by Ed Stoddard
DALLAS - Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee’s continued presence in the
Republican presidential race has kept the white evangelical vote
divided, according to a new poll by the Pew Research Center.
Its latest national survey, conducted Jan. 30-Feb. 2 among 1,502
adults, found that Arizona Sen. John McCain now holds a substantial
lead among all segments of the Republican electorate — with the notable
exception of white evangelical Protestants.
McCain and Huckabee’s support among the voters in this key Republican
base was divided evenly at 34 percent a piece.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, whose Mormon faith is viewed by
many evangelicals as a heretical cult, had 17 percent of the support
among these voters.
But both McCain and Romney has seven-point gains from the previous
month with this group of voters as other candidates dropped out while
Huckabee’s support remained stagnant at 34 percent.
This suggests that if Huckabee’s campaign fades, evangelicals are
already starting to look to either McCain or Romney to be their
political saviours.
Huckabee is an ordained Baptist preacher who has connected well with
this conservative constituency, which is stridently opposed to abortion
rights and gay marriage and has become one of the Republican Party’s
most reliable bastions of support.
The Pew survey has a margin of error of plus/minus three percentage
points.
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Evangelical vote remains divided even as Republican field narrows
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