Story highlights
NEW: Trump said he previously criticized Romney before getting to know him
The value of a Donald Trump endorsement of Mitt Romney is unclear
Rick Santorum agrees with Newt Gingrich that Florida delegates should be proportional
The Republican candidates are campaigning in Nevada, which holds its caucuses Saturday
Celebrity business magnate Donald Trump endorsed Mitt Romney for president Thursday, telling reporters he will not mount an independent campaign if Romney is the Republican nominee.
Trump, who has repeatedly flirted with the possibility of his own White House bid, revealed his decision in Las Vegas two days before Nevadaâs Saturday caucuses.
âItâs my honor, real honor, to endorse Mitt Romney,â Trump said, with Romney and his wife standing nearby. Calling Romney âtoughâ and âsmart,â Trump said, âheâs not going to continue to allow bad things to happen to this country.â
Romney responded by praising Trump for âan extraordinary ability to understand how our economy works and to create jobsâ and for being âone of the few who has stood up to say China is cheatingâ in international trade.
It was unclear whether Trumpâs decision will have any impact on the Republican race. A Pew survey last month found that 64% of definite and likely GOP voters said an endorsement from the reality television star would make no difference to them.
In the survey, 13% said it would make them more likely to back a candidate, while 20% said it would actually make them less likely.
âEndorsements rarely sway voters,â Republican strategist Alex Castellanos said. But âthe Trump endorsement undermines (Newt) Gingrichâs argument that it is just the Washington establishment that is out to stop him and nominate Romney. Trump is the ultimate outsider.â
Trump was not always so positive regarding Romneyâs record. During an interview on CNNâs âState of the Unionâ in April, Trump criticized Romney for eliminating jobs while in the private sector.
âHeâd buy companies. Heâd close companies. Heâd get rid of jobs,â Trump told CNN Chief Political Correspondent Candy Crowley. âIâve built a great company. My net worth is many many times Mitt Romney.â
Asked what changed since then to bring his endorsement of Romney, Trump told CNN later Thursday that his past comments were âpolitical talk.â
âThat was a long time prior to my getting to know him,â Trump said of Romney. âBut I have gotten to know him and heâs a terrific guy. I donât know if he really comes out like he really is in person. Heâs a warm, smart, tough cookie and thatâs what this country needs. We need somebody thatâs tough, that will stop China and OPEC and all these other nations from just ripping us up. And i think he can do it.â
Perhaps in reference to Trumpâs earlier comments, Romney said Thursday after thanking Trump for the endorsement, âI spent my life in the private sector, not quite as successful as this guy but successful nonetheless.â
News of Trumpâs endorsement of the Republican front-runner came as the GOP candidates stumped for votes across Nevada and Romney continued to wrestle with fallout from a CNN interview in which the former Massachusetts governor said he wasnât âconcerned about the very poor.â
Poll: Romneyâs big lead in Nevada
âWe have a safety netâ for the very poor, Romney told CNNâs Soledad OâBrien on Wednesday. âIf it needs repair, Iâll fix it. Iâm not concerned about the very rich; theyâre doing just fine. Iâm concerned about the very heart of America, the 90%, 95% of Americans right now who are struggling, and Iâll continue to take that message across the nation.â
Pressed by OâBrien, Romney noted that the poorest Americans have access to food stamps, Medicaid and housing vouchers.
âYou can choose where to focus,â he said. âYou can focus on the rich; thatâs not my focus. You can focus on the very poor; thatâs not my focus. My focus is on middle-income Americans.â
Romney later insisted that his words were taken out of context and reiterated the full context of the quote, which was meant to stress his focus on the middle class.
âYouâve got to take the whole sentence, (or else) it sounds very different,â he said. âWe have a safety net for the poor. ⦠If there are people that are falling through the cracks, I want to fix that.â
The comment, however, sparked a new round of debate over an emerging narrative of Romney as a plutocrat unaware of the needs and concerns of ordinary Americans. It also evoked memories of previous controversial Romney statements, such as when he said he likes firing people who provide poor service.
Gingrich hammers Romney over âpoorâ comment
Romney is âreinforcing the image of the national party that is elite (and) out of touch,â said Mark McKinnon, a former campaign adviser to George W. Bush and John McCain. âThatâs why heâs having such problems with independent voters. ⦠Unless the Republicans turn that around, they cannot win this election.â
Gingrich, the former House speaker, has blasted Romney for the remark over the past two days, declaring Wednesday that he is âfed up with politicians in either party dividing Americans against each other.â
On Thursday, Gingrich said that âwe should care about the very poor â unlike Governor Romney. But I believe that we should care differently than Barack Obama. Both Governor Romney and Barack Obama seem to believe that a âsafety netâ is all the poor need. I donât believe that. What the poor need is a trampoline so they can spring up and quit being poor.â
Gingrich press secretary fights off Trump questions
Regardless of the extent of Romneyâs verbal miscue, the former governor is now the clear Republican front-runner.
A national poll released Wednesday showed an immediate benefit for Romney, putting him in first place at 31% compared to 26% for Gingrich, 16% for Santorum and 11% for Paul.
The Gallup daily tracking poll had Gingrich ahead of Romney after the former speaker won the January 21 South Carolina primary.
Romney cemented his status as the GOP leader with an overwhelming victory in Tuesdayâs Florida primary. Romney won the primary with 46% of the vote, compared with 32% for Gingrich, 13% for Rick Santorum and 7% for Ron Paul, according to the Florida Department of State.
The victory gave Romney all 50 of Floridaâs convention delegates and, more important, new momentum heading into a series of caucuses and primaries building up to Super Tuesday on March 6, when 10 states will hold nominating contests.
Zakaria: Why I canât wait for the Republican convention
Gingrichâs campaign asked the Republican Party on Thursday to allocate the 50 Florida delegates on a proportional basis, rather than the winner-take-all format that gave them to Romney.
In a letter to the Republican National Committee, the Gingrich campaign argued that an RNC rule says early primaries and caucuses must award delegates proportionally. However, party rules say the issue can be addressed only at the August nominating convention in Tampa, Florida.
Santorum also has expressed support for Florida to change its system, but the Florida Republican Party chairman, Lenny Curry, said in a statement Thursday that wonât happen.
âFlorida was winner-take-all before election day, we were winner-take-all on election day, we will remain winner-take-all,â Curryâs statement said, adding: âIt is a shame when the loser of a contest agrees to the rules before, then cries foul after losing.â
CNNâs Tom Cohen, Jim Acosta, Paul Steinhauser and Alyssa McLendon contributed to this report.