Over on conservative group blog Red State, a blogger named Erick Erickson prepares to get behind Mitt Romney. He's still not happy about it:

Theoretically, Rick Santorum could keep Romney from getting to 1,144. But as Romney piles up more and more wins and neither the Gingrich nor Paul campaigns remain factors, let alone have pulses, the inevitable will set in. Conservatives may not really like Mitt Romney, but they do not want a fractured party too divided to beat Barack Obama. There will be no white knight, no dark horse, and no brokered convention. We have our nominee.

If, come November, Mitt Romney wins, he will owe it to a lot of Republicans who put their reputation on the line and it will be payback time. If Mitt Romney loses, party leaders will undoubtedly try to blame conservatives as they always do, but it will be really hard to cast blame when Romney’s supporters have billed him as Mr. Electable since shortly after they they billed Harriet Miers as a genius conservative pick for the Supreme Court.

Either way, conservatives have and no doubt will continue to make it very clear that Mitt Romney may be the standard bearer of the Republican Party, but he most definitely is not the standard bearer of the conservative movement. The disentangling of the movement from the party will continue. So too will our shared effort to oust Barack Obama from the White House.

Now is the time for all liberals to take great pleasure in watching conservatives holding their noses and supporting a candidate they loathe. I also like this comment thread on the Corner, about this morning's Etch-a-Sketch comment:

Last night Mitt actually gave a decent speech which might make one believe he has finally converted to a conservative candidate. Now, this nitwit goes on the Commie/Clinton News Network and says this. Well, Mitt; is this guy right? Are you just saying what you said last night to get through the primary, then you'll take it all back and morph into McCain JR???

No wonder people have reservations about Mitt.

Rally for Romney: We Don't Know Who He Is, but He's Our Nominee.

The problem remains that he actually believes he has drifted too far to the right.