Santorum's caucus visits may be part of tactical effort to change rules, outmaneuver Romney
Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum was dropping by several area caucus sites Saturday morning – an unprecedented move, activists say – in what some see as an attempt to persuade more GOP activists to tweak the caucus rules.
That happened Thursday night, during one of Missouri’s first GOP caucuses, held in Chariton County in north-central Missouri.

As the New York Times details the proceedings, the attendees, who gathered in a small steakhouse, voted to change the state party rules allowing the representatives elected at the first round of caucuses to remain uncommitted until Round 2, in April.
But the Chariton Republicans voted to require that those elected to go on to Round 2 must be committed to Santorum, who overwhelmingly won the non-binding statewide primary Feb. 7.
A spokesman for the state GOP said the decision is within the rights of the caucus-goers. “We have been informed that caucus-goers in Chariton County voted to bind their delegates to the winner of the primary — effectively giving their four delegates to Rick Santorum,” the spokesman said.
Such action – if repeated at other sites on Saturday -- could help the former Pennsylvania senator secure some presidential delegates, who will be awarded during the Round 2 gatherings on April 21.
(Click here to read the Beacon’s primer of how Saturday’s caucus meetings -- and those in April -- will proceed.)
Santorum is slated to stop by two or three caucus sites Saturday – the campaign has not released the list – after two public events earlier in the morning.

Meanwhile, his chief rival -- former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney -- will hold a town hall meeting later Saturday across the river, in Collinsville.
Romney, who campaigned in Missouri earlier this week, is now focusing on Illinois' primary next Tuesday -- where he is hoping to outpoll Santorum and the other remaining GOP contenders, former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas congressman Ron Paul.
