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Poll: Rick Santorum takes slight lead in GOP race
Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney (Getty Images)
Rick Santorum has pulled slightly ahead of Mitt Romney in Republican primary voters' preference for the presidential nomination, a national CBS News/New York Times Poll shows.
Ron Paul is now in third, followed by former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich.
Rick Santorum: No longer such a long-shot
Just three points over Romney, Santorum's lead in the national survey is within the poll's margin of error, but after wins last week in three states, 30 percent of Republican primary voters now say they support Santorum for the nomination.
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The socially conservative former Pennsylvania senator received the backing of just 16 percent of Republican primary voters in a similarly worded question last month, leaving him in third place behind Gingrich.
Video: Who's really winning the 2012 GOP race?
Romney, who won the Maine caucuses on Saturday, has held fairly steady since January, while Gingrich's support has fallen by 11 points.
Santorum receives strong backing from conservatives, tea party supporters and white evangelicals.
Self-identified conservatives divided their support among the candidates in January, but in this poll they appear to be coalescing solidly behind Santorum. He receives far more support from this group than Romney does, and conservative support for Santorum has increased since last month.
Support for Gingrich among conservatives is now half of what it was in January, just before his victory in the South Carolina primary.
Santorum also leads the Republican field among tea party supporters, who make up more than four in 10 Republican primary voters, as well as evangelical Christians. Evangelicals were key to Santorum's narrow win in Iowa last month.
In January's national poll, tea party supporters divided their support between Romney (with 29 percent) and Gingrich (28 percent), while Santorum trailed with just 18 percent. In that same poll, 23 percent of white evangelicals backed Santorum. That support has now jumped to 39 percent.
Still, 60 percent of Republican primary voters nationwide say they could still change their minds about whom to support - so the race remains fluid.
This poll was conducted by telephone from February 8-13, 2012 among 1,197 adults nationwide. 1,064 interviews were conducted with registered voters and 331 with voters who said they plan to vote in a Republican primary. Phone numbers were dialed from samples of both standard land-line and cell phones. The error due to sampling for results based on the entire sample could be plus or minus three percentage points. The margin of error for the sample of registered voters could be plus or minus three points and five points for the sample of Republican primary voters. The error for subgroups may be higher. This poll release conforms to the Standards of Disclosure of the National Council on Public Polls.
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