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Indeed, a host of Republicans
-- 76 percent in a recent CBS-New York Times poll -- said it was too early to say who they would support when voting begins in January. Just 19 percent said they had firmly chosen a candidate. The volatile race is taking place in a dramatically different Republican Party than the one that nominated John McCain
-- and for much of the 2008 race strongly favored the thrice-married Giuliani. The GOP fell out of public favor following McCain's loss to Obama. It then rebounded with the growth of the tea party movement, which helped Republicans win control of the House and boost its ranks in the Senate last year. Today's Republican Party is more conservative. "The most visible shift in the political landscape since ... 2005 is the emergence of a single bloc of across-the-board conservatives," the Pew Center said earlier this year. And those conservatives -- at least at this point -- seem reluctant to continue a trend that's been the hallmark of Republican presidential primaries in recent decades.
The Republican Party usually has chosen a nominee who has been the perceived next in line. Ronald Reagan lost once before winning the 1980 nomination. George H.W. Bush got beat that year, became Reagan's vice president and won the GOP nod in 1988. Bob Dole lost twice before becoming the party favorite in 1996. And McCain made a strong run at the nomination in 2000 before clinching it eight years later. This year, it's Romney who is making his second bid. And, if history is a guide, he's the most likely to end up winning the nomination
-- even if the all-over-the-map polls don't show it.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated
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