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Ron Paul Still Taking Delegates From Romney

May 8, 2012 RSS Feed Print
Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul appears at a town hall meeting in College Park, Md.

Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul appears at a town hall meeting in College Park, Md.

By BRIAN BAKST and STEPHEN OHLEMACHER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Don't tell Ron Paul the Republican primary is over. He's too busy mucking up Mitt Romney's efforts to accumulate enough convention delegates to officially claim the GOP nomination for president.

Paul's supporters won control of state GOP conventions in Maine and Nevada last weekend, stripping Romney of delegates in Maine but graciously letting him keep the ones he won in Nevada's February caucuses. Next up: Republican state conventions in Minnesota, Missouri, Louisiana and Iowa.

[Read: Ron Paul Continues to Nip at Mitt Romney's Heels.]

"I don't think they'll be able to ignore us completely," said Kevin Erickson, a pastor from northeastern Minnesota who rescheduled a surgery to qualify as a national convention delegate for Paul.

The father of five supports his family on a single income but said he's budgeted about $6,000 to attend the GOP's August convention in Tampa, Fla. A lifelong Republican, Erickson said he's working hard for a platform that denounces what he sees as a weakening of due process when it comes to detentions authorized by the USA Patriot Act. He expects to have plenty of company.

Paul won't threaten Romney's hold on the GOP nomination — Romney's delegate lead is so big he is likely to reach the 1,144 delegates he needs to clinch the nomination by the end of the month. The former Massachusetts governor is already in general election mode, focusing his energy on uniting the GOP and defeating President Barack Obama in November.

But Paul could have enough supporters in Tampa to cause trouble if they don't get what they want. And what do they want?

At the very least, they want a prominent speaking role for Paul at the convention, said Marianne Stebbins, who has coordinated Paul efforts in Minnesota. More broadly, they want a platform for their message of limited government as they work to reshape the Republican Party, one state at a time.

[Read: Ron Paul Still on the Hunt for Delegates.]

"I hope they're smart," Stebbins said of the Romney campaign. "Those margins, Romney versus Obama, are so thin that I hope they don't shove an entire constituency out of the party that they will need in November."

The Romney campaign treads lightly around Paul, careful not to offend his supporters but insistent that Romney is the nominee.

"Gov. Romney has a lot of respect for Dr. Paul and the energy his supporters bring to the process," Romney campaign spokeswoman Andrea Saul said in an email. "We look forward to working together to help Mitt Romney defeat President Obama this fall. As for individual state conventions, make no mistake that the Tampa convention will nominate Mitt Romney, and it will be his convention."

Romney has 856 delegates — 288 shy of the number he needs to clinch the nomination. Paul, a Texas congressman, has 94, according to an Associated Press count.

There are 107 delegates at stake in primaries Tuesday in North Carolina, Indiana and West Virginia.

Primaries have not been Paul's strong suit — he hasn't won a single primary or caucus. But Paul's supporters have successfully navigated the convention process in a number of states, adding to Paul's delegate total while gaining influence over state parties.

In Iowa and Nevada, Paul supporters were elected to lead their state Republican parties. In Maine, two Paul supporters were elected to the Republican National Committee. In Massachusetts, Paul's supporters denied a delegate spot to Kerry Healey, Romney's former lieutenant governor, even though Romney won the state's presidential primary with 72 percent of the vote, according to The Boston Globe.

It would be a mistake to underestimate the number of Paul supporters who will attend the GOP national convention because they will probably outnumber Paul's delegate count in some states, said Josh Putnam, an assistant political science professor at Davidson University who writes the political blog Frontloading HQ.

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I am really sick and tired of every "news person" using figures from AP as gospel.....they don't know how many delegates Romney has, or Paul for that matter......and it's funny how Dr. Paul keeps sweeping up delegates, but Romney's count never goes down. Come on AP, show us the math.

Ron Paul's delegates worked hard and got him a spot on the ballot at the Tampa convention and I think this race is a long way from over. They haven't stolen, hijacked or stripped Romney of any delegates....Romney flat out does not have the support to gain delegates and Dr. Paul's supporters are proving it over and over again.

One last thought...if Romney is the chosen one and has all this support.....why can't he get his delegates elected without try to cheat? or get more than 300 people (compared to Paul's 5 or 6 thousand) at his "rallies"?

Romney should stop believing his own press coverage and the press should start covering Dr. Paul honestly.

Kate 12:16AM May 11, 2012

http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=888&dat=19760721&id=EadjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=c10DAAAAIBAJ&pg=2781%2C3455627

The beloved Ronald Reagan also "mucked things up" back in his campaign

Simon Right of PA 10:15AM May 10, 2012

I love the "According to the AP count" That alone makes the speaker who uttered the words completely ignorante to the delegate system. Romney does not have as many delegates as they say and Paul has way more than reported according to what we have SEEN at the conventions. Pauls delegates almost always overwhelm Romney's. Paul is the true candidate here not Romney.

Derekt of AR 12:37PM May 09, 2012

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