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Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich Battle For Bible Belt Voters Ahead Of Super Tuesday 2012

First Posted: 03/03/2012 10:24 am Updated: 03/03/2012 11:27 am

By RUSS BYNUM, ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAVANNAH, Ga. -- The GOP presidential candidates are fighting to win over conservative voters in the Bible Belt as the race takes on a more prominent Southern focus.

After bowing out of recent contests north of the Mason-Dixon line, Newt Gingrich is staking his entire campaign on a big victory Tuesday in Georgia, where the onetime House speaker represented a suburban Atlanta district for 20 years. Rick Santorum is making inroads in Tennessee with a message that the state's evangelical voters should feel right at home with the former Pennsylvania senator's socially conservative views.

Both candidates hope to capitalize on Super Tuesday victories to propel their campaigns forward to Alabama and Mississippi on March 13 and to Louisiana on March 24. None of those Southern states was very hospitable to Mitt Romney during the former Massachusetts governor's White House bid in 2008, so there's prime recruiting ground to entice conservative voters who want an alternative to Romney.

"I fully believe that the South will be a key player," said Joe Dendy, Republican chairman for Cobb County in metro Atlanta. "I think we're going to see a clearer picture between Newt and Rick as to which one the South has seen as more conservative. And that's going to play a big role in the rest of the campaign."

With 76 delegates up for grabs, Georgia holds the biggest prize on Super Tuesday, and Gingrich spent most of the past week touring the state by bus. Still, a victory largely would be seen as meeting expectations and might not generate much momentum.

For Santorum, any victory in the South would come off as a sign of strength.

Jacob Wilkins, a 19-year-old student at a Tennessee Bible college, said he's decided Santorum is the superior candidate "as far as moral issues are concerned." He heard Santorum speak last week at a Baptist church in Powell, Tenn.

"America's a mess and he's got a better hold on what we need than any other candidates," Wilkins said.

Romney hasn't completely conceded the South. He stopped once in Atlanta last month, and his wife stood in for him at an event in the city Thursday. He planned a rally Sunday in Knoxville, Tenn.

In the 2008 race, Romney finished third in each of the upcoming Southern primary states except for Mississippi, which voted after Romney quit the race. He still faces trouble connecting with Southern conservatives, who see him as too moderate, and with evangelicals, who might be troubled by Romney's Mormon faith.

"I'm a Christian and he's a Mormon," said Tamara McGhee, 45, a teacher from Douglasville, Ga., who remains undecided between Gingrich and Santorum. "That may create some bias with me because we have very different religions."

After Super Tuesday, the Southern campaign moves to Alabama and Mississippi, which hold primaries a week later.

"Super Tuesday, I'm sure, will set the tone for Mississippi and Alabama particularly," said Henry Barbour, a Republican National Committee member and Romney supporter from Mississippi.

His uncle, former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, has said he won't endorse until the party picks a nominee.

Most of the Republican statewide elected officials in Mississippi, including U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran, are backing Romney. Gov. Phil Bryant hasn't made an endorsement since his initial pick, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, ended his run, although he said he is leaning toward Romney.

Dot Ward, a 73-year-old homemaker from Madison, Miss., said she is leaning toward Gingrich.

"I think Newt stands the greatest possibility of being able to debate with him intelligently and present a good case," Ward said. "But then I'm not sure about Newt and his ability to be president. See, that's what worries me the most. I'm unhappy about all of the candidates. And Rick Santorum, I do like very much. I like what he stands for. But I don't think he's got what seems to me the maturity."

Louisiana has received scant attention with its primary still three weeks away. Gov. Bobby Jindal hasn't endorsed anyone since Perry, whom he supported, dropped out. Campaign ads, mailers, bumper stickers and yard signs are largely missing from the state, which has 46 delegates up for grabs.

Jason Dore, executive director of Louisiana's state GOP, expects candidates will spend time and money in his state if the nomination remains undecided by the March 24 primary.

"It's going to be a last-minute thing," Dore said.

The state's Republican voters are staunchly conservative and are expected to favor Gingrich or Santorum in the primary over Romney.

"I would think Louisiana voters would gravitate toward Gingrich as a fellow Southerner and conservative and toward Santorum as a conservative, and not in the Romney camp, except only in the reluctant sense," said Kirby Goidel, a Louisiana State University political science professor.

In Georgia, evangelicals and tea party voters have struggled with their choices.

The group Georgia Right to Life endorsed both Santorum and Gingrich as equally strong abortion foes.

The Christian Coalition of Georgia hasn't endorsed anyone, but its leaders have sent emails opposing Gingrich. Jerry Luquire, the group's president, said Gingrich has too much "anti-family baggage" associated with his three marriages and past infidelities.

"He may have been forgiven by his family and by his God," Luquire said. "But there is still a penalty he has to pay."

Mike Morton, a tea party leader in Rome, said members of his group have been favoring Santorum. But he sees Gingrich gaining ground by focusing on Georgia and promising $2.50-a-gallon gasoline.

"What I kind of see now is the question of Santorum's electability starting to rear its head again," said Morton, who sees the candidate's focus on social issues turning off some fiscal conservatives. "It causes people to think if that's where he is, is he really electable in a cycle where the economy and getting jobs are the top issues?"

___

Associated Press writers Erik Schelzig in Powell, Tenn., Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson, Miss., and Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, La., contributed to this report.

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08:10 AM on 03/14/2012
How did Mr. G. think he would win in AL? They do NOT even let us gamble or watch porn here. Didn't he know that these folks saw and read about his open marriage stuff? They probably wanted to throw their bibles at him. LOL :)
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dumbunny
07:26 PM on 03/04/2012
Gingrich is going to wipe the floor with santorum.
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linnwood
09:38 AM on 03/04/2012
How funny is this......Gingrich and Santorum fight over the Bible belt vote......A Catholic and a serial adulterer.....Funnier is that the serial adulterer will win the Bible belt......Can I hear an AMEN?
08:12 AM on 03/14/2012
OMG! That is what I was thinking! I don't know about adulterer but I read he wanted an open marriage. I did NOT even bother to vote. I do NOT want either.
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knewsreply
PhD: International Educator and Marketer
09:30 AM on 03/04/2012
I guess it's better to lie about ones faith than be an example of faith in action.
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thomasdep
Where's Skinny?
09:13 AM on 03/04/2012
GINGRICH? I thought he was trying to get on Dancing with the stars or some other show because he was ALL WASHED UP!!!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Mafdet
12:51 AM on 03/04/2012
I've spent some time in the Deep South. Half my family comes from there. In the Deep South you will find a higher concentration than anyplace else of preachers, community leaders, law enforcement officers...who all fit the same profile: Puffy, pink, windbags obssessed with material goods and hair, who beat their fat little fists against their chests and forever declare that they know what's good for everyone else even if imperfect themselves. In a word, Gingrich. I'm just going to go out on a limb and declare that Gingrich will certainly prevail over Santorum in Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. I guess Romney will be counting on Gingrich and Santorum dividing up the batshtcrazy voters in those states so that he can pull out some wins, but I don't think Santorum is going to get very many votes down there. I think Gingrich might actually win more states than just Georgia. And I wouldn't be surprised to hear the first rumblings of what Son-of-the-South running mate Romney is thinking about. Well, we've already seen Bob McDonnell's name raised.
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dekendall
12:35 AM on 03/04/2012
None of the GOP candidates seem to care about the middle class and the poor. They are in support of corporate America first. If there is a little left over for the lower classes to grovel over they would be happy. Considering what Obama inherited when he took office I think he has done a good job for the most part. There are things I dissagree with and things that are improving kind of on the slow side but, still things are better than they were. I say give Obama another 4 years and see where we are then.
12:18 AM on 03/04/2012
I moved to Tennessee from Chicago and I can tell you first-hand that these are the meanest so-called Christians I have ever met. They call this the Bible belt, but they don't even know the Bible. They try to quote a scripture, but I always have to finish it for them. They say the Bible says....how does that go... well I think it says.... My advice: Don't ever really need someone to pray for you, by the time they figure out what the Bible says, you will be on life support.
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Mafdet
12:56 AM on 03/04/2012
I went to a funeral in Mississippi last year and the preacher, amid his spirited intonations, instructed us all to look to the Book Zedachariah for guidance in our grief. As I glanced across the row, I saw at least a half dozen puzzled people pull out their Bibles and dutifully look for it, to no avail.
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FALCON72
You can see the truth in every mirror.
08:34 PM on 03/04/2012
For the southern evangelicals, the Bible is a book they put pictures of their family in. The get preachin' from the preacher; it's his job to tell them what the Bible says and what that means. And they don't question it, because a man of God just spoke to them. It isn't called blind faith for nothing.
11:13 PM on 03/03/2012
"The Christian Coalition of Georgia hasn't endorsed anyone, but its leaders have sent emails opposing Gingrich. Jerry Luquire, the group's president, said Gingrich has too much "anti-family baggage" associated with his three marriages and past infidelities.

"He may have been forgiven by his family and by his God," Luquire said. "But there is still a penalty he has to pay."

So he may have been forgive by God but that is not good enough for these Christians? These people are nuts.
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donbrown
A television producer in Hawaii
10:47 PM on 03/03/2012
LOL...fortunately, the "Bible Belt" doesn't have the influence it did before 2000.
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Otherday
Chief Imperial Sage, Earth, Milky Way Quadrant
09:40 PM on 03/03/2012
Think of all the Baptists, Methodists, Pentecostals, and other Christian denominations all across the South. You have to wonder how they take Santorum's observation: "American Protestants have fallen away from Christianity."

Maybe he ought to explain that better?
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Vere15
Vero nihil verious (nothing truer than truth)
11:16 PM on 03/03/2012
Fundamentalist sure have fallen away from Christianity - they now believe in salvation by GOPPIA only - the rest does not matter to them
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dbrett480
08:56 PM on 03/03/2012
I look forward to more craziness coming from Newt and Santorum in an effort to attract core Republican voters.
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StillAmused
Some mayo on that troll, please...
08:36 PM on 03/03/2012
Just wonderin' if the thr0wbacks listening to these aliens — and applauding them — realize that BOTH are båtsh!t-cråzy?
07:27 PM on 03/03/2012
I just hope they can all stay in the race. The longer it goes, the more extreme it becomes... and the more clear it becomes as to exactly what they stand for. In other words, the more they open their mouths, the less Obama has to. Republican primaries are the best democratic campaign gifts money cannot buy.
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Dbos
Single payer universal health insurance agent
07:10 PM on 03/03/2012
No longer called the Bible belt ; it should now be called the Bile belt.