Wall Street Willie has done better in the last couple of debates, and that certainly helped him. But probably the biggest factor in his Florida rebound is his massive amount of money spent. In Florida, there has been $15.9 million spent on ads for Romney ($7 million by the Romney campaign and another $8.9 million by the Romney super-PAC), while only about $4 million was spent on ads for Gingrich ($1.2 million by the Gingrich campaign and another $2.8 by his super-PAC). That's a huge advantage for old Wall Street Willie.
Yesterday I posted five recent Florida polls, and all of them had Romney with a significant lead in that state. Now the Rasmussen Poll has released it's latest figures, and they verify what the other polls have been saying. Here are those numbers:
RASMUSSEN POLL
Mitt Romney...............44%
Newt Gingrich...............28%
Rick Santorum...............12%
Ron Paul...............10%
Other/Undecided...............6%
That takes care of the voting for January, and for Gingrich's best early voting chances. His next chances to make inroads into Romney's delegate count won't come until the end of February and the first week of March. Arizona and Michigan will hold their primaries on February 28th, and 10 more states will vote on March 6th (Super Tuesday). The question now is can Gingrich hold on until the end of February.
There are four caucuses in the first half of February -- in Nevada, Maine, Colorado, and Minnesota. There is also a primary in Missouri, but it is just a beauty contest and doesn't award any delegates. It is doubtful that Gingrich will do too well in those caucuses, since he just doesn't have the organization in place. Romney is organized in those states, but so is Ron Paul. And Ron Paul has shown an extraordinary ability to turn out his supporters for caucuses. If Paul is going to do much of anything this year, the next couple of weeks are his big chance to shine.
Here is the schedule through Super Tuesday:
February 4, 2012 | Nevada (caucus) |
February 4–11, 2012 | Maine (caucus) |
February 7, 2012 | Colorado (caucus) Minnesota (caucus) Missouri (primary) – No delegates awarded |
February 28, 2012 | Arizona (primary) Michigan (primary) |
March 3, 2012 | Washington (caucus) |
March 6, 2012 (Super Tuesday) | Alaska (caucus) Georgia (primary) Idaho (caucus) Massachusetts (primary) North Dakota (caucus) Ohio (primary) Oklahoma (primary) Tennessee (primary) Vermont (primary) Virginia (primary) |
As a resident of Maine, I'd definitely like to give you an eye witness account of what's goin' on up here.
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, the ratio of Democrats and Independents to Republicans is an easy 10:1 in Maine. So Rick Santorum has absolutely no support here - most of the Republicans are just to the right of center (like our senators), and aren't buying his hate-infested nonsense talk. I know Ron Paul is currently (or just finished up) touring the state, and he's really popular with the college kids who don't quite get everything he's about. I myself like some of his ideas, but he's just far too twisted for my taste.
Maine will either go to Gingrich or Romney. I'm betting on the latter. But it really doesn't matter. Very few people in Maine give a damn about the Republican candidates. Maine will go to President Obama in 2012, guaranteed. All four of our pathetic electoral college votes.