The campaign is playing the delegates game. Rumor also has it that FL is WTA, and in that case, the campaign could waste millions and end with zero delegates or invest that money in smaller states and end with a big chunk of the delegates.
SC is a mini FL in the sense that it is an early primary which has huge influence on the race. The influence isn't proportional to size or delegates in comparison to FL either. If the campaign by some miracle pulled off a win in SC the race would be wide open.
So, FL isn't a wise investment. Sorry that you're butthurt that they are ignoring your home state.
Exactly. It is all rumors. I am not even asking that the campaign try and run media ads down here. But they could at least return calls to our news outlets.
Check out this article. I am not BS'ing you.
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com...n-paul-stealth-campaign-presidential-campaign
What bothers me is the total ignorance of the campaign towards this state. It doesn't take money (alot of which comes from this state) to return calls to the major newspapers. It doesn't take money to mention Florida in the list of states that Ron Paul will be moving on to after Iowa.
Unless Santorum is brought down a notch, he WILL win South Carolina. In fact, if you look at Ron Paul in South Carolina from 2008, he has a LONGGG way to go for South Carolina to matter. So if the argument is that South Carolina is winnable and that is why the money is being spent there, well that money is going to need to overcome A LOT.
S.C. went to McCain in 08, barely edging out the upstart Huckabee who won Iowa. Romney didn't do so hot coming in 4th behind Fred Thompson.
Check out what Lew Rockwell said about Ron Paul's <4% showing in S.C. in 2008
http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/18873.html
That dynamic has not changed. Santorum is basically Huckabee now. Rick Perry is counting on S.C. as the anti-Romney non religious candidate, which is what Paul would be competing directly with. So those voters that turned out for McCain would need to be split between Perry and Paul. Given these dynamics, I am just not sure that ad buys in S.C. are worth the money either.
Essentially, the difference between the two strategies in each state is that Ron Paul is buying ads in S.C. hoping to lift up the religious vote. I am good with that on one hand, but I believe that if Ron Paul thinks he can win ALL of S.C. delegates in a proportional scenario (those are the rules of the GOP) then its a good move. Otherwise, he is scraping for what? 6 delegates? How does that money argument hold up? I don't think it does.
Assuming Florida is winner take all, that means the GOP didn't stick to it's rules in S.C. Either way only a RP win in S.C. delivers enough delegate to make the money worth it, if that is the argument for ignoring FL.
I think it's a momentum strategy to be honest, but that doesn't play well either by hoping the momentum from a good showing in N.H. and a S.C. win will carry right through FL.
Florida is just a momentum killer for this campaign. Not because it's unwinnable, but because the campaign is assuming that Florida is winner take all, even though the Florida grassroots are playing like it is going to be proportional. Even with a loss in Florida, Ron Paul needs to show up big down here. Same with S.C. to a lesser extent.
Why crush the momentum by completely dissing FLorida activist? Ron Paul got 62k votes down here in 2008. If he wants to keep his NATIONAL campaign going past Florida, he is going to need money. That money is going to come from amped up Florida grassroots who BELIEVE he can win! It is not going to come from depressed grassroots who think Florida and their efforts here just flat aren't worth it and don't matter.