This is the website of Abulsme Noibatno Itramne (also known as Sam Minter). Posts here are rare these days. For current stuff, follow me on Mastodon

Categories

Calendar

April 2026
S M T W T F S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

2012 Republican Delegate Count: First Round of Super Tuesday Results

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page. When a candidate gets down to 0%, they have cinched the nomination. If they get up past 100%, they have been mathematically eliminated. Rather than the date on the x-axis, we show the “% of Delegates Already Allocated” as this better represents the progress through the race. Note that these numbers include estimates of the eventual results of multi-stage caucus processes which will be refined as the later stages occur.

So, Super Tuesday happened. As of this update, Green Papers has “called” 385 of the 419 delegates available from the Super Tuesday contests. There are 34 delegates that haven’t been determined yet that will result in updates later, but of the ones we do know, the estimates for Super Tuesday contests are: Romney 208, Santorum 84, Gingrich 72, Paul 21. Romney also picked up a Superdelegate, bringing the total for the day to Romney 209, Santorum 84, Gingrich 72, Paul 21.

Compared to the Sabato Crystal Ball projections which we used to game out Super Tuesday over the weekend, Romney performed better than expectations, as did Gingrich. Santorum and Paul underperformed compared to those predictions. In any case, where does this put us…

Bottom line, Romney is the big winner today, and this may be the start of him actually pulling away and heading toward the nomination, but he is still not out of the woods in terms of the danger of being blocked from 1144. Lets look at the details.

The situation for Santorum, Gingrich and Paul is essentially what I mapped out in the gaming Super Tuesday post. To paraphrase what I said there, it is now absolutely undeniably clear (although the trend was obvious even before today) that none of these three guys are on a path to the nomination. Of the three, Santorum is doing the best, but with today’s numbers, to be on a path to win, he would need to now get 64.5% of the remaining delegates, compared to the 21.1% he has gotten so far. For this to even come into the realm of possibility, Gingrich and Paul would both have to stop getting delegates, Santorum would have to pick up all of their support, AND something would need to happen to cause support for Romney to plummet. This is a very unlikely sequence of events. It isn’t going to happen.

Oh, I guess I should also note that Gingrich pulled back ahead of Paul for 3rd place.

The remaining question is: “Are the non-Romney’s collectively still in a position to potentially block Romney from getting to 1144?” If after today, Romney was under 50% of the total delegates, and his “% of remaining needed to win” was heading upward or flat, this is a possibility that would be looking like it was still very much in play. But Romney exceeded the 49.7% of delegates he needed in order to be on track toward 1144, and did it by a decent margin. Of the delegates in today’s total, he picked up 209 of 386, or 54.1%. This reduced his “% of remaining needed to win” from 49.7% to 48.5%. That means to block, the non-Romney’s collectively need to be getting 51.5% of the delegates, compared to the 46.9% they have managed so far. So they have to do better than they have been so far, and by a non-trivial margin. And they have do do this even though it is obvious none of them can win outright. It has to be about stopping Romney.

Now, the rest of March has a bunch of states that are supposed to be relatively good for the non-Romneys. So the non-Romney’s managing to get 51.5% in the next few state is very much within the realm of possibility. After that we hit more Romney friendly states in April. The thing to watch for in the upcoming states is not who wins the popular vote, or even the delegate count. The question will be: “Is Romney continuing to get enough delegates to avoid being blocked?” Right now, that magic number is 48.2%. As long as he is getting 48.2% of the delegates (or more) then he is marching his way toward the nomination. If he gets less than that, then blocking will remain possible a little bit longer. If the rest of March really is friendly to the non-Romneys, we may see that Romney’s “% needed to win” starts heading back up a bit before Romney hits friendly states again and starts fully pulling away. As long as we see that happening, blocking Romney is still a possibility. And indeed, if Romney is damaged by the contests in March and his April states start looking not so good after all, then blocking starts looking more real again.

But Romney’s “% of remaining needed to win” is the smallest it has been so far, and none of the other candidates have realistic shots at winning, only a shot at blocking that relies on them continuing to win delegates even though it is obvious they can’t win, so Romney is in a pretty good position right now. Watch that line though. Until it starts heading downward decisively, Romney hasn’t got it wrapped up just yet.

So what is next? Well, first, the last 34 delegates from Super Tuesday (they are from Georgia, Ohio and Tennessee). Then on Sunday we have Kansas (40), Guam (9), Northern Marianas (9), Virgin Islands (9). Then Tuesday we have Alabama (50), Mississippi (40), Hawaii (20), American Samoa (9). And then it goes on and on…

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-06 (UTC)

Curmudgeon’s Corner: Did You Get Him a Drum Set?

In the latest Curmudgeon’s Corner…

Sam and Ivan talk about:

  • WA Caucuses
  • Super Tuesday Predictions
  • Human Computer Interactions / Data Speeds and Usage

Just click to listen now:

[wpaudio url=”http://www.abulsme.com/CurmudgeonsCorner/cc20120304.mp3″ text=”Recorded 4 Mar 2012″]

or

1-Click Subscribe in iTunes

View Podcast in iTunes

View XML Feed

2012 Republican Delegate Count: Adjusting Maine Again

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page. When a candidate gets down to 0%, they have cinched the nomination. If they get up past 100%, they have been mathematically eliminated. Note that these numbers include estimates of the eventual results of multi-stage caucus processes which will be refined as the later stages occur.

The delegate count estimate in Maine is apparently a little jittery. On February 12th I posted the initial results as Paul 8, Romney 8, Santorum 4, Gingrich 1. On February 18th Green Papers updates this to Romney 8, Paul 7, Santorum 4, Gingrich 2. Today this seems to have gotten updated back to Paul 8, Romney 8, Santorum 4, Gingrich 1. So this means for the day Paul gains a delegate and Gingrich loses a delegate. At this point though, one delegate alone doesn’t make a significant difference in the overall picture.

According to our Soft Green Papers plus DCW Superdelegate count though, this means Ron Paul actually pulls ahead of Newt Gingrich into 3rd place in the delegate count by a two delegate margin. So I guess there is that.

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-05 (UTC)

  • RT @chucktodd: Romney is traveling today like a candidate who cares more about delegates than primaties. #atlanta and #knoxville #
  • RT @fivethirtyeight: Romney's about even-money to win an outright majority of Super Tuesday delegates. #
  • RT @fivethirtyeight: Right now, my guesstimates are 217 del for Romney, 108 for Santorum, 60 for Gingrich, 25 for Paul — more detail later. #
  • Reading – British journalists accused by militia group of spying in Libya (Chris Stephen) http://t.co/R62KqxIV #
  • Reading – An Interview With One of Ron Paul's Top Secret Manchurian Delegates (Eli Sanders) http://t.co/29ZxmDtw #
  • How I Caucused Myself as a Republican Precinct Committee Officer for Rick Santorum (Paul Constant) http://t.co/EAnRrGLZ #
  • Reading – Ron Paul, Goldy, Big Winners at 37 LD Republican Precinct Caucuses (Goldy, Slog) http://t.co/KP4S7otb #
  • Reading – Obama At AIPAC (Andrew Sullivan) http://t.co/G9GAeuEF #
  • Reading – Torrent users freak out over shift from Xvid to x264, threaten to pirate elsewhere (Andrew Webster) http://t.co/vskx4uQe #
  • Reading – Obama: "We've Got Israel's Back" Ctd (Andrew Sullivan) http://t.co/nbqnoIAo #
  • Reading – Romney Could Win Majority of Super Tuesday Delegates (Nate Silver) http://t.co/lMloKgid #
  • RT @daveweigel: Santorum on track to win in Oklahoma. Lest you think that doesn't matter, remember: Wes Clark won it in 2004. #
  • RT @LarrySabato: Super-Tues seems mainly about Mitt. He gets MA,VA,VT, prob OH & ID. Outside shot at TN. Maybe wins ND or AK. #
  • MT @fivethirtyeight: People seem not-so-excited about Super Tuesday. Kind of bullish 4 Romney, suggests we've reached the acceptance stage. #
  • RT @ppppolls: BTW in case you thought Birtherism was dead: 33% of TN Republicans think Obama was born in US, 45% do not #
  • MT @joshtpm: For u who don't follow pollsters' twitter, sounds like broad Romney trend going into Tues, maybe even a bit of newtmentum #
  • Reading – We interrupt normal IR blogging to state the obvious about the Star Wars films (Daniel W. Drezner) http://t.co/sU7JAsXf #

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-04 (UTC)

  • Reading – Santorum already losing delegates in Ohio (Steve Thomma) http://t.co/Y6I8qB2O #
  • Reading – Fantasy Delegates (Josh Putnam) http://t.co/38vubMxV #
  • RT @ppppolls: Increased parity between Newt and Santorum is big story of GOP race this week. Ultimately Mitt is the beneficiary #
  • RT @dhewlett: “.@BreakingNews: Update: Disneyland in Anaheim, California, reopens after geocaching game triggers lockdown" Oops, Nerd Alert! #
  • RT @FHQ: Statewide wins/losses aside, this is increasingly a fight for Gingrich/Santorum to keep Romney from getting delegates. #
  • RT @DemConWatch: It's really been that way since Iowa. RT @FHQ: This is increasingly a fight for G/S to keep Romney from getting delegates. #
  • Reading – Romney Camp Says Santorum’s Ohio ‘Delegate Debacle’ Shows Major Problems
    (Benjy Sarlin) http://t.co/Swwumb2r #
  • RT @davidfrum: It's prob true that Obama admin used contracept issue to dig a trap for GOP. But there was no obligation to jump in #
  • RT @fivethirtyeight: Anecdotal accounts seem to suggest Paul or Romney will win WA caucuses, Santorum less likely. #
  • Reading – Local GOP apologizes for turning 1,500 away from caucuses in Kennewick (Michelle Dupler) http://t.co/x7WhWYht #
  • Reading – Rush Limbaugh Apologizes to Sandra Fluke Reported (Evan McMorris-Santoro) http://t.co/0xyTQnWS #
  • Reading – "Return of the Jedi" is the Best Star Wars Movie of All Time (Kevin Drum) http://t.co/k5wx3Cdo #
  • RT @LarrySabato: I used to think a combo of primaries & caucuses was best. Now, primaries much preferred. Too many caucus problems all over. #
  • RT @pattonoswalt: Ayn Rand would be very pleased with how the free market bitch-slapped Limbaugh today. #
  • RT @LarrySabato: What does Romney get out of likely WA win? Positive Sunday headline, Mittmentum 4 SuperTuesday, denial of 'mo' to Sant. #
  • RT @daveweigel: DEVELOPING: Exit polls suggest that the trees in Washington state are the right height #
  • MT @LarrySabato: Delegate fetishists pointing out none allocated in WA today. But candidates get as much juice from headlines as delegates. #
  • RT @chucktodd: There are 424 delegates up for grabs Super Tuesday, but Santorum can only compete for 369. http://t.co/3sBeDwuL #
  • RT @LarrySabato: Congrats to WA GOP. Unlike some other state R parties, it is compiling & releasing data efficiently. #
  • RT @MittRomney: I’m heartened to have won the Washington caucuses, and I thank the voters for their support today. #Mitt2012 #
  • MT @fivethirtyeight: Santorum needs some wins in caucuses, or to win OH by a blowout, to make the race interesting post Super Tuesday. #
  • RT @ggreenwald: CATO was one of the earliest, most vocal opponents of Bush/Cheney exec power abuses & Iraq War #JustAFact #
  • RT @meetthepress: BREAKING: House Majority Leader Eric Cantor endorses Gov. Mitt Romney on Meet the Press #MTP #
  • RT @daveweigel: Will be fun to watch the further GOP establishment scrambling the week after Super Tuesday, as Mitt loses AL/MS primaries #
  • MT @CarrieNBCNews: In Marist poll, Obama up 50-38 on Romney in OH. & a Portman VP pick not wrth a signif Mitt boost http://t.co/jHRKqB4V #
  • Reading – Race to 1144: Washington Caucuses (Josh Putnam) http://t.co/F6Q6jolN #
  • Reading – Tearful Vladimir Putin wins presidency (Tom Parfitt) http://t.co/FaVOWE0p #
  • Reading – Actual Press Bias Or Something, Anyway (Jonathan Bernstein) http://t.co/HxPUOs8F #
  • RT @levarburton: Last day of shooting before launch! #readingrainbow #relaunch #excitedashell #
  • RT @thinkprogress: BREAKING: @ProFlowers pulling ads from Rush Limbaugh show despite apology. 7th company to drop Rush. http://t.co/M6XdpoF6 #
  • Reading – Santorum: I'll beat Romney if Gingrich drops out (Joel Gehrke) http://t.co/lpRWB3jN #
  • Reading – Zap your brain into the zone: Fast track to pure focus (Sally Adee) http://t.co/IH1jrQpM #
  • Reading – WA Caucus Yet Another Sign that Mitt Romney Is the Republican John Kerry (Goldy, Slog) http://t.co/Qseqvgn8 #
  • Watching – Invisible Mercedes (mashable) http://t.co/kDMQNyD9 #
  • Reading – How Obama Got His Groove Back (Zeke Miller) http://t.co/ESU01gJN #
  • Reading – Top Republicans Settle For Romney (McKay Coppins) http://t.co/XVXGny50 #
  • Reading – DMCA: Horrors of a Broad and Automated Censorship Tool (Ernesto, TorrentFreak) http://t.co/EF4vCunT #
  • Reading – Animal Crackers (Lambert Strether) http://t.co/NR0HUgFl #
  • Reading – Khamenei Takes Control, Forbids Nuclear Bomb (Juan Cole) http://t.co/h9v8pm1N #

Gaming Out Super Tuesday

There are a lot of states voting on Super Tuesday (10). Polling is sparse. The delegate rules vary greatly between states and are complicated. I don’t really have the resources or time to do a deep dive here. Luckily, other people do. On March 1st Sabato’s Crystal ball did a detailed delegate prediction while looking at all of those things. (They also included Washington, and it seems they probably overestimated Santorum there, but that’s how predictions go.) They don’t provide a range of predictions, just one. Their best guess, on Super Tuesday: Romney 197, Santorum 144, Gingrich 46, Paul 26.

This would bring their totals for the race to: Romney 393, Santorum 221, Gingrich 98, Paul 78. (This from adding Sabato’s numbers to my current estimates which combine the Soft Green Papers count and the DCW super delegate count.) Lets see where we would end up on my “% of remaining delegates needed to win” chart if the above is indeed what happens…

Now, technically speaking this is another of my “everybody loses!” results, as even Romney ends up increasing his “% or remaining delegates needed to win” number in this scenario (from 49.7% to 50.2%). But there are definitely degrees of losing, and Romney has by far the best deal here. Lets start at the bottom.

After this result Ron Paul would need 71.3% of the remaining delegates to catch up and win, compared to the 9.9% he would have gotten up to that point. This clearly is beyond what is reasonably possible. Paul was never about winning though, he is about getting his message out. So he’ll of course continue on.

After this result Newt Gingrich would need 69.9% of the remaining delegates to catch up and win, compared to the 12.4% he would have gotten up to that point. This is also clearly beyond the range of the reasonably possible. So the question becomes if Gingrich can continue to get funding anyway to stay in and continue acting as a spoiler, with the hope that along with the other non-Romneys he can block Romney from getting to 1144.

After this result Rick Santorum would need 61.7% of the remaining delegates to catch up and win, compared to the 28.0% he would have gotten up to that point. I am tempted to say this is ALSO clearly beyond the range of the reasonably possible, and I think it actually is. But for the sake of argument, you can imagine a situation where Gingrich and Paul both drop out (unlikely), Santorum picks up ALL of their support (unlikely) AND Romney has a series of major mistakes and his levels of support drop dramatically and significantly and those people decide they like Santorum after all (unlikely) then maybe Santorum can get to 61.7%. (If even more dramatically, on dropping out Gingrich instructed his delegates to vote for Santorum, and a bunch of them indicated they probably would, that would lower the 61.7% number, but still probably not enough.)

After this result Mitt Romney would need 50.2% of the remaining delegates to get to 1144 and seal the deal, compared to the 49.7% he had gotten so far. Unlike the other three candidates, these numbers are actually very close to each other. If he continues just that level, he gets blocked, but Romney only has to do SLIGHTLY better than he had been doing up to that point in order to actually win. At this point, Romney would NOT yet have started breaking out to drive his “% of remaining needed to win” number down toward zero. At the same time, he has not had a disaster where this number starts moving dramatically upward. But would these results put Romney in a position where finally pushing “% of remaining needed to win” down in the next few contests gets a lot easier?

If the actual result is anything like what Sabato and company predict for Super Tuesday, then it will be absolutely clear that Paul, Gingrich and Santorum are not on a path to win the nomination. (And frankly, even before Super Tuesday, this direction was clear, this would just hammer that home.) But the three of them will still collectively be in a position where if their ability to get delegates remains flat (or increases) they will block Romney. Their ability to keep this as something that remains possible (at least for awhile longer) will in large part depend on how Super Tuesday gets “spun”. If we start hearing from the talking heads about how Romney’s lead is now insurmountable and this is all over, then support for the other three will start to decline rapidly, and in the next contests Romney should be able to finally actually start closing in on a win and it really will be done.

If on the other hand, the spin is all about Romney still not closing the deal and that Santorum has momentum out of winning the popular vote in Ohio or some such regardless of the delegate situation, then this drags out a bit longer. But that depends on people continuing to vote for the non-Romneys, even after it is clear they have no shot at winning. It truly does become a “non-Romney” vote specifically aimed at blocking Romney rather than a vote actually for any of these three guys directly. But will the Santorum, Gingrich and Paul people actually do that? Or will they just say “I guess it is Romney” and either vote for Romney or just stay home, finally letting Romney start getting the margins of delegates he needs to wrap this thing up?

Given the overall situation, if pressed to make the prediction, I say the spin leans toward “Maybe Romney won the night on delegates… but look at all the shiny states won by the others… and Virginia doesn’t count because Santorum and Gingrich weren’t even on the ballot… Romney is having trouble closing the deal… we need to start looking at Kansas and Alabama and Hawaii and Mississippi and the rest of the states and territories in March (at least). And if this this and this happen, then… BROKERED CONVENTION! Wouldn’t that be AWESOME???”

I predict this not because I think the numbers actually back up this case, but because it is in the interests of the press to drag this out as long as possible, so they will hype any ray of hope the non-Romneys have for as long as they can possibly get away with it, which will in turn lead people to continue to think it is a contest and vote for the non-Romneys as the process continues to drag on, which will continue to feed the Romney hasn’t locked it up narrative for awhile longer. They did this in 2008 with the Democrats, they will do it in 2012 with the Republicans.

Then eventually it will get to the point where Romney’s lead is so overwhelming it will be hard to sustain that narrative, the support for the non-Romneys will finally start to dissipate, and Romney will slowly but surely make his way to 1144.

Having said that, despite my prediction to the contrary, I still hope the non-Romneys can sustain enough between them to block Romney. That would be much more fun to watch.

2012 Republican Delegate Count: Washington Caucuses

Chart from the Abulsme.com 2012 Republican Delegate Count Graphs page. When a candidate gets down to 0%, they have cinched the nomination. If they get up past 100%, they have been mathematically eliminated. Rather than the date on the x-axis, we show the “% of Delegates Already Allocated” as this better represents the progress through the race. Note that these numbers include estimates of the eventual results of multi-stage caucus processes which will be refined as the later stages occur.

So, today’s update includes the preliminary estimates from the Washington caucuses. As always, is important to note that no actual delegates were allocated at this point. That will happen at later stages of the process. Our graphs reflect Green Paper‘s “soft count” estimate, which will change over time as the later stages of the process happen. By those estimates, the results were Romney 16, Paul 10, Santorum 10, Gingrich 4. Santorum also picked up a super delegate since yesterday’s update. So for the day: Romney 16, Santorum 11, Paul 10, Gingrich 4.

Bottom line though, we have yet another day where EVERYBODY LOSES. Of course the narrative is all about how Romney has now “won” several in a row, and this gives him momentum going into Super Tuesday. And of course that is a very real effect. “Winning” and the media spin around it have a huge effect. People don’t just vote for their favorite candidate, they tend to want to vote for someone that can win. So things may change in future contests.

But as of right now, Romney did the best of the night, but he needed to get 49.4% of the delegates to be “on pace” to get to 1144. He actually got 16/41, or only 39.0%. So the percentage of remaining delegates he needs to get to win actually increases from 49.4% up to 49.7%. This isn’t a big move, but it is a move in the wrong direction. To be wrapping this up, Romney needs to be winning by numbers that drive this metric down. So far, he continues to hover in the range where if he continues as he has been, he will eventually win, but if he starts to do even slightly worse, he can be blocked.

For the non-Romneys, their path to the nomination continues to get more and more unlikely. Santorum is still in second place. He now needs 55.9% of the remaining delegates to catch up and win. This would be a remarkable change from the 20.4% of delegates he has managed so far. The more realistic goal for the non-Romneys at this point continues to be that they collectively get enough delegates to block Romney, not that any of them actually collect enough to win themselves. (Having said that, one of these guys catching up is not yet actually impossible if something major happens, it is just getting increasingly likely.)

I’ll also note that according to our estimates (combining the Soft Green Papers count and the DCW super delegate count) Ron Paul has now caught up and tied with Newt Gingrich for 3rd in the delegate count.

And now we have Super Tuesday. Although not as big as 2008, we’ll still have a large number of delegates awarded. The main thing to look out for: Does Romney’s “% of remaining needed to win” actually start to drop? If not, the possibility of him not getting to 1144 gets a lot more serious.

@abulsme Updates from 2012-03-03 (UTC)

  • Reading – Obama Backs GOP Into Limbaugh-Shaped Corner (Evan McMorris-Santoro) http://t.co/cfTFiysQ #
  • MT @kmcquadeEPS: @mattyglesias @AndrewBrietbart As a left-of-center guy, u need 2 know yr comment is shameful. Your lack of civility is sad. #
  • Reading – What Intersections Would Look Like in a World of Driverless Cars (Emily Badger) http://t.co/pOKE32NR #
  • RT @Kimsfirst: March 1980 Illinois poll: Carter 60 Reagan 34. Election day: Reagan 50 Carter 42. Relevant today: see http://t.co/mzYfgk7s #
  • Reading – 40 Delegates Up For Grabs In Today's Washington Caucuses (Oreo, DCW) http://t.co/N3STF44K #
  • In the parking lot waiting for things to open up. McDonalds breakfast. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • OK, going in. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • I am now the "temporary chair" of my precinct because I am the first to show up from Ruggs Lake precinct. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Registered my straw poll preference for Ron Paul on the sign up sheet. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • The table designated for Ruggs Lake has room for about six people. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44ru #
  • There is a table with Ron Paul people giving out swag. No other candidate with visible presence. Got some swag. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • 30 minutes after doors open. 30 minutes until event starts. I am still the only one at the Ruggs Lake table. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Most people appear to be staying for the actual caucus rather than leaving after they vote in the straw poll. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Slight drama as someone fell off their chair and hit his head on a bench. A bunch of us ran over. He is fine. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Cell coverage sucks in here. Have to stand up and walk around to get tweet out reliably. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @DaPlaneBoss @RonPaul glad you are enjoying them! :-) #
  • @DaPlaneBoss Yes. Gray hair. #
  • 15 minutes out. Getting more crowded and noisy. Still the only one from Ruggs Lake. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • I ran to get something from car, took packet with me to make sure not lost. Concerned people. But I came back. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Still only one at Ruggs Lake table. Maybe I should have brought a pen. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Of course what I wanted from my car isn't in my bag after all. I may have to go back out. But I will wait. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Room getting quite full. 1 m until it is supposed to start. Still only one at table. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • There are still people in line to get signed in, so they are waiting a few minutes to start. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Reading packet to know what I have to do if I am the only person from my precinct. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Filling out surveys on how I feel about various issues, etc. Still only person for Ruggs Lake. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Pledge of allegiance. We have started. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Looks like I *am* Ruggs Lake. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • They are reviewing how the precinct caucuses will work. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Three people now for Ruggs Lake! I am not alone! #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • There was a 4th sign up for Ruggs Lake so we are waiting, but will vote shortly. 3 of us here. 3 del positions. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @RQDammit I'm at the caucuses. Woo! #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Ruggs Lake votes in three delegates to county . 2 Santorum, 1 Paul (me). #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • The other two from my precinct were a nice couple. Very friendly. They liked Santorum. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • The other two from Ruggs Lake left. Our precinct caucus is over. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • The bigger precincts are still going through multiple rounds of voting to select delegates. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @osbournequinn They have not reported results from the straw poll yet. Waiting to see if they do. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • My precinct, Ruggs Lake, elected 2 dels to county caucus that support Santorum, and 1 (me) that supports Paul. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Lots of people leaving. Don't know if they will reconvene the whole group to give straw poll results. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @seifert5 Best Republican still in the race. Reserving thoughts on November for November. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @osbournequinn Will be good to see what he (and Rand) end up doing as time goes on. :-) #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Confirmed with chair that the whole group will not reconvene and no straw poll results will be reported here. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Still a bunch of precincts doing their thing. But probably 2/3 of people who were here gone now. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • The 4th person from Ruggs Lake who did the straw poll but didn't stay for the caucus didn't actually "vote". #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @hurricaneoasis Saw the del tally for my precinct. Just the meaningless straw poll they are not counting yet. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @seifert5 Don't know reason. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Sticking around longer just to see if anything random happens. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @hurricaneoasis Yes, I know. Affects media narrative, which in turn affects future contests. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @hurricaneoasis Uh, effects. Darn iPhone. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Guesstimate on total attendance at this site: About 200. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • 95% confidence interval an attendance here: 150 to 250. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • 95% confidence interval on attendance here: 150 to 250. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @Marcooo8a Heh, they sounded pretty solid on Santorum. Next step county caucus. Long way to Tampa. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Room getting empty. Just a handful of precincts still working. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • New pple watching me 4 caucus livetweet check out http://t.co/m39aSYhz for more election commentary and analysis. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • @Marcooo8a I am conflicted on November for now. Will decide once it is clear what all the choices will be. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • I think only 1 precinct is still doing anything. Bunch of other people just milling around. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • 26 people signed Ron Paul supporter sheet at Ron Paul table. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • That would be somewhere between 10% and 17% for Paul based on my total attendance est. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • I think everyone is done. Chairs are being put away. A few people still milling and talking in small groups. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • Someone asked on counting. Told ballots are not counted here. Straw poll signups go to county to get counted. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • At county there are counting observers from the campaigns. Folks who want are free to also go there to observe. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • All that is left is cleaning up. So wrapping up live tweeting and going home. Check out http://t.co/X3c9bC9V. #wacaucus #ruggslake #ld44 #
  • RT @gregpalmer: Sadface. RT @pete_schultz: Every balloon you see floating into the atmosphere represents the worst day in a toddler's life. #
  • MT @MysteryPollster: We unveiled a redesigned, much improved poll chart & dashboard today. Check it out: http://t.co/kn2IIx3R #
  • RT @delong: Why Republicans are in a box: their base, and nobody else, thinks unmarried people shouldn’t have sex http://t.co/a8svFNz3 #
  • Reading – Measuring Polarization through Chamber and Party Medians over Time (voteview) http://t.co/zExuuqh8 #
  • Reading – Taking an Axe to a Lorax (Andrew Sullivan) http://t.co/4a5atnSJ #

Live Tweeting my Local Washington State Republican Caucuses

I am planning today to go to the Republican Caucuses here in Washington state. Doors open in about 30 minutes, you have to be signed in about 60 minutes from now, and 90 minutes from now the “action” should get started.

Assuming I am able to, I will be live tweeting as things progress. The tweets will appear on abulsme.com at a few minutes before 00:00 UTC in daily summary form, or you can follow me on Twitter to get updates in real time:

@abulsme

If I understand correctly, there will be a straw poll vote (which will be what is reported first by the press, but doest really matter), then there will be speeches and such, and then delegates will be picked for the county conventions. Those delegates will state their preferences most likely, but will not be bound in any way at the next level. Washington has 40 delegates, 30 will be winner take all 3 at a time by congressional district, and 10 will be proportional based on the state wide vote.

For the record, I plan on expressing my preferences (I hesitate to call what happens at a caucus actual voting) for Ron Paul. Of the four remaining Republican candidates, he is my preference by far. In terms of caucus participation, I am a Republican for the day, but at this point I am not ready to commit to what I will do in November. We shall see. And there will likely be other choices besides the Republican and Democrat, some of which may be interesting.