UncleBuck
Well-Known Member
Agreed, New Hampshire only provides 12 delegates to the RNC. Paul/Romney/Santorum got 7 a piece out of Iowa.
LOL!
is that so?
http://elections.nytimes.com/2012/primaries/delegates
Agreed, New Hampshire only provides 12 delegates to the RNC. Paul/Romney/Santorum got 7 a piece out of Iowa.
Your own mainstream media them selves said its an important 2nd place finish, and quit comparing apples and oranges.
you gonna keep blathering, or are you going to tell me how ronald is gonna get to 1144?
Oh, yeah. You're right. I don't know where I read that said 7 split even and 5 to Gingrich or some shit.
Fucking google news.
Not shit over, this is an open field, this was romneys state and ron paul still got 2nd in romneyville, wait till sc.
That would be CNN. They reported it as an even split. But according to every other major media outlet in America Ron Paul finished 3rd in votes and delegates.
Not shit over, this is an open field, this was romneys state and ron paul still got 2nd in romneyville, wait till sc.
still not outlining the path to 1144, i see.
lol!
Iowa will send 28 delegates to the August Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla. To win the nomination, a candidate will need the support of 1,144 delegates out of a 2,286 total, meaning Iowa’s delegates amount to 2.5 percent of the number needed to win.But a candidate like Paul, whose campaign has emphasized state- and county-level organizing in places other campaigns have all but ignored, could possibly walk away with Iowa’s delegates by knowing Iowa’s rules and pitching the right battles.
And what states are in play for Paul to pick up those delegates? If Paul is going to win an election he's going to eventually actually have to, you know, win a state. He didn't win the first two and now come the southern states where he's likely to finish dead last or close to it.
Iowa will send 28 delegates to the August Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla. To win the nomination, a candidate will need the support of 1,144 delegates out of a 2,286 total, meaning Iowa’s delegates amount to 2.5 percent of the number needed to win.But a candidate like Paul, whose campaign has emphasized state- and county-level organizing in places other campaigns have all but ignored, could possibly walk away with Iowa’s delegates by knowing Iowa’s rules and pitching the right battles.
I believed i just answered that question in the very post in which you are responding to.
nice copy and paste, bro.
it betrays a complete lack of knowledge of the political process on your part.
I believed i just answered that question in the very post in which you are responding to.