South Carolina fought hard in the Republican race looms

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney held a campaign rally with South Carolina gov. Nikki Haley at Charles Towne landing as they will be greeted by supporters during a campaign stop in Charleston, South Carolina, January 5, 2012.

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters)-even as a candidate for the Presidency of the Republic fighting out in New Hampshire, confrontation loomed large in South Carolina, a conservative state with political history that evil and choose the winners.

Basic countries on 21 January – 11 days after New Hampshire–could stand for the conservative’s last hope to stop the Board over the more moderate Mitt Romney, who is likely to fill out to South Carolina off consecutive wins in Iowa and New Hampshire, where he has a huge lead in opinion polls.

Romney’s victory in South Carolina would essentially wrapped up the nomination early, but a victory by a conservative like Rick Santorum will give the right-wing Republicans long-sought Saviour rally around in a race that had moved to Florida and other States.

“South Carolina where the person-but-Romney hopes to eventually find their banners,” said Republican strategist Tucker Eskew, who is from South Carolina. “It’s killing the land and the land that bear to the President of hope.”

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