The Commercial Appeal

Crunch time for Carolina voters

This week’s events change some minds

- By Jeffrey Collins

CAYCE, S.C. — For weeks, Renee Boling was sure she was going to vote for Mitt Romney in South Carolina’s Republican presidenti­al primary. But a series of events this week changed her mind, and seemingly the minds of others across the state.

Romney repeatedly refused to release his income tax return and was on the defensive in two debates, while Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum made forceful arguments that led Boling to rethink whether the former Massachuse­tts governor was really the best candidate the

GOP could offer. The 37-yearold administra­tive assistant said Friday she was leaning toward Santorum, but could change her mind in the hours before she votes.

“He just didn’t back down,” Boling said of Santorum’s performanc­e at Thursday night’s debate. “He stood his ground.”

The dynamics of South Carolina’s campaign have shifted dramatical­ly in the last week after a series of events threw the race into turmoil and left countless voters undecided about who to support. Romney was positioned to win here after his commanding victory in New Hampshire. But polls now show he has slipped from the front of the pack to what even he described Friday as a close contest with Gingrich. Santorum and Texas Rep. Ron Paul trail in surveys.

The chaos of the South Carolina campaign crystalliz­ed Thursday.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry dropped out of the race and endorsed Gingrich, who had to fend off his ex-wife’s accusation­s that he had asked her for an “open marriage.” Romney, meanwhile, spent the day repeatedly resisting calls to release his tax returns immediatel­y. A cantankero­us debate — the second of two this week — capped off the surreal day.

Perhaps illustrati­ng the new reality of the race here, the raucous debate audience booed Romney as he answered a question about his refusal to release the tax returns.

The crowd gave two standing ovations to Gingrich as he defended himself against his ex-wife’s allegation­s.

“I’ve never seen anything like it . It is funny, I suppose,” marveled Colette Kent, a 78year- old from Fort Mill, who turned out Friday to meet Santorum.

Kent said values were the reason she was backing him, calling the former Pennsylvan­ia senator “a good and decent man” and “a Christian man.”

At first glance, the allegation­s by Gingrich’s ex-wife would appear to be deadly in a state smack in the middle of the Bible Belt. But more than a million people have poured into South Carolina over the past 20 years, increasing the population by nearly 33 percent and watering down some of its evangelica­l fervor.

Stephanie Irick, 55, was among those still sticking by Gingrich. She thinks Romney is a f lip -f lopper and the allegation­s by Gingrich’s exwife didn’t shake her support.

“Do I believe it? I don’t have a clue,” Irick said while at a Gingrich rally in Walterboro on Friday. “What goes on in people’s bedroom is their own business.”

Others said the timing smelled bad.

“This comes out now, after he’s been running how long? It doesn’t seem like a coincidenc­e,” said Mike Smith, 52. The Fort Mill resident who backed President Barack Obama over Sen. John McCain four years ago planned to vote for Santorum.

Smith shrugged at the rollicking nature of the race, saying the real issues were about paying the mortgage and feeding families.

“Everything else is a distractio­n,” he said. “We need jobs, not gossip.”

That’s what

Gingrich seemed to argue at Thursday’s debate in Charleston when he tore into CNN moderator John King for making the opening question about Gingrich’s former wife.

“He hit that out of the park,” said 62-year- old Ed Cheek, a hospital chaplain who was at a Santorum rally Friday in Lexington but planned to vote for Gingrich.

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