Here's where the candidates stand on all measures after the New Hampshire primary. It takes 1,191 Delegates to secure the nomination. The total raw vote and number of delegates for each candidate are also presented as percentages. Romney currently leads in all categories. Next up is Michigan, Tues. Jan. 15 with 30 or 60 delegates available, depending on the 50% penalty for an early primary. According to this, it's winner take all and any voter can vote in either primary by requesting the appropriate ballot.
Total:
Republicans Vote % Del/% of Del
Romney 103,763 30 30/43%
McCain 102,361 29 10/14%
Huckabee 66,876 19 21/30%
Paul 29,648 9 2/3%
Giuliani 24,151 7 1/1%
Thompson 18,715 5 6/8%
Hunter 1,720 1 1/1%
Tancredo 5 0 0Total 347,234 100 71
Republicans Vote % Del
Huckabee 26,035 34 1
Romney 73,806 25 4
Thompson 2,808 13 0
McCain 86,802 13 7
Paul 17,831 10 0
Giuliani 20,054 3 0
Hunter 1,195 0 0Tancredo 0 0 0
Republicans Vote % Del
Huckabee 40,841 34 17
Romney 29,949 25 12
Thompson 15,904 13 3
McCain 15,559 13 3
Paul 11,817 10 2
Giuliani 4,097 3 0
Hunter 524 0 0Tancredo 5 0 0
Republicans Vote % Del
Romney 8 67 8
Thompson 3 25 3
Hunter 1 8 1


But you forgot the count that really matters, Dan.
In New Hampshire, we had 279276 votes for Democratic Candidates and 228531 votes for Republicans. That's a roughly 50k vote lead, or a 10 point lead in the polls between Dems and Repubs. This, among record turnouts on all sides.
Whoever wins the primaries this year, one thing is for certain. Democrats win the general.
Posted by: IslamoLlama | Wednesday, January 09, 2008 at 10:17 AM