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2012 North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses

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FieldValue
election_name2012 North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses
countryNorth Dakota
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2008 North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses
previous_year2008
next_election2016 North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses
next_year2016
election_date
image1[[File:Rick Santorum by Gage Skidmore 2.jpgx125px]]
candidate1**Rick Santorum**
party1Republican Party (United States)
home_state1**Pennsylvania**
delegate_count16
popular_vote1**4,510**
percentage1**39.7%**
image2[[File:Ron_Paul,_official_Congressional_photo_portrait,_2007.jpgx125px]]
candidate2Ron Paul
party2Republican Party (United States)
home_state2Texas
delegate_count22
popular_vote23,186
percentage228.1%
image4[[File:Mitt Romney by Gage Skidmore 6.jpgx125px]]
candidate4Mitt Romney
party4Republican Party (United States)
home_state4Massachusetts
delegate_count4**20**
popular_vote42,691
percentage423.7%
image5[[File:Newt Gingrich by Gage Skidmore 6.jpgx125px]]
candidate5Newt Gingrich
party5Republican Party (United States)
home_state5Georgia
delegate_count50
popular_vote5962
percentage58.5%

The 2012 North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses were held on March 6, 2012. North Dakota has 28 delegates to the Republican National Convention; despite Rick Santorum's nominal win in the preference poll conducted during the caucuses, the majority of the delegates elected by the state party convention later in March said they supported Romney.

Results

2012 North Dakota Republican presidential caucusesCandidateVotesPercentageDelegates
**Rick Santorum****4,510****39.7%**6
Ron Paul3,18628.1%2
[[File:America Symbol.svg14px]] Mitt Romney2,69123.7%**20**
Newt Gingrich9628.5%--
**Unprojected delegates****0**
**Totals****11,349****100.0%****28**

Convention controversy

North Dakota Republican Party had its state convention from Friday March 30 to Sunday April 1 where twenty-five unbound National Convention delegates were elected. Rick Santorum had won the strawpoll at the Legislative Districts caucuses on Super Tuesday with a large margin to Ron Paul in second place and Mitt Romney in third place. The state party's national delegate nominating committee recommended a slate of delegates based on participation in the party. There was no requirement that the delegates personally support any particular candidate. The slate was merely a means for the party's nominating committee to place names into nomination at the convention based on criteria that weighted previous participation in and financial support for the party. Additional names were nominated at the convention itself and the national delegates and alternates were elected by the state convention delegates. State Party rules only required that the national delegates chosen at the state convention caucus before or at the national convention and determine whether or how to reflect the previous strawpoll result. In August, 2012, the national delegation caucused in Tampa, Florida, at the Republican National Convention, and allowed each national delegate to vote their own conscience. According to Santorum and Paul supporters the slate placed into nomination by the party's nominating committee should have lived up to the strawpoll result, but instead gave Romney a large majority of the delegates. This misunderstanding of state party rules and procedures lead former NDGOP Chairman Gary Emineth to call the vote undemocratic and a railroad job.

References

References

  1. "North Dakota Republican Delegation 2012". [[The Green Papers]].
  2. Silver, Nate. (March 4, 2012). "State-by-State Analysis: Romney Could Win Majority of Super Tuesday Delegates". [[FiveThirtyEight]].
  3. Wetzel, Dale. (2012-04-07). "Santorum delegate plan hits wall in North Dakota". [[WTOP-FM]].
  4. "NDGOP Presidential Caucus Information". [[North Dakota Republican Party]].
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