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2012 Republican Party presidential primaries

Voters of the Republican Party elected state delegations to the 2012 Republican National Convention in presidential primaries. The national convention then selected its nominee to run for President of the United States in the 2012 presidential election. There were 2,286 delegates chosen,[3] and a candidate needed to accumulate 1,144 delegate votes at the convention to win the nomination.[4] The caucuses allocated delegates to the respective state delegations to the national convention, but the actual election of the delegates were, many times, at a later date. Delegates were elected in different ways that vary from state to state. They could be elected at local conventions, selected from slates submitted by the candidates, selected at committee meetings, or elected directly at the caucuses and primaries.

The primary contest began in 2011 with a fairly wide field. Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts and the runner-up in the 2008 primaries, had been preparing to run for president ever since the 2008 election,[5] and was from early on the favorite to win the nomination. However, he lacked support from the party's conservative wing and the media narrative became: "Who will be the anti-Romney candidate?"[6] Several candidates rose in the polls throughout the year. However, the field was down to four candidates by February 2012: Former House speaker Newt Gingrich, U.S. Representative Ron Paul, former Governor Romney and former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum. It was the first presidential primary to be affected by a Supreme Court ruling that allowed unlimited independent expenditures to support or oppose candidates through super PACs.


Three different candidates won the first three contests. Santorum, who had been running a one-state campaign in Iowa, narrowly won in that state's caucuses by a handful of votes over Romney (who was thought to have won the caucuses before a recount). Romney won New Hampshire, but lost South Carolina to Gingrich. From there, Romney regained his momentum by winning the crucial state of Florida, while Santorum took his campaign national and carried three more states before Super Tuesday, while Romney carried seven states.


Super Tuesday primaries took place on March 6. With ten states voting and 391 delegates being allocated, it had less than half the potential impact of its 2008 predecessor. Romney carried six states and Santorum three, while Gingrich won his home state of Georgia. Twelve more events were held in March, including all of the territorial contests and the first local conventions that allocated delegates (Wyoming's county conventions). Santorum won Kansas and three Southern primaries, but was unable to make any significant gains on Romney, who maintained a solid lead over all other contenders after securing more than half of the delegates allocated in the month of March.


Santorum suspended his campaign on April 10, a week after losing Wisconsin and two other primaries to Romney. Gingrich followed suit on May 2, after the Republican National Committee (RNC) declared Romney the presumptive nominee on April 25 and put its resources behind him. On May 14, Paul announced that he would suspend funding the remaining primary contests and devote his resources to winning delegates at state conventions. He then won majorities in delegations of three states whose non-binding primaries had been in favor of other candidates.[7] On May 29, Romney reached the nominating threshold of 1,144 delegates by most projected counts following his primary win in Texas[8] and was congratulated by RNC Chairman Reince Priebus for "securing the delegates needed to be our party's official nominee at our convention in Tampa."[9] With his subsequent victories in California and several smaller states, Romney surpassed a majority of bound delegates on June 5.


Romney chose congressman Paul Ryan to be his running mate, but they went on to lose the general election to incumbent President Barack Obama. Ryan later went on to serve a term as Speaker of the United States House of Representatives and Romney was elected to the U.S. Senate from Utah in 2018.

Real estate mogul Donald Trump (declined May 16, 2011)[11]

Real estate mogul Donald Trump (declined May 16, 2011)[11]

February 1 – March 5, 2012: Contests of traditional early states , New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina,

Iowa

March 6–31, 2012: Contests that proportionally allocate delegates,

April 1, 2012, and onward: All other contests including winner-take-all elections.

Bonus delegates to each state that cast a majority of their Electoral College votes for the Grand Old Party (GOP) candidate in the

2008 presidential election

One bonus delegate for each GOP senator

One bonus delegate to each state that has a GOP majority in their delegation to the House of Representatives

One bonus delegate for each state that has a GOP governor

Bonus delegates for majorities in one or all of the chambers in their state legislature.

Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2012

Endorsements for the Republican Party presidential primaries, 2012

Fundraising for the 2012 United States presidential election

List of United States Republican Party presidential tickets

Nationwide opinion polling for the Republican Party 2012 presidential primaries

covering other nations, as well as the United States

Primary election

Republican Party vice presidential candidate selection, 2012

Statewide opinion polling for the Republican Party presidential primaries, 2012

Straw polls for the Republican Party presidential primaries, 2012

Republican Party presidential primaries, 2016

Official RNC delegate count in June, 2012:

: before convention

Final Green Papers delegate count

USA Today

Results of Primaries, with current total delegates for each candidate

collected news and commentary at The New York Times

Primaries

The Washington Post

Republican Primary Tracker

The Wall Street Journal

Republican Primary Tracker

from The Wall Street Journal

Republican Primary 17-poll average

: Complete state results and national totals for the 2012 Republican race, CNN

State-by-state scorecard

Analysis and news of debates and voting

2012 Election Central

The Green Papers

Complete descriptions of delegate allocation

The Green Papers

Major state elections in chronological order

The Green Papers]

Republican 2012 Delegate Count, Current Summary

CNN

America's Choice 2012: 2012 Primaries and caucuses results

Republican National Convention, Tampa, Florida, August 27—30, 2012

Rules for the 2012 Republican National Convention.