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Is Newt Gingrich helping or hurting Mitt Romney?
Renew America ^ | 03/15/2012 | Adam Graham

Posted on 03/15/2012 7:40:58 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt

Newt Gingrich in the wake of two losses in deep South States is seeking a justification for remaining in the race. When challenged by Brett Baier, Gingrich was unable to name a single state that he could win. Indeed, after playing hard as a "Southern Candidate" Gingrich has lost three straight Southern States including two deep South States near his home state of Georgia, so it's hard to imagine Gingrich winning elsewhere. Still Gingrich claimed a role in the race.

His argument for continuing is that he and Senator Rick Santorum are playing a "tag team" that is denying Romney the nomination. Gingrich argues that should he leave the race, his supporters will split between Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney and that Romney will turn all of his considerable resources on defeating his remaining foe-Santorum.

The second argument is fatuous. Campaign ads have not been running against Gingrich for some weeks, at least not in any number. The vast majority of its fire has been on Senator Santorum already and will remain so, particularly as Gingrich is no longer a serious threat.

The first argument is worthy of some consideration. The idea that the presence of two conservatives in the race has hurt Romney's progress is at least mathematically accurate. One can't take Newt Gingrich's total support and added it to Rick Santorum. Without Gingrich in the race, some of Gingrich's support would go to Romney. One poll showed with Gingrich gone, 56% of his supporters would go to Santorum, 27% to Romney and 16% to Ron Paul. Nate Silver of the New York Times did an analysis on this basis that showed that while Santorum would have won Ohio and Alaska without Gingrich in the race, Romney would have netted more delegates because most of the contests up until now have proportionally allocated their delegates.

However, in Alabama and Mississippi, this may not have been the case. Both states allocated congressional districts and an at-large delegation proportionally. With 56% of Gingrich supporters going to Santorum, Santorum would have won Alabama 51-36%, and Mississippi at 50.2%-39%. Santorum would have captured all the at-large Delegates for both Alabama and Mississippi as well as won a majority in most of the eleven congressional districts in the two states, leaving Romney with perhaps as few as six to twelve delegates as opposed to the twenty-three he won through Gingrich's presence which left the winner with less than a majority.

Looking down the road, there are even more states that are either winner take all by Congressional District or winner take all by state. In addition, Nebraska and Montana will elect their delegates at their June State Conventions, so their primaries are non-binding. However, any chance that Santorum will have of getting delegates in these states will be greatly enhanced by winning the primaries. So, Gingrich splitting the vote isn't going to help.

Of course those states that have proportional allocation with a relatively low threshold to obtain delegates that allow Gingrich to theoretically help stop Romney by winning voters who would have otherwise supported the former Massachusetts Governor. On the other hand, those that are winner take-all by Congressional District or proportional with a threshold above 15% are likely to have Gingrich advancing the cause of Mitt Romney by splitting the conservative vote and allowing Romney to win a plurality.

How do the remaining states line up?

Gingrich's Presence Will Help Romney
Illinois
Louisiana (Proportional-25% threshold)
Wisconsin
Maryland
Delaware
Pennsylvania
Indiana
West Virginia
Nebraska
Arkansas (Proportional, but if a candidate wins a majority, they get all delegates.)
California
New Jersey
Montana
South Dakota (Proportional-20% threshold)

Gingrich's Presence will hurt Romney:
North Carolina
Oregon
Texas

Gingrich's Presence Will Likely Help Romney
Rhode Island
Connecticut
New York
Kentucky
New Mexico

In fourteen states including California, the presence of Newt Gingrich will help Mitt Romney pick up delegates either by stopping Santorum from winning a majority of the vote (in Arkansas), enabling Romney to win either statewide or in congressional districts, by taking votes from Santorum in proportional contests where Gingrich is unlikely to reach the high delegate thresholds.

In three other states, the pure proportional nature of the contests and lack of thresholds means that Gingrich is marginally hurting Romney by filching a few delegates that would have gone to the former Massachusetts Governor. If we assume 12% for Gingrich in Oregon and Oregon and 20% in both Texas and North Carolina, that would give Gingrich forty-four delegates, of which twelve would have gone to Romney otherwise.

The five other states are somewhat harder to call. While Rhode Island and New Mexico divide their delegates proportionally at fifteen percent of the vote, results in other contests in these regions suggest Gingrich is unlikely to meet the threshold given the momentum in the race, so his presence is most likely to only reduce Santorum's delegate haul rather than generate any of his own.

Connecticut and New York are dicier. Both states offer some delegates as winner take-all by Congressional District. The remaining delegates (ten in Connecticut and thirty-four in New York) are awarded to the winner of the state if he wins a majority. If no one wins a majority, the delegates will be split proportionally among all candidates winning 20% of the vote or more. Romney is expected to win both states. However, Gingrich's presence could cost Santorum districts in upstate New York. In addition, if Romney finishes solidly under 50% in both states, Gingrich would cost Santorum at-large delegates.

There is one scenario under which Gingrich's presence could hurt Romney slightly. If due to a Gingrich split, Romney wins in New York, but not with a majority (say with 48% and Gingrich wins 10%), Gingrich could help Romney win a Congressional District or two in upstate New York while at the same time he could hold Romney under 50%, allowing Santorum to pick up slightly more at-large delegates in one or both states.

Kentucky is also complicated. The state awards eighteen delegates winner-take-all by Congressional District and Gingrich's presence could help Romney by splitting the conservative vote. On the other hand, it awards twenty-four statewide delegates proportionally with a fifteen percent threshold that Gingrich would probably still be able to get to. However, Gingrich would be unlikely to win enough proportional delegates that Romney would have otherwise won to make up for throwing even one Congressional District to Romney.

The math is simply against Newt Gingrich having a positive impact in terms of stopping Mitt Romney. Overall, Gingrich is now Romney's best friend in this race.

However, the race is more than math. There is psychology and how voters and activists feel about the race. More victories and wider margins make conservatives feel more confident that Romney can be stopped. Santorum won three of ten states on Super Tuesday, a majority of the vote in Kansas, and single digit wins in Mississippi and Alabama. Without Gingrich, Santorum would have won five of ten states on Super Tuesday to Romney's four, a super majority in Kansas, and won both Alabama and Mississippi outright by double digit margins over Mitt Romney. This situation may not have changed delegate math much, but it would have increased conservative sentiment that Mitt Romney wasn't so electable after all and that he could be beaten.

Conservatives can win in fight for someone under one banner, rather than working under multiple banners and attempting to be too cute by half in playing strategy games.

The results are clear, as is the way forward. If conservatives want to nominate an alternative to Romney, their only hope is to unite behind Rick Santorum.



TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: delegatemath; newt2012; newt4romney; nottromney; santorum2012; votenewtgetmitt
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To: no dems; All
Gingrich argues that should he leave the race, his supporters will split between Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney and that Romney will turn all of his considerable resources on defeating his remaining foe-Santorum.

And those are two very good points. Right now, Mitt has to spend time, money and energy fighting two candidates. If Newt goes, RINO-Rom will pummel Santorum. Like Newt said: Rick had Romney all to himself in Michigan and Ohio and lost both. Do not think that all the Newt votes will go to Santorum. THEY WILL NOT!!!
21 posted on 03/15/2012 8:07:05 PM PDT by no dems (No RINO-Rom, no Kook-Daddy; Newt or Rick must win the nomination.)
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To: lu shissler

Fo’ Shissler!

Can’t stand these accolites. They can’t do anything but find fault, which if you are looking hard enough you will....always.

Intellectually bankrupt is why they can’t muster enough reason and put forth a compelling case.

Bot, bot, a-bot, botty, bot. Malware crap programming.


22 posted on 03/15/2012 8:09:10 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously, you won't live through it anyway)
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To: lu shissler

Fo’ Shissler!

Can’t stand these accolites. They can’t do anything but find fault, which if you are looking hard enough you will....always.

Intellectually bankrupt is why they can’t muster enough reason and put forth a compelling case.

Bot, bot, a-bot, botty, bot. Malware crap programming.


23 posted on 03/15/2012 8:09:40 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously, you won't live through it anyway)
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To: Keyes2000mt

The real problem is that Santorum will help Obama via the fact that Santorum is pretty much unelectable in the general election. Nominating Santorum will be nominating the one guy who would lose to Obama.


24 posted on 03/15/2012 8:10:47 PM PDT by Yashcheritsiy
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To: Keyes2000mt

Then it matters not if Gingrich stays in Romney wins, if Gingrich gets out Romney wins, so save his doners some money.

Ego is a terrible thing to waste.


25 posted on 03/15/2012 8:11:44 PM PDT by itsahoot (Tag lines are a waste of bandwidth, as are my comments.)
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To: Patton@Bastogne; All

This list pretty much sums it up.

I think it is extremely telling that the only real argument that the Santorum supporters can come up with is “Gingrich hurts our guy’s chances of winning.”

Left unspoken is any argument for why their guy *deserves* to win. Simply put, they can’t really make the case for the Ricker. They can whine about Newt “taking votes away from” their guy (which operates on the false premise that Newt supporters would vote for Santorum otherwise instead of just, say, sitting out the primary since the only two options are both RINO establishment schlubs), but they can’t make the case for why we should vote FOR Santorum.

Your list makes a huge case AGAINST Santorum - and one which remains true no matter how much our bruised-ego Santorum supporting FRiends don’t like it.


26 posted on 03/15/2012 8:17:24 PM PDT by Yashcheritsiy
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To: Patton@Bastogne

Can I have some eggs with that spam?


27 posted on 03/15/2012 8:22:13 PM PDT by CharlesWayneCT
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To: Keyes2000mt

Santorum cannot win 1144 delegates and neither can Newt. If either or both were to quit, Romney could.

There’s your answer.


28 posted on 03/15/2012 8:28:44 PM PDT by bigbob
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To: CharlesWayneCT

I’m sure Patton will oblige with the eggs and some of that pork that Santorum loves so much on the side


29 posted on 03/15/2012 8:34:22 PM PDT by katiedidit1 ("This is one race of people for whom psychoanalysis is of no use whatsoever." the Irish)
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To: Yashcheritsiy

This article is narrowly focused on one question. What are you wanting a 10,000 word manifesto?

Look, there are plenty posts in favor of Rick Santorum and you may opt and sit on the sidelines and pout if you don’t get your, but that’s not representative of Gingrich supporters.

I’m for Santorum because he has character that can be relied upon. In every state Gingrich has to give away the 1/6-1/4 of the population that is looking for a President with strong moral character matters.

I also think Santorum has the courage to take on tough issues such as willingness to begin reforming entitlements NOW rather than waiting ten years like other candidates.


30 posted on 03/15/2012 8:39:11 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
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To: bigbob

No, there are only three purely proportional states left. We have mostly winner-take-all by Congressional District or winner-take-all by State. Multiple conservatives don’t help in such a situation, they hinder.


31 posted on 03/15/2012 8:43:27 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
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To: Keyes2000mt

What else would you expect with someone with such an out of control EGO...

They all cheat on their wives, they always put themselves first even over country.

It is disgusting and a disgrace...

However with all that said I think the longer the primary runs without a clear winner the shorter the time-frame Obama has to focus his campaign on one individual.

Right now Obama has to spend money on three campaign approaches.


32 posted on 03/15/2012 8:46:27 PM PDT by surfer (To err is human, to really foul things up takes a Democrat, don't expect the GOP to have the answer!)
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To: Keyes2000mt
This article is narrowly focused on one question. What are you wanting a 10,000 word manifesto?

That would be helpful.

Look, there are plenty posts in favor of Rick Santorum and you may opt and sit on the sidelines and pout if you don’t get your, but that’s not representative of Gingrich supporters.

Actually, I've been doing exactly the opposite - demonstrating time and time and time again WHY Santorum is a terrible candidate, with things like facts.

I’m for Santorum because he has character that can be relied upon. In every state Gingrich has to give away the 1/6-1/4 of the population that is looking for a President with strong moral character matters.

I wish Santorum supporters could figure out that character means more than *just* not being divorced.

Santorum helped to build the modern welfare state by his voting record. That is immoral.

Santorum helped to launch Sonya Sotomayor's judicial career with his vote for her. That is immoral.

Santorum voted against reforming food stamps and other welfare programs that destabilise the nuclear family. That is immoral.

Santorum voted against opportunities to lower taxes and let workers keep more of what they earned through their own sweat. That is immoral.

Santorum voted against removing the tax code's marriage penalty, thus voting to continue to penalise people for getting married. That is immoral.

Yet, we have these sanctimonious ninnies who run around supporting Santorum because "he has a good marriage," while attacking the one guy who actually has conservative credentials in fixing the aforementioned problems because "he has a bad marital history."

For the past twelve years, Newt's been as happily and faithfully married as Rick Santorum has been. Newt has the added advantage of not having worked to big up the welfare state on the basis of phony "Christian compassion" arguments.

I also think Santorum has the courage to take on tough issues such as willingness to begin reforming entitlements NOW rather than waiting ten years like other candidates.

Ridiculous. Santorum himself is a part of the reason why we even have these big government entitlement problems in the first place.

33 posted on 03/15/2012 8:52:48 PM PDT by Yashcheritsiy
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To: Keyes2000mt

You really joined fr as a pre-teen? Santorum is nair..


34 posted on 03/15/2012 8:54:31 PM PDT by goseminoles
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To: goseminoles
Santorum is nair..

He removes hair?

35 posted on 03/15/2012 8:59:09 PM PDT by Yashcheritsiy
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To: Yashcheritsiy

He may think he does.. ;0)


36 posted on 03/15/2012 9:01:37 PM PDT by goseminoles
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To: Yashcheritsiy

I’ve commented on Newt’s character before and just don’t want to get banned, so I can’t debate the full extent of Newt’s character, so I’m going to let that pass, as I’m hamstrung by Free Republic’s rules from discussing the character of Newt Gingrich openly and freely.

Let it suffice to say that your arguments haven’t worked. In Mississippi, 20% of voters said that a candidate having strong moral character was the most important factor and they voted 65-8% or 13-1.6% And that percent is consistent in every primary and you guys can argue about it all you want but Newt is handicapped from winning those voters.

You’re cherry picking vote to form a narrative that’s simply not true. During 12 years in the Senate, Santorum received 7 grades of A from the National Taxpayers Union during 12 years in the Senate along with 3 B+ and 2Bs, he’s received strong ratings from the American Conservative Union and Citizens Against Government Waste.

Newt’s speakership was a wasted opportunity. After the government shutdown, he timidly gave in to demand after demand from President Clinton, broke spending caps, and counted on the Lewinsky scandal to deliver Republican gains. He was forced out by conservatives after four years because he could not have been re-elected Speaker. There was a conservative rebellion against him in 1997. Gingrich is a great revolutionary, but lousy at actually implementing anything.


37 posted on 03/15/2012 9:02:07 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
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To: goseminoles

No, I haven’t updated my profile in a long time. I joined when I was 19. Now, I’m 31.


38 posted on 03/15/2012 9:03:24 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
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To: Keyes2000mt

Time for an update.. me too. But I can care less about the snoops on this forum. I could care less. Probably much like you.


39 posted on 03/15/2012 9:08:31 PM PDT by goseminoles
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To: Keyes2000mt
One of those is wrong already, newt is helping willard in texas.
40 posted on 03/15/2012 9:16:58 PM PDT by org.whodat
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