Paul camp cries fraud over Nevada Caucus results

Stonewall

Contributing Member
Paul camp cries fraud over Nevada Caucus results

:ld: :bwl: :ld:



Mark Wachtler

Independent Examiner




February 5, 2012. Las Vegas. For the second time in just five primary states, the Republican Party, with the assistance of the national corporate news media, is raising questions about the legitimacy of this season’s primary election system. First, the Iowa Republican Party and the entire American media knowingly reported the wrong Iowa Caucus results with the wrong person being declared the winner. Last night, it appears the same thing may be happening in Nevada.And again like Iowa, critics are accusing the GOP of suspicious activity.



Perhaps it’s indicative that the beneficiary of these recurring vote counting “mistakes” always seems to be former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney. He’s just happens to be the same man that both the Republican Party establishment and the four corporations that own all of America’s news media outlets are actively supporting.




Iowa Caucus

In Iowa a few weeks ago, local Republican precinct captains – the individuals responsible for providing the official vote count to the state Republican Party – were up in arms and all over the national media claiming their vote counts had somehow been changed once they arrived at the state GOP headquarters. Two weeks later, the party announced that Mitt Romney didn’t win, but instead, Rick Santorum had actually won. This author was one of the only national journalists that predicted the results would be reversed. Two weeks later, they were. Read the article, ‘Santorum won Iowa and didn’t say Black’ for specific details, published two weeks before the Iowa GOP reversed their vote count.





Nevada Caucus

As early as 2:00am this morning, supporters of Ron Paul had taken to social media with cries of “fraud” over the Nevada Caucus election results, or lack there of.

Here are just some of the comments taken from the Ron Paul 2012 Facebook page:

Dorian RM posted, “I am seriously smelling voter fraud again. This is seriously depressing.” Toni P wrote, “I am not a big pusher of conspiracy theories, but this election is swaying me to how corrupt this all is.” Patrick M added, “It’s not a conspiracy. It’s been proven.” Matt K confirmed the same feeling, posting, “I’m smelling voter fraud.” Ryan added, “Is this true about the fraud in Nevada or is everyone just panicking?”





That’s the big question as self-imposed deadline after self-imposed deadline passes without any word from the missing precincts of Clark County. According to the Nevada Republican Party last night, they were going to recount every single vote from Clark County, right there in the smoky, back room of the GOP headquarters. The only good part of the announcement is that a representative from each candidate would be allowed to oversee the recount.




Expected to be over by “midnight”, that deadline turned into “dawn”. When dawn came and went with no vote results in sight, questions over vote fraud really picked up steam. See the below chain of events from last night and decide for yourself if something fishy is going on.




Events of the Las Vegas Caucus, February 4, 2012. All times and percentages are rough estimates from memory. All are from first-hand witness accounts.


Counting the votes

8:00pm EST – Some polls close, roughly 3 percent of the total vote is in. Mitt Romney leads with over 50 percent of the votes counted. Ron Paul and Newt Gingrich are tied with approximately 20 percent of the vote each.

9:00pm EST – Media outlets nationwide declare Mitt Romney the winner of the Nevada Caucus “in a landslide.”

9:01pm EST – All polls but one are closed. Some results have been released, less than 4 percent of the total vote is in. Mitt Romney leads with 46 percent, Gingrich second with 24 percent, Paul third with 19 percent and Santorum fourth with 11 percent.

10:00pm EST – All media outlets spend two hours declaring Mitt Romney the overwhelming winner of the Nevada Republican Caucus in a landslide victory. Only 4 percent of the vote is in.

11:00pm EST – CNN sends their election coverage live to the last remaining open precinct in Nevada, located in Clark County. The polling place remained open extra long to accommodate strict religious observers. The voter demographic of the precinct is devout Christians and Jews who refused to violate their Sabbath day by voting during daylight hours. 15 percent of the state’s precincts have reported, Romney still leads with approximately 46 percent to Gingrich’s 22 percent, Paul’s 20 percent and Santorum’s 12.

11:15pm EST – With apparently nothing better to broadcast, media outlets like CNN announce to viewers that they’re in for a treat. They will see the Caucus process, live in action. The outlets would broadcast live from the last open Nevada precinct.

11:45pm EST – For 45 minutes, actual voters at the Adelson precinct being broadcast live on CNN and other stations, gave some of the most heartfelt one-minute speeches in support of their candidate – every single one of them was caucusing for Ron Paul. This was no Ron Paul rally either. This was a closed-door caucus. These were actual voters who were about to vote at this particular precinct. According to 40 minutes or so of speeches, it appeared Ron Paul should capture 100 percent of the vote in this Clark County precinct.

12:00pm EST – CNN and the other outlets finally broke away from the speeches when no other candidates besides Ron Paul appeared to have any voters present. Only moments later, the network broke into its all-night election coverage to announce that the precinct viewers were just watching had begun to count the votes and had decided to do it publicly, letting the national media outlets continue filming.

12:15am EST – In riveting coverage, an entire auditorium full of hundreds of voters fell silent. One by one at a table assembled on a stage and with campaign representatives watching over their shoulders and the entire nation watching, the GOP precinct captain shouted out each vote as he unfolded each paper ballot.

12:30am EST: For five minutes, CNN sat in silence as the Republican precinct captain shouted out each vote while dozens of tabulator sat nearby keeping track. Unfolding one sheet at a time, the man yelled, “Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul, Ron Paul, Ron Paul.

12:45am EST: Based on your author’s quick mental addition, it appeared Ron Paul would capture roughly 70 percent of the vote in this precinct, with Mitt Romney coming in around 20 and Newt Gingrich down around 10. The entire time, every news outlet repeatedly congratulated Mitt Romney for his avalanche victory in Nevada.

12:55am EST: The official Nevada Caucus vote count was still stuck where it had been for the last 4 hours. 47 percent of the vote counted and included every county by one. 53 percent of the vote still outstanding, all from Clark County – the largest county in Nevada representing more than 60 percent of the state’s voters. It’s also the scene of the Caucus site just broadcast showing Ron Paul winning overwhelming.

1:00am EST: The same precinct captain in Clark County calling out votes 30 minutes earlier was now about to announce the final vote totals from the nationally televised caucus site. With CNN showing it live, the rough final vote count (going from memory) was 150 for Ron Paul, 50 for Mitt Romney, 20 for Newt Gingrich and 8 for Rick Santorum.

1:05am EST: The same above precinct then announced they were going to recount each and every vote to insure an accurate vote count.

1:30am EST: CNN and the precinct captain revealed the results of the second count. This time Ron Paul’s count was roughly 183 (58 percent of the precinct’s overall vote) to Mitt Romney’s 45, Newt Gingrich’s 20 and Rick Santorum’s 8. (Again, all numbers from your author’s tired, late-night memory. If the media wasn’t blacking out the coverage now, we could share the actual numbers with our readers.)

1:35am EST: Your author, and thousands of Ron Paul supporters still waiting up and able to do simple math, deduced that if Ron Paul won 65 percent of the vote in a large Clark County precinct and that was representative of his performance county-wide, the Texas Congressman should win the Nevada Caucus. Clark County alone represents more than half the vote in the entire state of Nevada. If Ron Paul won 58 percent of the 53 percent outstanding, compared to Mitt Romney’s 47 percent of the 47 percent counted, it’s a Ron Paul win.

1:45am EST: CNN blacks-out election coverage, shutting down the studio without so much as one word of explanation or warning. Switching to human interest stories with an afternoon anchor for ten minutes, the network the shut all live coverage completely, opting instead to rebroadcast the entire night’s early evening election coverage. Every minute of the broadcast for the next few hours replayed Mitt Romney’s victory speech repeatedly, along with all the CNN pundits declaring Mitt Romney the landslide victor with 3 percent of the vote counted.

1:50am EST: A quick check of Fox News revealed the exact same tactic. The network had switched to replaying its entire early evening election coverage. Viewing like a Mitt Romney campaign commercial, the network was repeatedly rebroadcasting the Mitt Romney victory speech from hours earlier. Their pundits also spent the entire time congratulating Romney on his overwhelming victory, with just 3 percent of the vote reported.

1:55am EST: Feeling like he had just stumbled back in time or tripped into the Twilight Zone, your author went to the internet in search of vote totals. Stuck all night at 47 percent of precincts reported, Mitt Romney was leading with 42 percent of the vote to Newt Gingrich’s 26, Ron Paul’s 18 and Rick Santorum’s 13.

2:00am EST: Getting the sneaky suspicion that the Republican Party’s vote totals weren’t adding up again, a quick stop at the Ron Paul 2012 Facebook page revealed your author wasn’t alone. The campaign had posted a message saying that the Nevada GOP had announced that even though the first 47 percent of the votes were counted and reported in an hour, the remaining 53 percent, all coming from Clark County, would take all night. Random posts followed leveling accusations of suspicion and even outright vote fraud. Many had watched the results being tabulated live on national TV just as this author had. We all saw Ron Paul’s overwhelming victory in that part of Clark County. It’s unimaginable to believe that in the same county, a candidate could win overwhelmingly when the votes were counted live on TV, but lose so badly when the votes were counted by the Party establishment behind closed doors.

2:00am EST: CNN and Fox News had blacked-out their coverage, opting instead to run reruns for the first time of any election so far this primary season. Online news outlets also froze their coverage, stopping all blog entries at midnight. With that, your author went to bed.

9:00am EST: Your author wakes up to a Nevada Caucus vote count with 71 percent of precincts reporting. The totals and percentages, even though the added 24 percent appeared to overwhelmingly favor Ron Paul by a staggering margin of more than 3 to 1 over Mitt Romney, had somehow managed to match the first 47 percent of the vote reported earlier in the evening that overwhelmingly favored Mitt Romney. The new state-wide totals now read Mitt Romney 47, Newt Gingrich 22, Ron Paul 18 and Rick Santorum 11.

10:00am EST: The Nevada Republican Party announces they are not going to release any of the missing Clark County vote totals until all the precincts in Clark County are turned in.

11:00am EST: The Nevada Republican Party announces they are not going to release the final and complete vote results. Instead, they are going to hold an internal recount.

11:05am EST: Outrage, frustration and condemnation erupt from Ron Paul supporters everywhere. Social media explodes with charges of blatant vote fraud by Nevada Republican Party officials. The entire corporate national news media, including all the Sunday morning political talk shows, blacks-out the events of the previous evening, the missing vote totals and the outrage by the Ron Paul campaign. Instead, they continue to inform their readers and viewers that the Nevada Caucus is over and it was another landslide victory for media and GOP favorite Mitt Romney.

Even the Ron Paul supporters will concede they have no evidence of actual election fraud regarding the tabulation of the Nevada Caucus ballots. What they do have is a very legitimate complaint and very real evidence. As Republican Party officials repeatedly remind us, primaries and caucuses are “private party events”. They are not general elections. They are party functions and the party makes, and changes, the rules whenever they want for whatever reason they want. If you don’t like it, don’t be a Republican.

The bigger tragedy is that the nation’s corporate owned media is obviously playing along, just as they did in Iowa. We’ll see if the Nevada GOP has to publicly and officially reverse the results of its election just as the Iowa Republican Party was forced to do two weeks after its caucus a few weeks ago. If that turns out to be the case, the national GOP and the nation’s news outlets will have more explaining to do than just the theft of one election.


http://www.examiner.com/independent-in-national/paul-camp-cries-fraud-over-nevada-caucus-results
 

gdpetti

Inactive
One thought is that if they keep this up, they might force Ron Paul into declaring as a third party candidate and then they will have to do the same game nationwide as the entire nation watches and wonders about our 'democratic' traditions. Should be eye opening to many sheep.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
I hope Ron doesn't get his hackles up enough to try a third party run at the Presidency. This would assure the Wonderful O another four years of mayhem.

Not that l especially like Mitten as stable door No. 1 pick. He's just a blue suit of a (maybe) more conservative cut.

And I hope there isn't a blue smurf plan underway to split the conservative vote. Not likely considering what I know of RP.

But how do you KNOW?

Joe
 

Straycat

Veteran Member
Look, let's be brutally honest here. It doesn't matter who "wins" the primary or who we actually vote for - the establishment chooses who they want, regardless of what the people want. The establishment does not like Ron Paul; therefore, he will not win no matter how many people vote for him.

The elections are just a dog-and-pony show (no offense to Joe) to placate the masses into thinking they made the choice. It's a farce. Our votes have ZERO effect on the actual outcome for the presidency.

After all, it's FAR too important a decision to be made by little people such as you and me. / sarcasm.
 

FREEBIRD

Has No Life - Lives on TB
"The elections are just a dog-and-pony show (no offense to Joe) to placate the masses into thinking they made the choice. It's a farce. Our votes have ZERO effect on the actual outcome for the presidency.

After all, it's FAR too important a decision to be made by little people such as you and me. / sarcasm."

THANK YOU!!!
(getting tired of hearing myself point it out)

Obama is going to be reselected, as his mission isn't complete. Not saying it because I want it to happen (I'm a Catholic and a Constitutionalist so there's no love lost between me and Mr. O).
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
Why is it the people can't do this over but this time leave the corrupt officials out of it and see how it turns out.
 

Palmetto

Son, Husband, Father
"The elections are just a dog-and-pony show (no offense to Joe) to placate the masses into thinking they made the choice. It's a farce. Our votes have ZERO effect on the actual outcome for the presidency.

After all, it's FAR too important a decision to be made by little people such as you and me. / sarcasm."

THANK YOU!!!
(getting tired of hearing myself point it out)

Obama is going to be reselected, as his mission isn't complete. Not saying it because I want it to happen (I'm a Catholic and a Constitutionalist so there's no love lost between me and Mr. O).

+1 That about sums me up too.

Palmetto
 

banana.republic.us

Senior Member
The best thing to do at this point is NOT participate.

Let them have it. There's nothing left at this point to fight over. We have maybe 2 years before the poop hits the fan and it don't matter who's in charge it'll spray over everything leaving a thin veneer of stinky brown-ness. LOL!
 

gdpetti

Inactive
Wait for national media??? They aren't allowed to cover it until others do, thus they are then allowed to cover the fact that others are covering it. That's how they operate, unless ordered to do otherwise, such as having very, very little to say about the whole Nevada election the day after. Now isn't that rather telling? Similar situation occurred in Iowa. The national media only covered after that guy started talking out about it... along with local stories about other problems on election night into the early morning as the numbers from certain areas seemed to have multiple problems in reaching HQ.

As of today, the national media has hardly mentioned Nevada at all. It seems as if they don't exist. So keeping that in mind, I returned to this page to bump this bad boy. Inquiring minds just gotta have fun don't cha know? It may be only a puppet show, but with Mother Nature already coming ashore in some parts of the world to prep the stage for later events, it seems only fitting to help her by giving voice to those screams that are never heard. How else can more sheep ever 'awaken' from their slumber and realize it was only a nightmare, and not merely a dream? Time for more shake, rattle and roll. Baby wants to dance, and she likes to choose her own music!
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
I would LOVE to see RP run 3rd party. Then we'd get to see the real strength (or not) of his national support. Whether Obama-scum or Romney-scum wins makes no difference to me at this point...
 

blackjeep

The end times are here.
Look, let's be brutally honest here. It doesn't matter who "wins" the primary or who we actually vote for - the establishment chooses who they want, regardless of what the people want. The establishment does not like Ron Paul; therefore, he will not win no matter how many people vote for him.

The elections are just a dog-and-pony show (no offense to Joe) to placate the masses into thinking they made the choice. It's a farce. Our votes have ZERO effect on the actual outcome for the presidency.


After all, it's FAR too important a decision to be made by little people such as you and me. / sarcasm.

This is precisely it. Criminals are running the country.
 

LONEWOLF

Deceased
Let's face the fact too that TSH *already* HTF,and all of us choose not to recognize it as we'd be responsible to respond powerfully to it.....kick, kick, kicking the can down the road like everyone else.....our Nation & Government, OUR FUTURES have been stolen out from under our noses.
 

Kadosh

Membership Revoked
I would LOVE to see RP run 3rd party. Then we'd get to see the real strength (or not) of his national support. Whether Obama-scum or Romney-scum wins makes no difference to me at this point...
Agree 100%! I'm voting for Ron Paul whether he's on the ballot or not. If he doesn't win, it really doesn't matter who does. :wvflg:
 

Disciple

Veteran Member
Well if these elitists have everything sewed up already I guess theres no need to trouble myself about voting. Or about politics.
 

Sebastian

Sebastian
It is said that the Platte River is a mile wide and an inch deep and so it is with the support for Willard, Getrich, and Mullah Santorum.

After all the votes were counted, or likely as not miscounted someone's folks had to stick around long enough to agree to be delegates for the Nevada State Convention where the real voting happens.

When all is said and done the Platte River is a mile wide and an inch deep.
 

Kadosh

Membership Revoked
Kadosh - Very insightful, I have not heard that particular angle before!
Well, I've had it with this rigged system. No more "lesser of two evils" for me. I'll write in Dr. Paul and won't give a rat's a$$ who wins. Romney or Obama? No difference to me.
 

pops88

Girls with Guns Member
It is said that the Platte River is a mile wide and an inch deep and so it is with the support for Willard, Getrich, and Mullah Santorum.

After all the votes were counted, or likely as not miscounted someone's folks had to stick around long enough to agree to be delegates for the Nevada State Convention where the real voting happens.

When all is said and done the Platte River is a mile wide and an inch deep.

The evening caucus people were told no delegates would be chosen from it, so it seems like a wink and a nod acknowledging Ron Paul being in the race to placate RP supporters. When RP was obviously winning the caucus in 2008 they shut it down, so it's hard for me to believe so many people have since changed their minds.
 

Giskard

Only human
I would LOVE to see RP run 3rd party. Then we'd get to see the real strength (or not) of his national support. Whether Obama-scum or Romney-scum wins makes no difference to me at this point...

So far EVERY time there is a major 3rd Party candidate, it's over for the Republicans and the Dems win. Unless the dim bulbs on the Left break with history and suddenly gain IQ points, this would be a guaranteed victory for Obama's 2nd term.
 

gdpetti

Inactive
A sorry state of affairs

By MAGGIE HABERMAN | 2/5/12 8:23 PM EST
Reid Epstein reports on the home page:

The biggest loser in Nevada’s Republican caucuses? The state’s feckless GOP.

Unable to control how its county parties count and report results, state Republicans were scrambling Sunday to explain why, almost 24 hours after most caucuses ended, the votes still have not been counted.
QUOTE:
Here in Clark County, home to two-thirds of the state’s population, officials counted ballots, by hand, until 4 a.m. before calling it a night. Counting resumed again at 9 a.m. By 11 a.m. local time Sunday, only half of the county’s ballots had been counted.

“About midway through the night I said, ‘This is ludicrous,’” state GOP Chairman Amy Tarkanian said Sunday morning. “So I sent my state party people down there, including my husband, and said, ‘Go help them count, this is crazy.’”

Tarkanian, whose husband is Danny Tarkanian, who ran unsuccessfully for the GOP Senate nomination in 2010 and who is seeking the nomination in a new congressional seat, said state and county officials are seeking to avoid a situation like what happened in Iowa, where two weeks after voting ended the state party announced that it was Rick Santorum, not Mitt Romney, who won the state.

With second place still undecided between Newt Gingrich and Ron Paul — a consequential matter since delegates are awarded proportionally here — Tarkanian said she wants to avoid looking bad, as did her Iowa counterparts when they finally announced new results long after their contest ended.

But it may already be too late for that — unlike Iowa, Nevada hasn’t even reported nearly complete results yet.

Chuck Muth, a former Nevada GOP executive director, wrote on his blog that the night was the “Nevada GOP’s national embarrassment.”

“You can say this about Nevada Republicans: they are consistent,” Muth wrote. “They never blow an opportunity to blow an opportunity. And hoo-ahhh … did they ever blow this one!”
UNQUOTE

This is a bit different than the situation in Iowa, where there were few caucus-night complaints, but the way in which Iowa GOP chairman Matt Strawn dealt with the certified count offended conservative members of the party, and Rick Santorum backers, who felt he was denied a deserved, clearly stated victory when all was said and done.

In this case, the mess was in real time, and the impact is still being felt.
=======================
fair use http://www.politico.com/blogs/burns-haberman/2012/02/a-sorry-state-of-affairs-113560.html

Now, fair use from: http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2012/feb/05/nv-nevada-caucuses-turnout-3rd-ld-writethru/

GOP still counting Nevada caucus results
The Associated Press
Sunday, Feb. 5, 2012 | 6:02 p.m.


In the casinos, they call it going bust.

After months of reassurance that they could play with the big boys despite a trail of mishaps, the Nevada GOP played all of its cards Saturday and lost big time in a messy, disorganized election that saw low turnout and rampant complaints of voter fraud and unexplained ballots.

But the biggest tell that the volunteer-run caucuses didn't go as planned was that more than 24 hours after voters finished casting their ballots, no one officially knew who had won.

By late Sunday, only 87 percent of the votes had been tallied. The holdup was Clark County, the state's most populous county and home to the Las Vegas Strip, where officials stayed up until the wee hours Sunday counting ballots but still couldn't finish the task.

To be sure, the winner was never in doubt. Various media outlets called the race for Mitt Romney soon after it was over, and he gave his victory speech Saturday night in Las Vegas. Romney won the state in 2008 and had the most organized campaign here of any candidate.

But the fate of the state GOP's 28 delegates remained unknown. State party officials estimated the outcome would likely show Newt Gingrich in second place, followed closely by Ron Paul. But for most of Sunday, they didn't have the hard votes to shore up their projections.

"It is just layer upon layer of issues that we are trying to work through," said acting GOP chairman James Smack. "We are not dragging our feet on it. We just want to make sure we get it right."

It was also unclear whether party officials were able to beat their previous statewide turnout of 44,000 in 2008, which was largely considered a flop. Early turnout numbers suggested fewer people may have voted in Saturday's caucuses.

"They had the mistakes of 2008 to learn from," said Chuck Muth, a tea party organizer in Las Vegas. "They apparently didn't learn from those mistakes and they created new ones."

In Washoe County, party officials said turnout in Reno appeared much lower than it was statewide four years ago. In rural Churchill County, turnout seemed on par with 2008.

In comparison, turnout was up slightly in the first three states to vote, New Hampshire, Iowa and South Carolina. Nevada was fifth, after Florida.

Northern Nevada GOP leaders blamed the dismal showing on early-morning cold weather, the lure of good skiing and Romney's projected dominance in the state.

"A lot of people felt the state was in the bag for Mitt Romney," Smack said. "If the other candidates had more time here, it would have made a difference."

The tedious hand-counting process had volunteers staying up until 4 a.m. and missing Sunday church services to tally ballots. Unlike most elections, the caucuses were not overseen by professional voting officials or the government, but rather the state and county GOP parties. There were 1,835 precincts and 125 caucus sites statewide.

"Our goal is to finish verification," said Clark County GOP spokeswoman Bobbie Haseley. "There is no modern technology when it comes to how the voting took place and the counting."

The caucus, run mainly by volunteers, led to some complaints of disorganization and confusion. Each county had its own caucus rules and some voters were unaware that they could not walk in and out and vote, as in a primary, but had to arrive on time and sit through some debates on behalf of the candidates. There were reports that GOP leaders found unaccounted votes. Paul supporters complained of fraud.

Several people posted their complaints on the Clark County GOP's Facebook page Sunday.

Former GOP Chairwoman Sue Lowden said there were no problems reported at the caucus site in Las Vegas where she volunteered as a site manager Saturday. Voting was done before noon.

Lowden, who oversaw the 2008 GOP caucuses, said she wasn't sure why the results had not been made public, but was careful to add that she was not being critical of the process.

"My goal in 2008 was to give the national press the number for their six o'clock newscast, and that goal was accomplished," she said. "It wasn't perfect, but we got the job done and I am still waiting for these results."

In the months and weeks leading up to the caucuses, it was clear that the Nevada GOP was not running the most experienced shop. Party officials moved their caucus date twice before settling on Saturday, and some campaigns fretted that too little had been done to educate voters about the messy caucus process.

Party officials frequently readjusted expectations, initially projecting 100,000 voters would show up, then 70,000, then 60,000, then 55,000 before some predicted late Friday that turnout would not exceed the 2008 results.

That year, Nevada Democrats and Republicans held caucuses ahead of most states for the first time ever. Democrats, led by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, drew 110,000 voters in a competitive contest that saw Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama campaigning earnestly across Nevada.

In contrast, Republicans drew only 44,000 voters to their non-binding contest that most candidates skipped.

To give the contest more clout this time, party leaders made the caucuses binding and promised to proportionally hand out delegates according to the election results in a bid to entice candidates to campaign here and give voters more incentive to show up.

But only Romney and Paul, who placed first and second in the 2008 caucuses, set up campaign operations in Nevada. Rick Santorum and Gingrich largely ignored the state until the contest's final week, when they showed up and held a few public events.

Adding to the uncertainty was a last-minute decision from party officials to release the election results not as they came in, but all at once late Saturday. The exception was the Clark County tallies, which were held to accommodate a special late-night caucus, the only one in the state.

The result was that long after most media organizations called the race for Romney, no one was quite sure how many votes he or any of the other candidates had won.

For some, the delayed results were not an indication of any greater trouble.

Former Nevada Gov. Bob List, state Republican committeeman, said the caucuses were a success with few issues.

"There was lots of good planning in ensuring we had accurate results before they were announced," he said. "That's the most important thing, a trustworthy process."
========================

Want some more? Fair use http://www.recordcourier.com/article/20120205/NEWS/120209924/1062&ParentProfile=1049
Clark County ballots only half counted
Staff Reports

According to the Nevada Republican Party's Web site only half of the ballots in Nevada's largest county have been counted.

The last Twitter update on the party's site occurred at about 4 a.m.*

Favorite, former Gov. Mitt Romney had a substantial lead when counting stopped with 57.4 percent of the vote. Ron Paul was second with 1,715 votes, or 19.2 percent and Gingrich was third with 1,416 votes or 15.8 percent. Rick Santorum was last with 7.3 percent of the vote.*

Those percentages follow most of the rest of the state. Nye and Esmeralda counties were won by Ron Paul, Mineral County by Gingrich.*
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