There are a lot of different conservative enclaves in Orange County so I don't know which way OC will vote.Questor wrote:No doubt. But the local republican party, especially at the local level, has a decidedly large number of lolbertarians. And Paul does very well in university areas, and do I have to mention the Ayn Rand foundation? We could also point to the high number of evangelicals in south county.General Mung Beans wrote:Not really, the OC after all is demographically speaking Romney paradise (ie rich suburbs) not Dixie-In-the-West.UnderAGreySky wrote:The real danger, as I read somewhere (likely Slate) is that self-professed 'conservatives' will now ditch Gingrich for Frothy because they want to back the winner. I can see that happening, and Mitt would be worried now as this would cause Santorum to start picking up delegates in the deep south without Newt being a spoiler. The article even speculated that, for the first time since '68, California's primary would be crucial in deciding the nominee - and while on average California is neutral, the R side apparently is batshit crazy (especially in the OC area).
I don't recall claiming that Gingrich (the "Dixie" candidate) would be viable in OC, nor do I recall Paul doing particularly well in the south.
To restate: If California is so close that the melange of nuttieness that is OC is a deciding factor, Ron Paul has done significantly better than expected. Santorum's share of the vote is most likely capped around 30-40%. Which means that in order for a three way race (and CA is a three way race, Gingrich is a non-entity here), both of the other candidates need to be pushing 30%ish numbers.
You have the campus libertarians around UCI and CSUF, there's also a contingent of libertarians here WRT the Ayn Rand Foundation, which will likely trend towards Paul.
But we also have Saddleback Church, Calvary Chapel and the former Crystal Cathedral, which will likely trend towards Santorum.
I do think that the bootstraps mentality of a lot of the people here will probably trend towards Romney because there are a LOT of the Prop 13/Howard Jarvis diehards, and Mittens' message of lower taxes and less government spending will likely resonate here in a place where the voters literally chose bankruptcy over raising taxes.
As for which candidate will win here, I really don't know.