State Police Clash With Pro-Hamas Thugs at the University of Virginia
Here's the Security Incident That Occured at the White House Last Night
Here's a Liberal Policy That Now Has Bill Maher 'Incensed'
Thank God For Straight White Men
The Left, Win or Lose, Will Never Give Up
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 216: Malachi the Messianic Messenger - Hebrew’s Bible...
Liberty Will Be Necessary for Us to Settle in Space
Behaving Badly: Texas has a Better Way to Deal with Campus Protests
The Latest Biden Insanity: Import Hamas Terrorists
Is the VA Lying About Capacity to Protect a Good Ole Boy System?
Joe Biden Hands Out Obamacare to Illegal Immigrants
Democrat Massachusetts Gov. Approves $400 Million In Freebies for Illegal Immigrants
In Case You Didn't Know, Roads and Bridges Are Now 'Racist'
Joe Biden's Economic Advisor Has No Idea How 'Bidenomics' Work
Americans Overwhelmingly Describe Trump As Strong Leader, A Stark Contrast of What They...
Tipsheet

Smooth Sailing: Romney Has 21 Point Lead in South Carolina

It seems as though Mitt Romney has all but won South Carolina, as he opened up a 21-point lead in the polls. The former governor has fended off attacks from Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich, who have taken to using his record at Bain Capital against the frontrunner. Indeed, South Carolinians seem not to care -- and in fact, the attacks have only succeeded in diminishing support for both candidates, who placed fifth and fourth respectively.

Advertisement

The poll showed 37 percent of South Carolina Republican voters back Romney. Congressman Ron Paul and former Senator Rick Santorum tied for second place with 16 percent support.

In a question asked of Republicans and Democrats, the poll found South Carolina voters would favor Romney over Obama by 46 percent to 40 percent.

After Gingrich, Texas Governor Rick Perry placed next in the Reuters/Ipsos poll with 6 percent support. Former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman, who was third in the New Hampshire primary, came in the lowest in the South Carolina poll with 3 percent support.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online from January 10-13 with a sample of 995 South Carolina registered voters. It included 398 Republicans and 380 Democrats.

Statistical margins of error are not applicable to online surveys but this poll has a credibility interval of plus or minus 5 percentage points for Republicans and 3.4 percentage points for all voters.

Is Romney all but the nominee? Or can someone else stop him in the later states?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement