Rick Santorum Wins CO caucuses with 42.3%, Romney second with 34.9%, Newt with 12.1%, Ron Paul 11.77%...
Santorum won Minnesota (and Missouri) last night, too. Hilarious.
So, we had our caucuses tonight in CO. Surprisingly, Santorum won our precinct handily.
I'm so sorry for you. He doesn't have a snowball's chance in Hell, of being the nominee. Clearly, he is vying for Veep.
It now appears as if Santorum won the CO caucuses entirely. I must admit I am surprised.
So, we had our caucuses tonight in CO. Surprisingly, Santorum won our precinct handily.
I can't believe he won CO. I saw that this morning and still can't wrap my mind around it. How the F did that happen.
Colorado has a streak of contrariness. Mostly based off the fact that the Caucus actually doesn't determine who our delegation votes for in the end.
2008, Mitt won but the delegation we sent to the National Convention were all pledged to McCain... Basically, this is a preference poll, who the State Convention votes for can, and often is, different than who wins the caucus. This is what we gave up when we went to the caucus system from the Primary we used to hold entirely too late to make a difference.
Mitt won 60% in 2008. That's a big reversal.
Why bother with the caucus if it doesn't matter at all? Isn't it more of a move of solidarity for delegates to be pledged to the eventual nominee even though a different candidate won the caucus? I don't know much about it, but the caucus seems to be more than just a preference poll. (I don't know if CO is like Iowa where the "results" released to the media aren't really the results, but I think Santorum won Colorado when all was said and done).
The caucus is where we elect the delegates for every level of assembly up to the State, at that convention some of those delegates will be elected to go to national. So, while the caucus doesn't decide who the delegation votes for (as there is no pledged delegate) it does elect the delegates that will eventually go as pledged to the eventual candidate.
The Presidential Preference poll is exactly that, an informal poll. That the caucus attendees know that is shown to be evident by the results that are often contrary to the eventual nominee. This is also true of both of the "Primaries" that were held on the same night. Oddly enough, Santorum "won" those contests, but is not guaranteed even one delegate from them...
So the caucus is entirely meaningless? That doesn't sound right at all. I mean, I can understand a scenario where Mitt wins every primary from now through April and at the time of your state assembly is clearly going to be the nominee and the delegates are pledged to him as a sign of solidarity. But I can't imagine a scenario where the race is close as of April and last night's caucus results are just thrown out the window and the delegates up and decide to pledge their votes to Mitt. I understand that it can happen, but it seems ... screwy.
It now appears as if Santorum won the CO caucuses entirely. I must admit I am surprised.