Rick Santorum easily won the Louisiana GOP primary Saturday, with exit polls showing such a clear win that the race was called by all the major networks as soon as polls closed at 9 PM EDT. By 11 PM he had about 50% of the vote and Romney was in danger of not even getting the 25% he needed to capture any delegates.
But it was the exit polls that showed the most interesting parts of the story. 75% of primary voters were 45 and older, 94% white.
The troubling news for Romney in the state: Santorum won self-described conservatives as well as moderates and liberals. Santorum won voters who said the economy was the most important issue by 13 points (and deficit voters by one point). Romney did win by 23 points among those who said that a candidate who could defeat President Obama was the most important, but overall that was just 38% of the voters. Santorum won overwhelmingly among those who were looking for moral or conservative candidates. Romney didn't even get 10% of either category, and Santorum got 70% of them. Combined, they made up 46% of the voters.
Here's the real shocker: 44% said Mitt Romney was the most likely candidate who could win. 27% of those folks voted for Santorum anyway, whereas of the third of the voters who said Santorum was the most likely candidate who could win in November, 94% of them indeed put their vote where their opinion was.
More people thought Newt Gingrich understood their problems better than Romney, 26-21%. 42% thought Santorum did. Most important question, if only Romney and Santorum were on the ballot, Santorum would have won 59-37%.
Now, does any of this matter? Will Gingrich finally get the hint? Who knows? Anyhow, a week from Tuesday brings us to Maryland and Wisconsin. Will anything have changed by then? Probably not.
We'll see.
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