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speciallyblend
01-12-2011, 08:09 PM
Hi rpf, wouldn't it be nice to have a sticky and the main theme of rpf to inform every voter to register republican and become or how to become a delegate and maybe have the state information as well for rpf members so we can actually win the gop nomination??? It would be nice to have info to direct folks on how to secure the gop nomination for Ron paul in the gop in their states! first step register republican!! next step get involved in the gop! If people cannot do those 2 simple things. Then they need to know they are hurting the liberty movement not helping it!!

if they cannot register republican and support Ron Paul in the primaries! what is it they are really doing but making themselves feel good about supporting Ron Paul!!

As many know in rpf i am not a gop lover but i still joined in my county and now we are basically the gop in our county!! Did i like joining the gop? NO did i drag myself to gop meetings ? YES Have we won support in our county and state? YES Are we growing? Yes Are we winning allies? YES. all these answers would be a strong NO if i/we in colorado hadn't joined the failed gop!!
Everyone here knows what they must do to win the gop nomination for Ron Paul in 2012, if you cannot complete the simple first step that Ron Paul asked you to then your ignoring Ron Paul not me and what does that tell you? It says your ignoring Ron Paul's wishes. that alone says alot!!

Ron Paul 2012 ps rpf mods we really need to stress the importance of joining the gop and helping Ron paul win the gop nomination anything less is just talk!!

speciallyblend
01-12-2011, 08:17 PM
if anyone has info for washington state for the gop please send to me so i can forward to another rpf member thanks ps searching now!!

wow first link i found and ron paul didn't do so bad;) http://www.thegreenpapers.com/P08/WA-R.phtml

i assume washington state is like colorado. you go to your local meetings and become a delegate and win votes if someone is running as well!!

DamianTV
01-12-2011, 08:26 PM
If Ron does run in 2012, I think the Admins of the Forums here could make a modification so anyone on here that is a Delegate is recognized in the Forums as such. A custom title like RP Delegate for Florida or something.

This is, of course, contingent on our champion running for office in 2012.

speciallyblend
01-12-2011, 08:29 PM
If Ron does run in 2012, I think the Admins of the Forums here could make a modification so anyone on here that is a Delegate is recognized in the Forums as such. A custom title like RP Delegate for Florida or something.

This is, of course, contingent on our champion running for office in 2012.

sounds like a plan:)

plus here is the info for washington state if anyone in washington wanted to look?

Washington has 40 delegates.

3 party leaders, the National Committeeman, the National Committeewoman, and the chairman of the Washington's Republican Party, will attend the convention as unpledged delegates by virtue of their position.
37 (27 district and 10 at-large) delegates are elected by the Primary and the Caucuses.
51% (37 × 0.51 = 18.87, round to 19) of these delegates are elected by Primary.
49% (37 × 0.49 = 18.13, round to 18) of these delegates are elected by Caucus.

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Saturday 9 February 2008: Precinct Caucuses.


Republican Party Caucuses meet in each precinct. Participants are required to sign a form stating they are Republicans (as voters do not have to declare political party membership to vote in the state's regular primaries or general elections). Each Precinct Caucus chooses the precinct's delegates to the County Convention. The County Conventions will, in turn, choose delegates to the State Convention. There is no formal system applied in the Precinct Caucuses to relate the presidential preference of the Caucus participants to the choice of the precinct's delegates. The participants at each Precinct Caucus alone determine if presidential preference is to be a factor in such choice and, if so, how it is to be applied.

The Caucuses initiate the process of electing 18 (49% of 37) of the National Convention delegates. These delegates will attend the Republican National Convention officially "Unpledged".

The following are the near-final results of Washington's Republican Precinct Caucuses. With 99.99% of precincts reporting, Sen. McCain has 25.3% of the delegates, Gov. Huckabee 23.2%, Congressman Paul 21.5%, Gov. Romney 15.5%, Uncommitted 13.5%, Other 1.1%.

Source: Saturday, February 16, 2008 - Near-Final Results of Washington's Republican Precinct Caucuses

Tuesday 19 February 2008: Primary.

19 (1 from each of the 9 Congressional Districts and 10 at-large) of Washington's delegates to the Republican National Convention are allocated to presidential contenders based on the results of voting in today's Washington Presidential Primary. Voters are required to sign a form stating they are Republicans (as voters do not have to declare political party membership to vote in the state's regular primaries or general elections).

9 district delegates are to be allocated to presidential contenders based on the primary results in each of the 9 congressional districts: each congressional district is assigned 1 National Convention delegate and the presidential contender receiving the greatest number of votes in that district will receive that district's National Convention delegate.
10 delegates are to be allocated proportionally to presidential contenders based on the primary vote statewide. A 20 percent threshold is required in order for a presidential contender to be allocated National Convention delegates at the statewide level.
Statewide Primary Results John McCain 262,304 49.50%
Mike Huckabee 127,657 24.09%
Mitt Romney 86,140 16.25%
Ron Paul 40,539 7.65%
Rudy Giuliani 5,145 0.97%
Fred Thompson 4,865 0.92%
Alan Keyes 2,226 0.42%
Duncan Hunter 1,056 0.20%
Total 529,932 100.00%
Tuesday 19 February 2008 Primary
The vote by CD is estimated by apportioning/interpolating the vote by county into the vote by CD, hence, the vote in each CD is a rough estimate. Source: Washington Secretary of State Contest McCain Huckabee
Pop
Vote Qual
Vote Del Pop
Vote % Del Pop
Vote % Del
CD1 53,761 41,287 1 28,003 67.825% 1 13,284 32.175%
CD2 82,237 62,517 1 41,773 66.819% 1 20,744 33.181%
CD3 73,441 53,638 1 34,106 63.586% 1 19,532 36.414%
CD4 73,708 66,448 1 33,564 50.512% 1 17,698 26.634%
CD5 89,321 61,245 1 41,171 67.223% 1 20,074 32.777%
CD6 42,181 31,366 1 21,730 69.279% 1 9,636 30.721%
CD7 17,912 13,757 1 9,883 71.840% 1 3,874 28.160%
CD8 53,023 40,801 1 28,327 69.427% 1 12,474 30.573%
CD9 44,319 34,083 1 23,745 69.668% 1 10,338 30.332%
At-Large 529,903 389,956 10 262,302 67.265% 7 127,654 32.735% 3
Delegates 19 16 3

Saturday 22 March - Saturday 3 May 2008 (tentative date): Republican Party County Conventions convene in each county. Each County Convention chooses delegates to both the Congressional District Conventions and the State Convention.

County Conventions choose both the county's delegates to the Republican Party Convention of the Congressional District the county is a part of as well as the county's delegates to the Washington State Republican Convention. Again, there is no formal system applied in the County Convention to relate the presidential preference of the County Convention delegates to the choice of the county's delegates to either the Republican Convention of the Congressional District in which the county is located or the Washington State Republican Convention; each County Convention alone determine if presidential preference is to be a factor and, if so, how it is to be applied.
Once more, there is no formal system governing how the District Convention is to go about indicating its presidential preference to the State Convention. It is the delegates in attendance at the Congressional District Convention alone who decide how best to go about this.

Thursday 29 May - Saturday 31 May 2008: The State Convention convenes.

There is no formal system applied in the State Convention to relate the presidential preference of the Caucus participants to the choice of the National Convention delegates. The participants at the State Convention alone determine if presidential preference is to be a factor in such choice and, if so, how it is to be applied.

The State convention elects 18 delegates. These delegates will attend the Republican National Convention officially "Unpledged".
3 party leaders, the National Committeeman, the National Committeewoman, and the chairman of the Washington's Republican Party, will attend the convention as unpledged delegates by virtue of their position