http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/republican_delegate_count.html
About 800 of the 1200 remaining delegates are in winner-take-all states or districts, or ones that become winner-take-all if a candidate hits a percentage threshold of the vote.
Illinois (direct delegate election by district)
Pennsylvania (direct delegate election by district)
West Virginia (direct delegate election by district)
California (WTA by district or a mix?)
New York (WTA by district or a mix?)
Texas (WTA by district or a mix?)
Connecticut (WTA by district or a mix?)
Maryland (WTA by district or a mix?)
Wisconsin (WTA by district or a mix?)
New Jersey (WTA by district or a mix?)
Puerto Rico (pure WTA statewide)
Washington D.C. (pure WTA statewide)
Delaware (pure WTA statewide)
Utah (pure WTA statewide)
I know santorum will never step aside. Now, the media is
pushing the 2 weakest candidates on us. Reality- 2 Game players.
It won’t hold in every district.
Santorum will win many downstate districts, and most of their delegates. Where Santorum will have a fight is otherwise Conservative places like DuPage County, and some important districts where he could have won a REPUBLICAN Primary and gotten more delegates, but failed to field any.
He could still win the state. I will say this: it looks like most Newt voters who COULD be persuaded to vote for Rick to beat Mitt WILL do so. This is of benefit to Santorum, because it means the “split” of where Newt voters would go if he wasn’t in the race won’t apply, and Rick will do as well as he possibly could have in IL when all is said and done.