Herman Cain was the primary on Saturday, despite the efforts made by the famous comedian to turn the preliminary results of a joke on Saturday, urging the masses to vote for the former CEO of Godfather, and kept his name on the ballot.
And cheered Colbert as a presidential candidate alternative to vote for him in his Comedy Central program last week. Super PAC formed up to aid efforts, including commercial air teasing that Cain is "Washington's strange is not even running for president ... send a message. On Jan. 21, and Herman Cain to vote."
But despite the positive reception on the campus of College of Charleston on Friday, when Colbert held a joint meeting with Caine university students, and interviews with their friends and they said they did not take seriously a joke to move forward in their place a vote on Saturday.
"I saw myself as a gag," Seth Whisnant, 24, a student at the University of South Carolina who voted for Ron Paul.
Said Steve Kropski, 26, a student in the Faculty of Law at the University of South Carolina, and believes that he will be supported by most people Colbert Cain as a joke.
"I can not imagine people [actually vote for Cain, but never underestimate that there are some people who did not."
Said Lindsay Lipscomb (20 years), a student at the University of South Carolina who voted for Newt Gingrich, here in Columbia this afternoon, and said he did not believe experts Colbert was "wise" because it can take away from the voices of candidates viable.
"It's just going to take sounds and change the margins for all the others," he said, adding that he believed that Cain was a "great candidate" with "a lot of excellent points."
He said one of the students and supporters of Ron Paul, said he believed that students would vote for the only political Cain of people who do not have a strong preference first.
"Some people have been taken seriously only because they do not care about the other candidates, I do not care to vote for any of them," said Chetna Mehra, a young man of 21 years at the University of Southern California who voted for Ron Paul. "But I hope no one took him seriously."
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