PPI - Radically Pragmatic
  • Donate
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Locations
    • Careers
  • People
  • Projects
  • Our Work
  • Events
  • Donate

Our Work

Election Watch: Gingrich and Romney Battle for South Carolina

  • January 18, 2012
  • Ed Kilgore

With the South Carolina primary on tap this Saturday, Mitt Romney is breathtakingly close to a victory that would likely all but clinch the presidential nomination. He’s been ahead in every public poll taken in South Carolina since his win in New Hampshire. His conservative opposition remains divided. And the one candidate who did drop out after New Hampshire, Jon Huntsman, promptly endorsed Romney after months of badmouthing him.

But a strong debate performance by Newt Gingrich on Monday, and the $3.4 million his Super-PAC invested in attack ads on Romney that have generated a lot of even more powerful “earned media,” have placed the outcome in South Carolina in some doubt. A final debate on Thursday, along with the decision—or indecision—of conservative opinion-leaders to consolidate support behind a single candidate, could make a difference.

Romney and his own Super-PAC have clearly concluded Gingrich is the main, and perhaps the only, real threat, and have resumed the intense fire on the former Speaker (heavily utilizing former House colleagues) that cut him down to size in the run-up to the Iowa Caucuses.

Meanwhile, the candidate who came out of Iowa with a strong claim to have finally become the “true conservative alternative” to Romney, Rick Santorum, is struggling a bit, though still, along with Ron Paul, showing up in the mid-teens in South Carolina polls. Santorum appeared to have obtained a real breakthrough last Saturday, when a sizable group of conservative religious leaders convened in Texas by Christian Right warhorse Tony Perkins announced it had reached a “consensus” to back the Pennsylvanian. But almost immediately, backers of Newt Gingrich who attended Perkins’ conclave contested this interpretation of events, and suggested the group was evenly divided between Gingrich and Santorum, with the vote to endorse Santorum only occurring after a big percentage of attendees had already left. In Monday’s debate, Santorum didn’t exactly shine, and found himself on the defensive for voting against a national “right-to-work” bill in the Senate (not a popular position among union-hating South Carolina Republicans).

Lost in the shuffle has been Texas governor Rick Perry, who hasn’t registered double-digit support in Palmetto State in any poll since October. Though he’s campaigning heavily around the state, the main publicity coming out of his campaign this week was the request made by one of his earliest and most prominent South Carolina supporters, state senator Larry Grooms, that he withdraw from the race and enable someone else to beat Romney. South Carolina looks to be Perry’s last stand, and it isn’t going well.

If Gingrich does somehow catch up with Romney, or perhaps even if Romney narrowly wins but Perry and Santorum do poorly enough that they are forced to drop out (no one expects Ron Paul to withdraw until the Convention itself), the next question will be whether Gingrich’s latest rise from the political grave will inspire a national renaissance of his campaign, or at least make him competitive in Florida, which votes on January 31. Until today, polls in Florida and nationally were showing Romney building huge leads over the field. But a Rasmussen survey released today, the first taken since Monday’s debate, shows Gingrich suddenly within three points of Romney nationally.

One note of encouragement for Gingrich might have gained a lot more attention earlier in the year: Sarah Palin told Fox viewers that were she voting in South Carolina, she’d vote for Newt. This was, however, the most indirect endorsement yet from Palin, famous for sometimes phoning in endorsements: she said she wishes Newt well so that the campaign can continue, and the winner can receive a more thorough vetting. Well, there’s no question she is an expert on the need for candidate vetting.

Assuming Romney survives South Carolina and other early tests to become the nominee, it’s worth wondering how much general-election damage he’s suffered from attacks on him by Gingrich and others. Aside from the Bain Capital issues raised so visibly by Gingrich’s Super-PAC (complicated most recently by allegations that one Bain beneficiary was a company that disposed of “biomedical wastes” from abortion clinics), his reluctance to release his tax records is turning heads, and each day he has to spend precious general election capital reassuring conservatives that he’ll be sufficiently loyal to their priorities in office. And in general, the nomination campaign continues to shine light on the gap between GOP “base” preoccupations and more mainstream sentiments, as illustrated by Monday’s debate. Democrats couldn’t have been happier with the spectacle of wealthy Republican candidates spending the Martin Luther King holiday lecturing poor and unemployed people on how to develop a work ethic while the audience howled for blood like Romans.

Photo credit: DonkeyHotey

Related Work

Op-Ed  |  June 19, 2025

Ainsley for the New York Times: A Progressive Future Depends on National Identity

  • Claire Ainsley
In the News  |  June 13, 2025

Ainsley on ABC Radio National: Lessons for Global Centre-Left Parties from Labor’s Win

  • Claire Ainsley
Op-Ed  |  June 13, 2025

Marshall for The Hill: Factory Jobs Aren’t the Future Working Americans Want

  • Will Marshall
In the News  |  June 12, 2025

Marshall in Politico: ‘It’s a winner for him’: Dems work to turn LA debate from immigration to Trump’s executive powers

  • Will Marshall
In the News  |  June 12, 2025

Ainsley on The Spectator’s Coffee House Shots Podcast: Is Rachel Reeves’s Headroom Shrinking?

  • Claire Ainsley
Op-Ed  |  May 28, 2025

Ryan for Newsweek: Trump Policies Hurt Workers in America’s Heartland. Democrats Have to Say So

  • Tim Ryan
  • Never miss an update:

  • Subscribe to our newsletter
PPI Logo
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Donate
  • Careers
  • © 2025 Progressive Policy Institute. All Rights Reserved.
  • |
  • Privacy Policy
  • |
  • Privacy Settings