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Rick Santorum's Rural Edge Keeps Him In GOP Primary

JIM KUHNHENN   03/23/12 04:55 PM ET  AP

WEST MONROE, La. — Republican presidential nominating contests often reveal a rural-urban split in the party, but what sets this year's campaign apart is the emphasis Rick Santorum is placing on that divide and wearing his successes in small-town America as a badge of honor.

To hear Santorum tell it, the ability of front-runner Mitt Romney to win in big-city suburbs is a mark of ideological weakness, not political strength.

"Gov. Romney does well in the counties where Democrats do well, and we do well in the counties where Republicans do well," Santorum said this week. "That might give you some indication as to who the candidate is who best reflects the values of the Republican party."

Whereas President Barack Obama once infamously tried to explain rural culture with an anthropologist's detachment, saying rural Americans "cling to guns or religion" out of a sense of economic desperation, Santorum happily embraces the culture. He worships with Pentecostals in central Louisiana one day and campaigns at a gun range in the north on another, testing his marksmanship by pulling the trigger of a .45-caliber semiautomatic Colt pistol.

Crisscrossing Louisiana this week and Illinois before that, Santorum thrived in small cities and rural areas where social conservatism runs deep, where the stresses of a slow economic recovery are intensely felt and where his faith-based, small-government message resonates more deeply than in cities and suburbs.

In state after state since he began to emerge as the not-Romney candidate in the Republican field, Santorum has beaten Romney in rural areas, even in states Romney ultimately won. In Michigan and Ohio, states where Romney barely prevailed, Santorum won the rural vote 43 percent to 34 percent, and 46 percent to 28 percent, respectively, according to exit polls.

In Illinois, where Romney easily won, Santorum still took the rural-small city vote 45 percent to 35 percent.

On Saturday, Santorum is expected to win in Louisiana, where he has campaigned more vigorously than Romney.

And while Santorum continues to collect delegates off his success in rural counties and congressional districts, his relative weakness elsewhere raises doubts about his ability to slow Romney's march to the nomination.

"He needs to do a lot better in the suburbs than he has recently," John Feehery, a Republican strategist and former top House Republican leadership aide, said of Santorum. "He's definitely the candidate of the sticks."

Stuart Roy, an adviser to a super political action committee that supports Santorum, said Santorum's inability to break through in the suburbs and cities is in a part a function of his conservative message.

"He is maximizing the social conservative base in most states," Roy said. "In doing that you are going to lose some of that suburban moderate vote. There is a trade-off there. The idea here is to win the primary or caucus. It's not about where the vote comes from."

But he said another factor is limited money. Santorum's campaign operates on a shoe-string budget and that means buying television advertising in cheaper markets, which tend not be in the big cities. As a result, suburban voters aren't as exposed to his message as they are to Romney's, along with Romney's deep-pocketed campaign and super PAC.

Santorum aides downplay the need for stringing together state victories, noting that he can keep amassing delegates by winning in states that are conservative strongholds like Louisiana and otherwise staying within reach with rural and small-town victories that also yield a share of delegates.

And Santorum's conservatism has a ready audience outside the city beltways and beyond the collar counties that surround them.

Indeed, rural and small-town voters are most apt to be deeply conservative _37 percent describe themselves that way compared to 33 percent in the suburbs and 31 percent among urban voters, according to surveys in 16 states where exit or entrance polls have been conducted. What's more, 68 percent of rural voters identified themselves as born again or evangelical Christians, compared with about half in urban or suburban precincts.

In the states that will vote in the next two weeks, Wisconsin has the highest concentration of rural small-town voters at 41 percent, according to the 2008 GOP primary exit poll. The state this year is considered a toss-up.

Santorum looks strong in Louisiana, where social conservative Mike Huckabee won in 2008 over John McCain, the eventual Republican nominee. Huckabee won 43 percent of the vote, aided by sizable majorities in the rural and predominantly Protestant northern part of the state.

But the rural-urban, Santorum-Romney divide also raises questions about how strong Santorum would be against Obama should he succeed in his long-shot quest to deny Romney the nomination.

The suburbs are strongholds of swing voters that have been crucial in presidential elections for years.

"He struggles in the swing areas of swing states," Kevin Madden, a consultant for Romney, said of Santorum. "That would put us in a difficult position to win back the presidency. I don't think there is much confidence that he would all of a sudden find the message in a general election."

Santorum, however, sees a model in the conservative candidates who succeeded in the 2010 general election by focusing their campaigns on limited government.

"Whether you are a conservative or an independent or a moderate, I think people are very concerned about the scale and size of the government and this intrusion into people's lives," he said, answering questions outside a fish processing plant in Kenner, La., this week. "We can make this campaign about that."

Santorum appeals on several levels. His social conservatism and religious underpinnings attract some while others like his small-government message.

"His Christian values – it is one of the things that stands out about him," Larry Glascock Jr., a West Monroe, La., truck driver, said at Santorum's stop Friday. "The country needs to turn back to God."

Others like his desire for a smaller government.

"I don't want any big government, no mandates," said James B. Terral, a retired accountant from West Monroe. "Personally I think an employer should not be forced to do anything but pay an employee. They don't need to baby sit them and they don't need to act like they own them. We need more freedom to do what you want to do."

___

AP Deputy Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta in Washington contributed to this report.

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MarkInTexas
Moderate is the new liberal.
07:08 PM on 03/24/2012
The last statement of this article highlights the thoroughness of the brainwashing by the masters over their pawns.
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Snerdgronk
co(R)po(R)atoc(R)acy plutoc(R)acy
03:14 PM on 03/24/2012
...

Snerd
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
01:31 PM on 03/24/2012
"No!... I hate President Obama, MORE!!!!"
"So vote for ME!"
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Snerdgronk
co(R)po(R)atoc(R)acy plutoc(R)acy
02:39 PM on 03/24/2012
Egg-actly!

Snerd
REDSTATEREFUGEE
Texan by birth ; Californian by choice
01:21 PM on 03/24/2012
If Googling a U.S. map of Red and Blue counties, it is easily detectable that most Republican voters ( largely neo-conservative ) reside in the rural heartland of America. Evem within large states like Texas and California, more liberal populations gravitate to "islands" of urbanity, leaving the sparsely populated agricultural regions to the conservatives.

Time is not on the side of the GOP, however, as more and more folks are attracted to metro areas---cities,suburbs, and exurbs---with their jobs, educational and entertainment resources, and consumer amenities. Demographically, Santorum will lose the Republican nomination to Romney, who will lose by a small margin to Obama.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HOMEY1
WE WON YOU LOST
01:14 PM on 03/24/2012
HP was that headline for our amusement? KEEPS HIM AFLOAT hahahahahahahahahahahahaha
GOOGLE SANTORUM
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Snerdgronk
co(R)po(R)atoc(R)acy plutoc(R)acy
02:41 PM on 03/24/2012
I guess it's 'cause, he not walkin' on water, no more ...

Snerd
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jeff Sadowsky
10:39 AM on 03/24/2012
The only vote that matters takes place on Nov 6th. FOUR MORE YEARS!!!!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
athiesttoo
reorganization: creating an illusion of progress
10:20 AM on 03/24/2012
Louisiana the state the brings you Mr. Family Values, Senator David Vitter.
Why let a little thing like prostitution cloud your voting judgement.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The National Inquire of Politics the GOP!
02:48 PM on 03/24/2012
C Street produces strange bedfellows and Washington politicians!
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windstorm46
y a H O O O O !!!!! 4 MORE for 44
05:45 AM on 03/24/2012
Ricki will win today and again will believe he's going to be president - because God preordained it !!!
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The National Inquire of Politics the GOP!
02:49 PM on 03/24/2012
If only we could believe in GOD?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Zibop
The bags are full of crayzee.
03:09 AM on 03/24/2012
Helium head.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nypapajoe
02:09 AM on 03/24/2012
A political party that continuously alienates gays, women, intellectuals, minorities and other religious denominations based on their personal biased, bigoted, racist hatred, without any factual basis to support their irrational rhetoric that clearly can not be defended nor supported by any logical means is profoundly stupid! There is no reasonable explanation other than its crazy! how is this possible? It's an election year! You would think that these hypocrites would embrace their hypocrisy and at least try not to alienate everybody! America this is complete unadulterated lunacy! Just listen to these Republicans it's embarrassing! I just returned from Europe and they are laughing at us!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chazbo
11:51 PM on 03/23/2012
What's keeping Santorum afloat is his head which happens to be made out of cork.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
den1953
The National Inquire of Politics the GOP!
02:51 PM on 03/24/2012
F&F
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HIGNJ
Yeah, I'm gonna say it because you won't...
10:16 PM on 03/23/2012
Larry Glascock Jr., a West Monroe, La., truck driver, said at Santorum's stop Friday. "The country needs to turn back to God." No offense Larry..but really? really?
To take this road will be the cause of the Crusades again!

You want to take a stance on "small government" and want "freedom"? Okay..don't pay into Medicaid, (SSI and SSD), Medicare, family first, unemployment, WIC and social security.. The very thing they are against is what they utilize daily or may need in the future..
Biting the hand that feeds them??
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PrairieGayCompanion
To improve is to change
08:49 PM on 03/23/2012
Success is getting 34% percent of a 20% voter turnout.
jimbo57
ni dieu ni maitre
08:18 PM on 03/23/2012
GOP. Get their funding in gated communities of rolling lawns and McMansions. Get their votes in trailer parks. And, as far as they're concerned, the rest of the country between those two extremes can go suck eggs.
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athiesttoo
reorganization: creating an illusion of progress
10:23 AM on 03/24/2012
West Monroe has some trashy trailer parks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
miketothad
trollslayer
01:33 PM on 03/24/2012
Hell, Jefferson Parish has some of those.
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MaxHeadroom
My Karma ran over my dogma.
08:01 PM on 03/23/2012
What "edge"? The dummies that don't believe in evolution, or still think that the President isn't a citizen and is a practicing Muslim as well?

Be afraid, very afraid, Mr. President.