Political Hotsheet
By

Stephanie Condon /

CBS News/ April 3, 2012, 5:30 PM

Reservations about Romney dim in Wisconsin, CBS News early exit polling shows

Wisconsin primary

Nicole Newberry (C) casts her vote with her children Colin (L) and Liam, at a polling place on April 3, 2012 in Pewaukee, Wisconsin. Voters in Wisconsin, Maryland, and Washington D.C. vote today in the Republican presidential primary.

/ Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images

Updated at 6:06 p.m. ET

(CBS News) About six in 10 of Mitt Romney's supporters in Wisconsin say they strongly favor him, CBS News early exit polling out of the state shows. The results show more enthusiasm for the current GOP presidential front-runner than in other recent primary states.

While 58 percent "strongly favor" Romney, another 36 percent of his backers said they have reservations about him and another 6 percent said they voted for him because they dislike the other presidential candidates. In Illinois two weeks ago, where Romney won by a solid 12-point margin, just 42 percent of his supporters strongly favored him, but 47 percent had reservations. Fifty-five percent of Romney voters in Louisiana "strongly supported" Romney, but the former governor lost the state to Rick Santorum.

Among Santorum backers in Wisconsin, 43 percent of Santorum voters strongly favor him, but 37 percent have reservations about him. Another 19 percent dislike the other candidates.

A full 83 percent of Wisconsin Republican primary voters think Romney will be the party's nominee, the early exit polling shows. Only 11 percent think it will be Santorum.

Even two-thirds of Santorum voters expect Romney to be the Republican nominee. Only a quarter think it will be Santorum.

Full Republican delegate scorecard
Nationwide primary results so far
CBSNews.com's complete 2012 campaign coverage

Voters in Wisconsin, Maryland and the District of Columbia weigh in on the Republican primary today, but the focus is falling squarely on Wisconsin. The politically-charged state saw a string of Tea Party victories in the 2010 election, politically divisive recalls last summer, and will hold a recall vote on Republican Gov. Scott Walker this summer. Today's primary will give one candidate a high-profile victory in a state sure to be competitive in the general election.

In this intense political environment, Romney is aiming to win the delegates and momentum to deliver a final blow to his main rival Rick Santorum's campaign. Recent polls out of Wisconsin have given Romney the edge, but Santorum is making one more attempt at expanding his voter base and winning over working class Republicans. Santorum is aiming to perform well in Wisconsin ahead of the April 24 primary in his home state of Pennsylvania.

Romney has shored up the support of several high-profile Republicans at this point -- including Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan and Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson -- with some saying a longer primary could be detrimental to the GOP in the general election.

Romney's recent endorsements were an important factor for over a third of voters in Maryland and Wisconsin today. For most voters, however (61 percent in Maryland and 59 percent in Wisconsin), the endorsements were not an important factor.

The economy was the top issue for 51 percent of Maryland voters and 58 percent of Wisconsin voters today. It has been the most important issue for voters in the primaries and caucuses to date. In both states, more voters say the nation's economy is getting worse, not better.

As in other states, defeating President Obama is the candidate quality that mattered most to those voting in primaries today. In Maryland, 43 percent said electability was the most important quality, while 19 percent said "strong character," 17 percent said "the right experience," and another 19 percent said being a "true conservative" was the most important. In Wisconsin, 37 percent named defeating Mr. Obama, 21 percent said "strong character," 19 percent said the "right experience," and 18 percent said they were primarily looking for a "true conservative."

There are a total of 92 delegates at stake Tuesday, with 16 coming from the District, 37 from Maryland and 39 from Wisconsin. Polls in the District and Maryland close at 8 p.m. ET, and they close in Wisconsin at 9 p.m. ET. The Maryland and D.C. primaries are closed to Republicans while Wisconsin is holding an open primary.

CBS News is conducting exit polls in Wisconsin and Maryland and collecting vote counts in all three primaries.

Heading into Tuesday's contests, Romney has accumulated 559 delegates, CBS News estimates, while Santorum trails with 243. Newt Gingrich has 128 while Ron Paul has 45.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
22 Comments Add a Comment
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Alonegunman says:
100% of Ron Paul supporters wont vote for anyone else...does this mean Romney loses? :)
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Thinkbeforeyouwrite says:
Why is this news item from April 3 still so highly featured? It doesn't make sense.
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abcrichards says:
I am a former democrat. I did not vote for Clinton. I was raised on the west coast. I knew
nothing of southerners. I thought Clinton was a racist. I have to laugh at myself now. When
I first saw Obama when he became senator in Chicago. I said wow, that guy is going to go
some where. I hated Al Gore. I thought he was a dork, so I registered Republican and voted
for Bush. IN 2008 I all most voted for Obama. Being that I have always been a capitalist and
and more moderate, I voted for McCain. I really wanted Romney that year.
I like that Romney is more moderate and a fiscal conservative. I am not a social conservative
at all. All in all, JFK and Bobby Kennedy were my favorites. I could never vote for Obama.
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tacitus7 says:
It's interesting that Romney's best performance was in the southeast corner of the state where the Romney name has currency from when the senior Romney (George) ran American Motors (main factories in Kenosha). People there know that this is a a brilliant, top-notch, caring, compassionate, freedom-loving family... not some strange group of "cultists" as the Santorumites and the Obamabots would like people to imagine.
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abcrichards replies:
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Very well said! I agree 100%
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mrjones038 says:
Im sorry but President cannot fix or even reverse the damage done by Former President Bush. It takes atleast 8 years to begin to even reverse the damage and another four years from the 2016 president. Also when Romney makes the statement "so we can take back the White House" It dosen't sound like he is saying take it back for the republicans , it sounds like take it back from the Black guy. I'm just saying.
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realtimecoffee replies:
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What Mr Jones is saying is don't throw out the Black guy. Doesn't matter if he's done well or not to Mr Jones.
timsky969 replies:
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Nice job anti Bushers don't like the facts just make up your own.
Bush gave us tax cuts that Obama extended Ha
4.5% unemployment
52 months of job growth
Freed millions from tyranny No need for a NOBEL
Inherited the dot.com bust the Housing bull Barney Dodd
After the Clinton's shazamm we got 911
Yet Bush didn't blame the left he just stepped up
And Bush can throw a Baseball
Tea anyone
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TimeToEvolve says:
Are there actual Republicons in Wisconsin? The people who don't like their homes, jobs, state and country. Or any of their neighbors. Don't they think they better do something about that pretty soon?
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abcrichards replies:
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I think he is on drugs!! Good grief !!
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summer4all says:
He is looking for donors for his Moon Colony now and he is taking all the looney tunes with him to be there forever and ever. Care to join??? GO for it. Donate. He can use YOUR money because he have no intentions to spend his.I hope all the GOP and Supreme Justice will join him in this adventure it would be constitutional because He said so. LOL He will come back for his 2nd term just to annoy you and hit you for more money. Keep your checkbook open. Support other runners, they have enough of their own but they rather have yours. money.
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arithehun replies:
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That was Gingrich that wanted the moon base!
abcrichards replies:
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I thought the guy on the above comment was on drugs, you must be his friend!!
I hope you two are having fun in LA LA land.
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thebob-bob says:
Wisconi's are too intent on getting rid of their "bait and switch" Governor to care about either one of the flip-flopping Romnatrons running in the primary.
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FormerUSMCSergeant says:
About six in 10 of Mitt Romney's supporters in Wisconsin say they strongly favor him,
--
As if they have a choice.
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tacitus7 replies:
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It's a polling question.... "strongly" favor vs. simply "favor."
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royalstar05 says:
Obama is going to win easy.
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