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"I was out on the trail when it kind of came to me," a suddenly upbeat Perry said of changing his mind during the run. He added, "This was not a difficult decision." His staying in likely benefits Mitt Romney since it means conservatives looking to vote for someone else to back might end up dividing their support among Perry, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and ex-House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Perry became an almost overnight front-runner when he strode into the presidential race in August, and made up for his late entry with strong fundraising. But his polling numbers both nationally and in early voting states went into free-fall because of his support for offering in-state tuition at Texas universities to the children of illegal immigrants and a series of increasingly embarrassing debate flubs that made him a national punch line. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal campaigned with Perry during the final, frenzied days in Iowa and says he'll continue to support him despite the even poorer-than-expected result. "He's got a lot of folks around him counseling him what to do," Jindal said. "I'm just proud to call him a friend."
[Associated
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