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2012 Republican Primary Voters In Ohio Wait For Their Candidate

By DAN SEWELL   10/10/11 06:24 AM ET  AP

Republican presidential candidates (L-R), Gary Johnson, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Herman Cain and Jon Huntsman participate in the Fox News/Google GOP Debate at the Orange County Convention Center on September 22, 2011 in Orlando, Florida. The debate features the nine Republican candidates two days before the Florida straw poll. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

WEST CHESTER, Ohio -- The Grand Ole Pub in this Cincinnati suburb is a good place to find Republicans. It's not so easy, though, to find one who feels settled on, or even enthused about the party's current field of presidential candidates.

Patron Jim Goll sat near a portrait of conservative standard-bearer Ronald Reagan, and the walls are decorated with pictures of talk show hosts Sean Hannity and Bill O'Reilly and other political figures. It seemed that Goll and other patrons couldn't see any of the current field joining the Republican icons on the pub wall.

"They've all got some points that I like," Goll said. "If I could take all the candidates and put them in a pot and mix them together, that would be awesome."

Ohio has been a swing state for decades, and recent polls indicate Republicans could take it back in 2012 after Barack Obama's 2008 win – Republican George W. Bush carried Ohio twice, as did Democrat Bill Clinton. But first Ohioans would have to rally around a common candidate.

Mixed feelings and indecision seem common across a swath of Republican-dominated suburbs that provide votes for Republican nominees – whom history says must win Ohio to win the general election. A recent statewide Quinnipiac University poll indicated support for Mitt Romney was at 24 percent, with "don't know" at 22 and Rick Perry at 21 and the rest scattered among the other candidates.

The region's Republican voters were credited with delivering Ohio – and clinching re-election – in 2004 for Bush. John McCain also ran well in the region in 2008, but shy of Bush's 2-to-1 margins.

Ohio plans to vote on March 6, the "Super Tuesday" when about a dozen or so states will hold primaries or caucuses. The challenge for Republican candidates is to generate enough enthusiasm out of the current malaise that they rally behind the Republican nominee. Otherwise, low turnout could turn the state toward Obama again.

Lori Viars, a social conservative activist in Warren County, a series of suburbs between Cincinnati and Dayton, is among those Republicans who predict Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, can't get the region's base out in sufficient numbers.

"I think he (Romney) is the only who one would be objectionable to my crowd, and I worry that because conservatives are split among the other candidates, Romney could win (the nomination) and then we could end up losing to Obama," said Viars, an anti-abortion leader for whom Romney's since-changed abortion rights position alienates her. "I definitely fear for our party."

Viars is still undecided, which she said is unusual for her at this stage.

When Perry got into the presidential race, Tracy Brewer was hoping that the Texas governor would sweep her off her political feet. More than a month later, she's still standing, and still undecided. Perry has stumbled in debates, and she opposes his failed attempt to require Texas girls to be vaccinated against a sexually transmitted disease that can cause cancer, or Texas's policy giving in-state tuition to illegal immigrants.

Brewer was dead set against Romney in 2008, but she's keeping an open mind for 2012 if he looks like the best candidate to defeat Obama.

The GOP-dominated southwest Ohio region has a substantial tea party movement, and many adherents say they support Ron Paul, the libertarian-minded Republican congressman.

Mike Wilson, leader of the Cincinnati tea party, isn't among them. He disagrees with Paul on foreign policy.

"Everybody in has strengths and weaknesses," said Wilson, who thinks Paul has a loyal base that will keep him in the running late into the race, and that it's too soon to crown candidates as front-runners. "I think the media are wrong if they take this as a two-person race."

He recalled that before the primaries began four years ago, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani and Sen. Fred Thompson of Tennessee were considered top contenders. Wilson this year had liked former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who dropped out, and he is among the growing number of people taking a fresh look at pizza magnate Herman Cain, who won a Florida straw poll and drew praise for debate performances.

At the Grand Ole Pub, co-owner Bill Langford likes Cain's business acumen, which he thinks is needed to deal with the nation's struggling economy, although he's not sure Cain can build enough support to win.

"Quite possibly, the person you like isn't electable, and you have to be pragmatic," Langford said.

Langford and wife Pat opened the restaurant-bar in a strip shopping center a year ago, and he said the economy has taken a toll on small businesses like his. They were busy last Friday night, though, with a number of tea party and Republican partisans in the crowd.

Three generations of the Keith family were at one table having burgers, sweet potato fries and other pub fare.

"We just have some serious flaws with the two front-runners (Romney and Perry)," said family patriarch Dan Keith, a pilot. "It's really tough; it's a toss-up."

"I think he's still got a lot of Democrat ideas in his head," chimed in son-in-law Jason Durbin about Perry, referring to Perry's former party affiliation.

Dan's wife Pat likes Newt Gingrich, the former speaker of the House. She suggested that a Cain-Gingrich combination could be good blend of business and government experience.

At the pub's bar, Rex Sowards, who owns a small vending company, said he is still sorting through the declared Republican candidates.

"I do we think we could do better," he said. "But it's early. Who knows? Maybe Romney will get in there and knock Obama out."

Nursing her beer, Christy Dollison, a call center manager, saw unpleasant parallels to 2008, when the veteran candidate McCain outlasted the field that included Romney only to lose to Obama.

"I just see 2008 all over again. It's concerning with the shape the country is in," she said. "We got stuck with McCain last time, and we get stuck with Romney this time."

The picture near the bar reminds some of what they would like to see in a GOP nominee.

"We're all hankering for a Ronald Reagan," said Dan Keith. "And it's not going to happen."

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02:58 PM on 10/11/2011
Same old same old. The GOP field is filled with candidates that can't even attract a majority of their own party, much less of the U.S. electorate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ClevelandLib
Unless
02:02 PM on 10/11/2011
Ronald Reagan would advocate closing tax loopholes for millionaires. He'd also advocate raising taxes and increasing the debt ceiling as he did 11/17 times. Cracks me up these guys are hoping for a president that their party today would summarily reject.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
07:59 PM on 10/11/2011
An acceptable cantidate would have to be for it before he or she is against it.
gclafontaine
Sand is a small price to pay for sandlessness.
01:20 PM on 10/11/2011
Indeed. That uneasiness you feel is due to the fact that all of the GOP candidates are either ignorant ideologues or empty suits with no ideas other than what current polls provide for them.
01:15 PM on 10/11/2011
The GOP problem is very basic. The Party is moving from Right to extreme Right...thus loosing the key Moderate vote...and most of the Independents, who are also Moderates. You cannot ever win a General Election, by catering to an Extreme...whether it's the Extreme Right or the Extreme Left.
01:06 PM on 10/11/2011
It must be a party like they have at the sanitarium. Fits with the dressing up as revolutionaries as you support an unjust oppressive system. What color is the sky in your world?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:04 PM on 10/11/2011
"They've all got some points that I like," Goll said. "If I could take all the candidates and put them in a pot and mix them together, that would be awesome."

Gee, I'd like to put them in a blender!
zatonoichi
the blind swordsman
01:29 PM on 10/11/2011
How about a wood chipper? Or a cement mixer?
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Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:48 PM on 10/11/2011
Small is beautiful.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JACK DOYLE
12:50 PM on 10/11/2011
Combined they are a half wit ?
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Hillbilly49
Don't tell me you are a Christian; let me guess.
11:03 AM on 10/11/2011
The right wing cast of beauty contestants are so incompetent they allow the average, dirt poor, Faux Nooze viewer think they could be president.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ramsha
10:35 AM on 10/11/2011
The poor showing of the Republican Presidential Candidates is not merely due to the candidates make up alone. The Republican ideology itself has to be blamed. It is stagnant in some core principles and no longer a people’s party which cares for the majority of the common folks or their belief's. Their policies create an environment where the gap between the haves and have knots are widening. On the other hand they are blaming the people who are pointing this out as they are outraged by the disparity. You cannot look good when the product you are trying to promote and sell is rotten to the core to many.
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BlueRoseofTexas
There is nothing micro about my bio
10:09 AM on 10/11/2011
At the debate tonight, the moderators should read statements and policies from Reagan without identifying him and see how the candidates react. Then after, the big reveal, showing how they have wandered far into the wilderness off the path their god set in the 80s.
PROGRESSISGOOD
Without Economic Justice, There Is No Justice!
10:38 AM on 10/11/2011
I was appalled when Reagan was elected in 1980. I didn't think American voters were so stupid and cruel. But they were/are.

Now I long for the days of Reagan's conservativism over the Corporate Fascists in the Republican field today.
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BlueRoseofTexas
There is nothing micro about my bio
11:49 AM on 10/11/2011
I know! It's so ironic. It shows how low we've fallen!
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Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:16 PM on 10/11/2011
That's a grand idea...but then they'd say that President Reagan was being quoted out of context just as a visceral reaction.

Nonetheless, the dark refulgence that has taken over the once-'right' GOP and their supporters would certainly be shown for what it is, a dissembling of authoritarianisms under the guise of being 'conservative'.

They have a "Regulate Women, Not Markets' spirit of 'liberty'.

They dream our nightmares.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chefacree
10:04 AM on 10/11/2011
Anybody who would sit around a bar with all those photos of has beens and never was is truly lame.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chefacree
10:01 AM on 10/11/2011
In their hearts they know that not a one of these losers has a chance of ever getting elected. They keep looking for the big daddy but they don't have one. Just little wienies that can't.
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Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:18 PM on 10/11/2011
...or comatose.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:52 AM on 10/11/2011
Last line of the article:

"We're all hankering for a Ronald Reagan," said Dan Keith. "And it's not going to happen."

What a joke! Ronald Reagan couldn't get the 2012 nomination from the current Republican Party. He wouldn't have lasted through the first "debate". He supported gay rights. He raised taxes several times both as Governor of Calif. and as President. He supported comprehensive immigration reform and stem cell research. President Obama is much closer in sync to Reagan's views than any of the lame crop of GOP candidates are. For that matter, the President is closer to Reagan than to Ted Kennedy.
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Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:24 PM on 10/11/2011
That President Reagan is President Obama's ideal president, and not FDR, is something neither the Democrats nor the Tea Party wishes to understand nor grapple with. The GOP, however, does understand, but such 'beauty' does not go with a 'swarthy' complexion in their view.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
henrypapillon
Put a Psychiatrist in every NRA meeting.
09:51 AM on 10/11/2011
Don't fear for the party, fear for the country.
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Larry Motuz
More prayers, fewer preyers.
01:27 PM on 10/11/2011
Fealty to a party tends always to deliver fear for any country. Fealty to wealth over liberty is the byword among many politicians today.

Fanned for your micro-bio.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
roydoe
roydoe knows all-sometimes
09:44 AM on 10/11/2011
The funny thing is that in six months all this hubbub of picking candidates will be old news and the laser-like attacks on Obama will have begun in earnest, and no matter who the standard barer is, the Corporatist Party will coalesce around that person, and he will be God's anointed King who has been imbued with magical powers of Republican perfection, when compared to Obama.
That being said, democrats, don't discount any of these miscreants for one second, because political miracles happen and one of these miscreants will soon be a Republican Saint.
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ywcachieve
President Barack H. Obama supporter.
10:06 AM on 10/11/2011
We Dems have no fear.