Matt Towery's Inside
The Numbers:
Poll Shows South Carolina Will Be Romney's JFK In West Virginia
By Matthew Towery
(10/19/07) From my own and others' experience, I've come to believe
that a presidential candidate's religion is usually thought to be
a bigger deal with voters than it really is.
Hubert Humphrey comes to mind. He was the Minnesota U.S. senator
who almost became president in 1968. During a previous run for the
White House in 1960, Humphrey was locked in a head-to-head showdown
with John F. Kennedy in West Virginia. That state's Democratic primary
was considered the make-or-break indicator of whether America would
accept Kennedy's Catholicism.
Humphrey was running out of money and momentum, but he managed
to buy time on a West Virginia TV station. He fielded questions
-- unscreened questions -- from viewers on the telephone.
It all went wrong. The phone connections wouldn't broadcast properly.
When they did, confusion reigned.
The big blow came when a live caller got through to confront the
jovial, colorful Humphrey. "You get out of West Virginia, Hubert
Humphrey!"
That mishap symbolized Humphrey's doomed candidacy. Kennedy won
West Virginia and thereby squelched the idea that America feared
a Kennedy White House would be subordinate to the Vatican.
A new InsiderAdvantage/Majority Opinion survey of 486 registered
Republican voters in South Carolina hints that the Palmetto State
may be a West Virginia-caliber hurdle for Mitt Romney's candidacy.
We asked:
"Are you aware that Mitt Romney is of the Mormon faith?"
Yes: 88 percent
No: 12 percent
Next, we asked:
"Would Mitt Romney's Mormon faith make you more or less likely
to vote for him in the South Carolina primary?"
More likely: 13 percent
Less Likely: 45 percent
Don't know/undecided: 42 percent
The survey was conducted October 17. It has a margin of error of
plus or minus 4.5 percent, and has been weighted for age and gender.
At face value, these numbers appear to make Romney's effort in
the first Deep South primary to be about more than just winning
or losing X number of delegates. It could also signal whether the
country as a whole is ready for a Mormon president.
Romney has been portrayed by many in the GOP as the logical candidate
for so-called "religious right" voters; those who might
be disappointed that Republican frontrunner Rudy Giuliani is pro-choice,
and who also are aware that John McCain traditionally has problems
in South Carolina.
In fact, the son of the late Bob Jones of Bob Jones University
endorsed Romney. That institution is a center for conservative education
in South Carolina, and is known for it elsewhere.
But Jones equivocated in his endorsement of Romney. In essence,
he said he's behind Romney because Romney has the best chance of
winning the general election for president. But Jones also explicitly
rejected the tenets of the Mormon faith.
Our poll shows that this two-sided endorsement may or may not help
Romney. We asked a third question:
"Are you aware that Bob Jones III has endorsed Mitt Romney
for president?"
Yes: 58 percent
No: 42 percent
Then this:
"Would the endorsement from Bob Jones III make you more or
less likely to vote for Romney in the South Carolina presidential
primary?"
Yes: 27 percent
No: 32 percent
Don't know/No Opinion: 41 percent
If you consider that at least one recent poll shows that Romney
leads in South Carolina with 26 percent of the Republican vote,
then he may already have captured the top spot or be in a position
to do so.
Other polls show the former Massachusetts governor trailing Giuliani
or Fred Thompson in South Carolina.
Should a candidate's religion matter in the 21st century? Certainly
not. Does it matter? Probably not.
Kennedy proved almost a half-century ago that biases against certain
religions can be overcome. But unlike Kennedy, whose Roman Catholic
faith was considered a prominent issue early in the campaign, Romney
has yet to face down the question of his "exotic" religion
and its founding document, The Book of Mormon.
When the presidential primary season accelerates into high gear
and the gloves come off, the attacks on Romney and his religion
will come -- maybe through sneak attacks, like a thief in the night,
but they will come.
Romney has going for him his remarkable gift for articulation,
including his quick wit. If any of the current GOP candidates are
equipped to deal with the awkwardness to come, it's probably Romney.
Jack Kennedy did so by clearly saying he would be his own man as
president, neither beholden to the pope nor the dispensations of
any one religion or person.
Romney, in today's far wackier world, might get by with simply
saying he has not nor will he ever watch HBO's program about Mormons
and polygamy, "Big Love." It just might work.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Matt Towery served as the chairman of former Speaker Newt Gingrich's
political organization from 1992 until Gingrich left Congress. He
is a former Georgia state representative, the author of several
books and currently heads the polling and political information
firm InsiderAdvantage. To find out more about Matthew Towery and
read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE, IN
|