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Rick Santorum Won Alabama Primary With Help From Religious Voters

By ALAN FRAM and JENNIFER AGIESTA   03/14/12 11:29 AM ET  AP

WASHINGTON -- People favoring a candidate who shares their religious beliefs helped Rick Santorum capture Tuesday's Republican presidential primary in Alabama, exit polls of voters showed. He also won among women and younger voters.

In the contest in neighboring Mississippi, Santorum did well with those caring most strongly about a contender's religion, and those seeking a true conservative and strong moral character in their nominee.

People saying it mattered that they share religious beliefs with their candidates comprised three-quarters or more of voters in both Deep South states. Santorum, the former Pennsylvania senator who has repeatedly emphasized the pivotal role Catholicism has played in his life, won 41 percent of their votes in Alabama, while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich took 31 percent. Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, was a distant third with 23 percent of their vote.

In Mississippi, Santorum, Gingrich and Romney ran roughly evenly with that group. But among the nearly half of Mississippians saying sharing religion with a candidate was very important, Santorum won 43 percent, well ahead of his two rivals.

In another measure of the role religion was playing, Santorum captured 35 percent of white evangelical Christian or born-again voters in both Alabama and Mississippi, about the same as Gingrich but several percentage points better than Romney. Such voters accounted for 8 in 10 voters in Mississippi, the most in any state this year where voters have been surveyed, and nearly as many in Alabama.

Santorum won support from almost 4 in 10 women in Alabama, several points ahead of Romney. He and Gingrich ran about evenly with men in that state. Santorum did especially strongly with working women there, capturing nearly half of their votes – more than double the number backing either Romney or Gingrich.

Both genders were more closely divided in Mississippi.

Santorum won in both states among voters under age 45, taking 4 in 10 or more of their votes.

Santorum had a huge lead among voters in both states seeking a candidate who is a real conservative, winning just over half of their votes. He also captured more than 6 in 10 of those in each state preferring a candidate with strong moral character, rewarding a contender who spoke unhesitatingly about the importance of family and faith.

Romney did strongly with each state's more moderate voters, capturing nearly 4 in 10 moderates and liberals, but it was obviously not enough. Underscoring his weaknesses with both state's voters, he lost command of several constituencies he has generally been able to count on previously.

While he has often won among voters citing the economy as their top worry, those voters divided about evenly in Mississippi. He won that group only slightly in Alabama.

As with every state so far, the largest group of voters in Alabama and Mississippi selected the economy as the issue that mattered most. Romney, the wealthy former private equity executive, has made repairing the economy a top focus of his campaign and has prevailed among voters concerned about that issue in most states so far in 2012.

In Mississippi, Romney shared a lead with Santorum with college graduates and people from families earning at least $100,000 annually, while he and Gingrich both led among people age 65 and up. In Alabama, he split the lead with Gingrich among college graduates and with both his rivals among regular Republicans. All are groups Romney has typically won.

In both states, Romney and Gingrich each won about a third of people without college degrees, with Romney lagging behind. That characteristic is widely used to measure blue-collar voters, a constituency that the GOP must dominate in the general election to offset Democratic advantages with other groups. Nearly 6 in 10 in both states lacked degrees, ranking both near the top in that category among states that have voted so far.

Santorum ran about evenly with Gingrich in Alabama when voters were asked which candidate best understood the problems of typical Americans, an attempt to measure the empathy that voters see in the contenders. In Mississippi, Gingrich was ahead with that group.

Texas Rep. Ron Paul put little effort into both states' races.

Romney led among the nearly 4 in 10 voters in both states who cited the ability to defeat President Barack Obama in the November election as the main quality they are seeking in a candidate. Given four choices, that has been the top factor named in every state so far.

The surveys of voters in Alabama's and Mississippi's GOP presidential primaries were conducted for The Associated Press and the television networks by Edison Research. This includes preliminary results from 1,589 Alabama voters interviewed Tuesday as they left their polling places at 30 randomly selected sites, and from 1,665 Mississippi voters as they left 30 polling places. Each survey had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

___

AP news survey specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

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RepublicanDepression
Of the1% by the1% for the Gerrymandering One% =GOP
03:00 AM on 03/15/2012
The Alabama and Mississippi GOP males went into the privacy of the GOP primary.

When they emerged, Santorum was on everyone's lips.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
philoec
07:26 PM on 03/14/2012
Rick in the land of EWTN, there's no way you could lose, for that state is really a moral state, as proven -Those Franciscan nuns and friars where praying day and night and offering up for this to happen; God was pleased with their humility, for they have asked for wisdom, not for earthly treasures!
Satan is a chained dog, only, it'll get you, only if you get close to it. But we've seen God is all powerful, omnipotent, and JUST!!!
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john rajah
'Why do u call me Lord and dont do what I say?'
06:09 PM on 03/14/2012
These people vote according to the directions of their "pastors",who get their directions from talk radio funded by New York moneymen
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ChaCubed
Fabulously Liberal
02:57 PM on 03/14/2012
He won with the "help" of religious voters??? That's quite an understatement.

Santorum is a direct result of rabid anti-Obamaism, of which (according to a Republican strategist on The Rachel Maddow Show) polls show, White Evangelical Christians, are the most intense, and who vote for Santorum almost 100%; which makes sense because they'd be hard-pressed to vote for Romney or Gingrich. In addition, although they are not broken out as a separate group in the polls, I assume, White Fundamentalist Catholics, who most likely do not embrace Romney or Gingrich, also vote for Santorum.

I think it is indicative of the level of anti-Obamaism of White Evangelical Christians that they will vote for Santorum in spite of the fact that he's Catholic, and in spite of the fact that he said Protestants left Christianity. It's a perfect example of "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" and "politics makes strange bedfellows". :-))
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
philoec
08:01 PM on 03/14/2012
What faith is that white fundamentalist catholics?
Isn't only, ONE, HOLY, APOSTOLIC, CATHOLIC (UNIVERSAL, because God said so) Church? ☺
Conspiracy theories is the result of years of immorality, indeed. But we still can't sing victory, for satan is working extra time, to make sure to lure all lukewarm souls!!
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ChaCubed
Fabulously Liberal
09:15 PM on 03/14/2012
There are many difference among Catholic congregations, Progressive Catholics, Regressive Catholics, Liberal Catholics, Conservative Catholics, Catholics for whom Catholicism is their religion and part of their life; and Catholics for whom everything is related to the Catholic beliefs, and the interpretations of scripture, they embrace.

It is sometimes difficult to tell if a poster is mocking religious people or is expressing their own religious and political beliefs, .... but if you are NOT mocking Catholics in your posts, then you are a perfect example of a strong religiopolitical Conservative Fundamentalist Catholic, perhaps a Conservative Fundamentalist Evangelical Catholic, perhaps even a Born Again Conservative Fundamentalist Evangelical Catholic! :-)

And yes, before you ask, an internet search will return multiple results from people who self-identify as such.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
02:33 PM on 03/14/2012
Isn't that all there are down there...religious voters? Two more states on my never move there list
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ChaCubed
Fabulously Liberal
03:10 PM on 03/14/2012
I am moving to Central Florida - "Florida's Heartland" of White Christian Republicans, because I found my dream home there. People wonder how I'll survive. I know in-home parties, which are popular there, are out of the question, but since that's not my thing anyway, I'll be fine; and since my immediate family are White Fundamentalist Catholic Republicans, I'll can get along with individuals who will keep their religiopolitics to themselves, and I will do the same.

I am optimistic, but not stupid: I'm renting the house for 4-6 months before purchasing it. ;-)
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
06:28 PM on 03/14/2012
I am a Yankee born and raised on Long Island now retired in S.C. We love it down here. Have a great house on 2 1/2 acres would NEVER be able to afford in N.Y. I find that if you do not talk politics and religion you will be just fine. Great idea to rent first though. We lived in a small town above Augusta, Ga. and were absolutely miserable there, hubby took a job transfer to Ga. because we knew we wanted to retire South for the weather. It did not work out but we love the low-country of S.C. Good Luck....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
philoec
08:02 PM on 03/14/2012
Ouch, the truth hurts -really bad!!!
considerthis
I try my best
12:53 PM on 03/14/2012
Santorum shares the women's beliefs? Somebody's lying here - 98% of women do not practice what he preachs about contraception.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
02:34 PM on 03/14/2012
It must be 98% of informed women..we are talking Mississippi and Alabama here. fanned
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
philoec
08:03 PM on 03/14/2012
What else he should preach? But what God commands him, you and me to do.
considerthis
I try my best
08:47 AM on 03/16/2012
he does not tell me what God commands of me - and apparently, my God and his speak differently
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12:27 PM on 03/14/2012
Stupid Jesus Freaks
02:01 PM on 03/14/2012
Everyone is entitled to their opinion. I think maybe if we all followed the teachings of Jesus more, this country would not be going down the toilet.
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camelias and sweet tea
Small drinking village with a shrimping problem
02:35 PM on 03/14/2012
Some prefer other tales. Easter bunny, Alice in Wonderland, Dr. Seuss, I could go on.
Some people just do not believe all the Bible stories.
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Okiemama
03:02 PM on 03/14/2012
People in the west have been doing that for over 2000 years. They have fought wars in his name and burned heretics in his name and persecuted others in his name. We might want to try ignoring him.
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JimR36
Micro-bio: where to begin...
12:04 PM on 03/14/2012
"Romney did strongly with each state's more moderate voters, capturing nearly 4 in 10 moderates and liberals"

Just how many Republican liberals are there in Alabama and Mississippi???????????????????????
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02:43 PM on 03/14/2012
Not surprising that Romney does not do well in the evangelical uneducated south. The more evangelical the state, the less educated people are and the more of federal tax money they get back from the federal government. I am tired of sending large amounts back to these states that still think the south should secede from the US. Let them do so and save the rest of us lots of tax money.
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philoec
08:04 PM on 03/14/2012
Beginning today, I'll start sending my contribution to Rock's campaign, for he has prove the South really has still morals.