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Newt Gingrich to visit Covington Feb. 29
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Presidential candidate Newt Gingrich will visit Newton County Feb. 29 as he campaigns in advance of the March 6 GOP presidential primary.

Gingrich, the former U.S. House speaker and Georgia native, will speak at a one-hour rally at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 29, at Peachtree Academy, 14101 U.S. Highway 278 in Covington.

The rally is open to the public, and Covington will be the only east metro stop on Gingrich's bus tour to Gainesville, according to former State Sen. John Douglas, who is working with Gingrich's campaign.

Gingrich said Sunday that he and other Republican presidential candidates must win their home-turf contests or face serious questions about continuing in the race.

The first test will come Feb. 28 in the GOP primary in Michigan, where rival Mitt Romney was born and his father was governor.

If Romney loses in Michigan, "I don't see what he says the next morning to his donors to stay in the race," Gingrich told "Fox News Sunday."

But Gingrich also acknowledged that he must win the March 6 vote in Georgia, a state that launched his political career more than 30 years ago. The same, he said, goes for Rick Santorum during the April primary in Pennsylvania, where Santorum was a senator.

"If any of the three loses our home state ... you have, I think, very, very badly weakened candidacies," Gingrich said. "I was home campaigning for the last two days precisely to say to all of my friends back home, Georgia really matters. You cannot take this for granted."

But Gingrich stopped short of saying he would drop out if he lost Georgia "given the chaos of this race."

The Republican rivals face a series of nine primaries and four caucuses between now and Super Tuesday on March 6. At stake are 518 delegates, more than three times the number awarded so far.

Georgia has the biggest delegate haul at stake, 76. Sensing an opportunity, the pro-Romney group Restore Our Future is targeting Gingrich in television ads in the state, hoping to deny the former House speaker a sweep of the delegates and leave some on the table for Romney to scoop up.

Information in this article was obtained from the Associated Press.