an economic plan that he referred to again and again but that his rivals dismissed as overly simplistic and unrealistic. Cain countered that the simplicity of his 9-9-9 plan to gut the federal tax code is its virtue, and he used it to separate himself as a bold outsider in a field of politicians.
During a portion of Tuesdays Washington Post-Bloomberg debate in which each candidate had a chance to ask another a question, four posed queries to Romney, acknowledging his position as the one to beat.
Meanwhile, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who was looking to revive his struggling campaign, seized few moments. He stayed silent for long stretches in the debate. When asked how he would fix the nations sputtering economy, he said only that he would develop new energy resources. Even when pressed, he offered few specifics.
What we need to be focused on in this country today is not whether or not we are going to have this policy or that policy, he said. What we need to be focused on is how we get Americans working again.
At another moment, Perry quipped: Mitts had six years to be working on a plan. Ive been in this for about eight weeks.
In one exchange, Cain, a former Godfathers Pizza executive, challenged Romney to name all 59 points in his 160-page economic plan, suggesting that it failed Cains test to be simple, transparent, efficient, fair and neutral in contrast to Cains proposal.
But the former Massachusetts governor did not hesitate to make the case that the complexity of his plan reflects the complexity of the nations problems and the depth of his experience, business know-how and ability to deal with those problems.
I have had the experience in my life of taking on some tough problems, Romney said. And I must admit that simple answers are always very helpful but oftentimes inadequate. And in my view, to get this economy going again, were going to have to deal with more than just tax policy and just energy policy, even though both of those are part of my plan.
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