States Santorum failed to make the ballot

veto

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I know he will not be on Virginia and indiana. The only other thing I am hearing is that he won't be eligible for some delagates in Tennessee?

Any other states?
 
He didn't file any delegates in Tennessee, but technically, he doesn't have to. If he wins delegates, the TN GOP will pick delegates for him. We didn't file any delegates in one of the Congressional Districts too and if we win delegates there, the TN GOP will pick delegates for us.
 
Hawaii is a caucus state and we won a third of the delegates the last time for the state convention.
 
Also important to note that Santorum picked up zero delegates tonight (someone feel free to toss up a link if there actually are hard pledges from tonight's results)

Here's the info I have (national delegates being awarded at the state convention)

February 7, 2012
Colorado (caucus - Closed) 36 total delegates (State Convention: Saturday 14 April)
Minnesota (caucus - Open) 40 total delegates (State Convention: Saturday 5 May 2012)
Missouri (primary) – Counts for Zero delegates

March 17, 2012
Missouri (GOP caucus - Modified) – 52 total delegates (State Convention: 2 June)
 
I know everybody says that the Missouri primary is meaningless, but I disagree. I think we can expect roughly the same results for the caucus. Really, who is going to bother to vote for somebody in the primary, but not come to the caucus? The results won't be THAT different.
 
I know everybody says that the Missouri primary is meaningless, but I disagree. I think we can expect roughly the same results for the caucus. Really, who is going to bother to vote for somebody in the primary, but not come to the caucus? The results won't be THAT different.

Actually based on 2008 results, the vast majority of people who vote in the primary will not bother to vote in the caucus.
 
i hope that is true, and another point is at the time of the caucus more info would have come out about the others and the motivation to vote for them would have changed.
Actually based on 2008 results, the vast majority of people who vote in the primary will not bother to vote in the caucus.
 
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