This Thread of Libs Melting Down Over The Washington Post Not Endorsing Kamala...
Here's What a Shark Tank Host Said About Kamala That Caused a Total...
Now We’ll Never Know Who The Washington Post Supports
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 239: What the Bible Says About Truth –...
The Great Gaslight About the Great Replacement
Trump Takes an Axe to Tax
Exxon Knew! First Warming and Climate, Now Plastics
Turn Off the Politicians and Listen to Yourself
Alive and Ambulatory? Let’s Be Thankful for These Blessings.
Dangerous Words
America’s Greatness Is found in 'One Nation, Under God'
20 Reasons to Vote for Republicans-- and Especially for Donald Trump
Kamala, Jesus, and the Founders
Here’s the Highlights of Joe Rogan’s Three-Hour Interview With Trump
Israel Offers Grim Warning to Iran After Launching Strikes
Tipsheet

Santorum Poised for Big Win in Louisiana

Tonight's Louisiana primary will see residents of the Pelican State go to the polls to choose their nominee for the GOP presidential nomination. Louisiana has 46 delegates, but only twenty will be awarded tonight. The remaining will be doled out at the state's June GOP convention.
Advertisement

Rick Santorum has been running strong in the state. The latest poll in Townhall's poll tracker shows the Pennsylvania Republican leading Mitt Romney by fourteen percentage points. A previous poll showed Santorum up by thirteen points. It's likely that Santorum will cruise to victory.

Romney's southern state struggles will continue tonight in Louisiana. The only southern primary that the frontrunner has won has been Florida - and Florida isn't exactly a classic southern state in terms of demographics - though neither is Louisiana. There are fewer evangelicals in Louisiana than in neighboring Mississippi and Alabama and a sizable Catholic population. These two facts would hurt a traditional evangelical candidate, but Santorum's conservative Catholicism will actually be aided. Additionally, despite Louisiana's status as a red state, only 27 percent of voters are registered Republicans, compared to nearly fifty percent of Democrats.

Advertisement

Santorum needs all the delegates he can get at this point to keep the momentum alive and keep up his hopes of having a chance to influence the GOP race. It's possible to sketch a path for Romney to 1,144 delegates - the number anyone needs to secure the nomination - but it's harder and harder to see a viable future for Santorum. Louisiana will give him a modicum of momentum, but after the April 3 mid-Atlantic primaries, there will be a three-week lull. Santorum needs to be able to make the case that his participation is necessary going forward.

Polls will close at 8pm tonight, and look for a winner soon afterwards. FiveThirtyEight has more.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement