Romney edges Paul in Maine and captures CPAC straw poll
PORTLAND, Maine (AP)—Mitt Romney eked out a narrow win in Maine’s Republican caucuses, state party officials announced Saturday, providing his campaign with a much-needed boost after three straight losses earlier this week. But the former Massachusetts governor’s margin of victory over rival Ron Paul was so slim it all but guaranteed scrutiny of the party’s decision not to count the results of caucuses scheduled later in February.
At a gathering in Portland, state Republican Chairman Charlie Webster announced Romney had won with 2,190 votes compared to 1,996 for Paul, the only other candidate to aggressively compete in the state. Rick Santorum received 989 votes and Newt Gingrich won 349, but neither actively campaigned there.
Webster said any caucus results that come in after Saturday wouldn’t be counted no matter how close the vote turned out to be.
“Some caucuses decided not to participate in this poll and will caucus after this announcement,” Webster said. “Their results will not be factored in. The absent votes will not be factored into this announcement after the fact.”
Maine’s caucuses began Feb. 4 and continued throughout the week. But the results announced Saturday accounted for just 83 percent of the state’s precincts. Several communities elected to hold their caucuses at a later date.
Caucuses in Washington County scheduled Saturday were postponed until Feb. 18 because of a major snowstorm that blanketed the region. Earlier, party Executive Director Michael Quatrano said county officials were told the results would not count toward the total.
In a televised interview, Webster said there were less than 200 votes in Washington County and he doubted that including them would have changed the outcome.
Speaking to supporters in Portland, Paul expressed disappointment that only a portion of the state’s caucuses had counted toward the total.
“I wish all the caucuses had met today,” Paul said, adding, “It’s almost like we could call it a tie.”
Romney was attending a fundraiser in California late Saturday, after campaigning in Maine earlier in the day, visiting caucus sites where he pressed voters for their support.
“I thank the voters of Maine for their support,” Romney said in a statement late Saturday. “I’m committed to turning around America. And I’m heartened to have the support of so many good people in this great state.”
Romney’s victory in Maine, just hours after he won the presidential straw poll at the Conservative Political Action Committee Conference, helped slow a skid that began earlier this week when he lost contests in Missouri, Minnesota and Colorado.
In the CPAC poll, the former Massachusetts governor was favored by 38 percent of the 3,408 respondents. Rivals Rick Santorum drew 31 percent, and Newt Gingrich was favored by 15 percent. All three candidates addressed CPAC in Washington on Friday. Ron Paul, who had won the straw poll in the previous two years, had 12 percent. Paul did not attend the conference to campaign in Maine.
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back to top23 Comments to “Romney edges Paul in Maine and captures CPAC straw poll”
This IS good for the process – As iron sharpens iron, Prov. 27:17 so one man sharpens another.
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Or, if you look at it from the Dems side, familiarity breeds contempt.
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I didn’t think there were any Republicans in Maine, but apparently there are 5,524 of them hiding in the woods somewhere. The CPAC response was even less impressive.
It’s weird to watch the news and think that the election is the only thing that matters, but in the real world Americans don’t seem to care.
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The Dem’s side is so used to familiarity breeding contempt that their logic is clouded as to the honesty of others’ motives.
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We live in interesting times! 21 days until we try to win our precinct for Ron Paul at our county’s caucus.
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I think it strage that Gingrich and Santorum did so badly. The reason given is that they did not campaign there. Really? So people decide on whom to vote for based on how many times they see them on TV or how many hands they shake at the local diner?
Come on. This is the Internet age. Click a few buttons, educate yourself, and then decide who the best candidate is.
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Xion: There’s at least one R Senator from Maine.
Interesting that Paul won CPAC for two non-election years, but crashed and burned this year.
And also that turn out for every R primary and caucus I’ve heard about has been down. I wonder of the combination of Bush, followed by Palin and the mad dog TP’ers has done more damage to that party than most folks realize.
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Oh yeah, Olympia Snow. She is a Republican like Obama is a Republican.
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Arcadia, Paul chose not to be part of CPAC this year (explanation here). I don’t think it’s considered “crashing and burning” when you’re not even in the race.
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Believe it or not, Kyle, people don’t just make up their minds by reading about the candidates from afar. The candidates still have to visit, meet some voters, get some local headlines. Otherwise, they could just sit at home and make a few speeches every day from their front porch; but that doesn’t work.
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Maine has two Republican Senators, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins. They’re both moderates (much more moderate than, say, Romney or McCain, who are only moderate within the GOP, but lean conservative compared with the overall voters), but 50% is better than 5%. Real conservatives won’t get elected in Maine unless the Democrats split their vote so that the conservative wins with 40% or so, which is what happened in the 2010 gubernatorial election (Maine actually has a conservative Republican governor).
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Matt Y, that stinks. It makes it a popularity contest. It shouldn’t be.
We should streamline the nominating process–have all primaries in the same month. People who don’t get a personal visit from a candidate would just have to get over it and vote on the merits of the candidates.
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Ron Paul didn’t get his message across to the people of Maine, it’s that simple.
And where have the Tea Partiers been lately? They aren’t “mad dogs” but when someone goes through life angry about everything else…..
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I disagree with streamlining it too much. We’ve heard about being tried in fire. There’s no way to vet a person if we can’t test their staying power. If they can’t handle primaries, how are they going to handle Congress and the rest of the world?
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NJL, with all due respect, I have several problems with the long, drawn-out nomination procedure.
I am not sure that going on a bus from state to state is the best way to judge whether a person can handle Congress and the rest of the world. It costs a lot of money. It ends up being a matter of strategizing for the candidates–rather than a matter of the people choosing the best candidate. The best candidate might end up picking the “wrong” states to campaign in and thereby lose the nomination. It leaves the later states with few to no choices. It favors the voters in some states and penalizes the voters in others. Having to win by how many barbecue joints you visit turns it into a popularity contest–like the junior high student council.
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I said “too much,” Kyle. We start waaaayyy too early on the next election — we start right after the last one. Some state has to go first no matter when you start, and to vie over that is a little bit childish. We could have a rotating system, if that would suit you better that 5 or 10 states go first this time, then move to the bottom the next time or some other form or rotation.
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And where have the Tea Partiers been lately?
–
Most have gone to Rick S…
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Romney 4 States
Rick 4 States
Newt 1 State
RP still stuck at 0
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Did Rick s get 16% or 18% which is good considering he did not visit the state.
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Conservatives campaigning actively in states which are historically Democratic and predictably go D in the general election. How wacky is that?
I can’t wait to see who emerges as the winners in the R primary in NY and California. The Jacob Javits wing of the GOP has now morphed into the Bloomberg wing. Truly not a dime’s worth of difference
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There have been articles in the Portland and Bangor papers the last couple of days about the decision to give Romney the win. Washington County Republicans are particularly annoyed that their votes weren’t counted; their caucus was postponed due to snow. If/when all the votes are counted, Ron Paul may come out ahead of Romney. Paul’s libertarian positions appeal to quite a few Maine voters.
Maine does have two Republican senators, the moderates Snowe and Collins, and a conservative Republican governor, Paul LePage. LePage won because the Democrat and the Independent split the Democrat votes. The Democrat representative from northern Maine, Mike Michaud, was somewhat pro-life (not totally) when he was in the state legislature. Only Chellie Pingree, the Democrat representative for the southern part of the state, is a real liberal.
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Pastor Roy (18),
Correction:
I.e., Romney — the current delegate leader — has less than 11% of the total delegates he needs to win.
It’s still quite the horse race, my friend!
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Here’s a link to a column in today’s Portland (Maine) Press Herald:
http://www.pressherald.com/news/tip-for-gop-first-collect-votes-then-name-winner_2012-02-15.html
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