Romney Is Not Out Of The Race

Help me out on that one.

We know Romney won Nevada, and Ron came in second.

Would they therefore not go ahead and re-distribute his delegates by the new percentages for each remaining candidate given his elimination? That would obviously give a big boost to Ron, effectively making him the winner of that caucus. I would think this would also be the case for Montana, Maine, and every other applicable caucus where Ron had a decent percentage.

Not necessarily. It's all about how the state GOP leadership decides to redistribute them.

I fear these all go to McCain.
 
John Edwards "suspended" his campaign as well. Do you think he's coming back too? It's just semantics, it means nothing.
 
Romney is officially out. You folks watch CNN way too much...

CNN "Romney suspends his campaign"

ABC News: "Romney Abandons Bid for GOP Presidential Nomination"
CBS News: "Romney exits presidential race"
FOX News: "Mitt Quits Race"

See any difference?
 
He's got delegates in a brokered convention....

John Edwards is a democrat.

They keep their pledged delegates no matter what until they were unbound. (Conversely, they have more at large unpledged delegates.)

You're a republican. So is Mitt Romney. So his delegates get divided up and reassigned by the states.
 
Not necessarily. It's all about how the state GOP leadership decides to redistribute them.

I fear these all go to McCain.


Then for a scenario like this, what is the point of participating in a caucus or voting in a priimary?

So much for Democracy, huh?
 
In other words, Romney may change his mind about whether he is seeking the GOP nomination or not. How typical of a flip flopper.
 
Then for a scenario like this, what is the point of participating in a caucus or voting in a priimary?

So much for Democracy, huh?

Hey, I'm a democrat by normal terms and a republican for just this one guy.

We do it just fine over there. It's your party. It's corrupt and has been for years.

Truth be told, it is over. You do realize that. McCain is the blessed one. And even if he's not, the blessed one isn't Paul.

The Republican party is built in such a manner that it can easily be controlled by the elites.
 
Help me out on that one.

We know Romney won Nevada, and Ron came in second.

Would they therefore not go ahead and re-distribute his delegates by the new percentages for each remaining candidate given his elimination? That would obviously give a big boost to Ron, effectively making him the winner of that caucus. I would think this would also be the case for Montana, Maine, and every other applicable caucus where Ron had a decent percentage.

That's a good point. Then again, these delegates might be free to choose whoever they want too.
 
That's a good point. Then again, these delegates might be free to choose whoever they want too.

In the not winner take all states this is what the freed up delegates will do. A portion of the delegates will be undecided even at the national convention, unbound delegates can vote for whoever is left. This can be a huge advantage for us if a lot of the delegates elected to state conventions are suddenly are unbound by Romney dropping out after winning the presidental preference poll. For those that are still on the fence to become a state delegate its time to do it in the upcoming caucuses primaries.

A good example is Maine where Romney won the popular vote but Ron Paul has a large proportion of people that were elected delegates to the state convention.

Who are they going to vote for in the first round of voting will be Ron Paul. Huckabee and McCain will likely be eliminated and Ron Paul will end up with the majority of delegates from that state. This scenario can repeat all over the country while the media dreams of McCain vs Hillary.
 
You're a republican. So is Mitt Romney. So his delegates get divided up and reassigned by the states.

In most states, his delegates will vote for whomever they want. Most caucus state delegates haven't even pick their guy yet. The news is jump superimposing the straw poll results on the delegate counts. It's all a guess.
 
There is no such thing as just suspending. He dropped out. And anyway they have no control over the delegates. Delegates are controlled by primary binding rules only when they apply. Even if Mitt told all of the delegates to vote for McCain it means nothing. They never have to do what he says.
 
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There is no such thing as just suspending. He dropped out. And anyway they have no control over the delegates. Delegates are controlled by primary binding rules only when they apply. Even if Mitt told all of the delegates to vote for McCain it means nothing. They never have to do what he says.

yes, he is not formally out of the race, the bound delegates he does offically his, as of now are still bound to vote for him

He's just not actively campaigning anymore, but he has not removed himself from the race in a formal manner

and there must be reasons for that
 
Most caucus state delegates haven't even pick their guy yet. The news is jump superimposing the straw poll results on the delegate counts. It's all a guess.

Ding. We have a winner. And if the anecdotal reports we heard from RP supporters in Nevada, Maine and Colorado are representative of a wider trend -- that Mitt supporters were happy to show up and vote but not interested much in being delegates (state delegates, that is, who will elect the national delegates) -- then Mitt's withdrawal is great news.
 
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