United States presidential election in Nevada, 2012

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United States presidential election in Nevada, 2012

← 2008 November 6, 2012 2016 →
  President Barack Obama, 2012 portrait crop.jpg Mitt Romney by Gage Skidmore 8.jpg
Nominee Barack Obama Mitt Romney
Party Democratic Republican
Home state Illinois Massachusetts
Running mate Joe Biden Paul Ryan
Electoral vote 6 0
Popular vote 531,373 463,567
Percentage 52.36% 45.68%

Nevada presidential election results 2012.svg
County Results
  Obama—50-60%
  Romney—50-60%
  Romney—60-70%
  Romney—70-80%
  Romney—80-90%

President before election

Barack Obama
Democratic

Elected President

Barack Obama
Democratic

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The 2012 United States presidential election in Nevada took place on November 6, 2012 as part of the 2012 General Election in which all 50 states plus The District of Columbia participated. Nevada voters chose six electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama and his running mate, Vice President Joe Biden, against Republican challenger and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and his running mate, Congressman Paul Ryan. Nevada has voted for the winner in every presidential election since 1912, except in 1976 when it voted for Gerald Ford over Jimmy Carter. Since 1912, Nevada has been carried by the presidential victor the most out of any state (25 of 26 elections).[1]

General election

Candidate Ballot Access:

  • Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan, Republican
  • Barack Obama/Joseph Biden, Democratic
  • Gary Johnson/James P. Gray, Libertarian
  • Virgil Goode/Jim Clymer, Constitution

Results

United States presidential election in Nevada, 2012[2]
Party Candidate Running mate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Democratic Barack Obama Joe Biden 531,373 52.36% 6
Republican Mitt Romney Paul Ryan 463,567 45.68% 0
Libertarian Gary Johnson Jim Gray 10,968 1.08% 0
Other/None 5,770 0.57% 0
Constitution Virgil Goode Jim Clymer 3,240 0.32% 0

By county

County Obama Votes Romney Votes Others Votes Total
Carson City 44.13% 10,291 53.15% 12,394 2.72% 634 23,319
Churchill 28.85% 2,961 68.79% 7,061 2.37% 243 10,265
Clark 56.42% 389,936 41.82% 289,053 1.77% 12201 691,190
Douglas 35.65% 9,297 62.42% 16,276 1.93% 502 26,075
Elko 21.96% 3,511 75.15% 12,014 2.88% 461 15,986
Esmeralda 21.15% 92 72.87% 317 5.98% 26 435
Eureka 13.24% 107 82.05% 663 4.70% 38 808
Humboldt 30.24% 1,737 66.33% 3,810 3.43% 197 5,744
Lander 24.67% 534 72.98% 1,580 2.36% 51 2,165
Lincoln 18.59% 400 78.58% 1,691 2.83% 61 2,152
Lyon 34.38% 7,380 62.99% 13,520 2.63% 565 21,465
Mineral 42.41% 863 53.07% 1,080 4.52% 92 2,035
Nye 36.07% 6,320 60.30% 10,566 3.63% 636 17,522
Pershing 33.55% 632 61.94% 1,167 4.51% 85 1,884
Storey 39.76% 920 57.09% 1,321 3.15% 73 2,314
Washoe 50.79% 95,409 47.09% 88,453 2.13% 3993 187,855
White Pine 26.54% 983 70.22% 2,601 3.24% 120 3,704

Analysis

Nevada has historically been a swing state. It has voted for the winner of every presidential election since 1912, except for 1976. From 1992 to 2004, the margin of victory was always under five points. In 2008, however, the state swung over dramatically to support Obama, who carried it by 12.49%.

In 2012, Obama held onto Nevada, though by a considerably narrower margin of 6.68%. This was due almost entirely to Obama carrying the state's two largest counties--Clark County, home to Las Vegas, and Washoe County, home to Reno. These two counties account for 85 percent of Nevada's population. Romney dominated the state's rural counties, which have supported Republicans for decades. However, the only large jurisdiction he carried was the independent city of Carson City.

As in 2008, Obama owed his victory largely to the state's Hispanic voters breaking heavily for him. According to exit polls, Hispanics made up 19 percent of the electorate and voted for Obama by almost three-to-one.[3]

Democratic caucuses

Incumbent President Barack Obama was not challenged for the Democratic candidacy so no Democratic Primary was held.

Republican caucuses

Nevada Republican caucuses, 2012

← 2008 February 4, 2012 (2012-02-04) 2016 →
  Mitt Romney by Gage Skidmore 8.jpg Newt Gingrich by Gage Skidmore 6.jpg
Candidate Mitt Romney Newt Gingrich
Party Republican Republican
Home state Massachusetts Georgia
Delegate count 20 0
Popular vote 16,486 6,956
Percentage 50.02% 21.10%

  Ron Paul, official Congressional photo portrait, 2007.jpg Rick Santorum by Gage Skidmore 2.jpg
Candidate Ron Paul Rick Santorum
Party Republican Republican
Home state Texas Pennsylvania
Delegate count 8 0
Popular vote 6,175 3,277
Percentage 18.73% 9.94%

Nevada Republican Presidential Primary Election Results by County, 2012.svg
Results by county. Orange indicates a county won by Romney, gold by Paul, purple by Gingrich.

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The Republican caucuses were held on February 4[4]and they are closed caucuses,[5] Mitt Romney was declared the winner.[6]

There are 400,310 registered Republicans voting for 28 delegates.[7][8]

Date of caucuses

The 2012 Nevada Republican caucuses were originally scheduled to begin on February 18, 2012,[9] much later than the date in 2008, which almost immediately followed the beginning of the year in January 2008.[10] On September 29, 2011, the entire schedule of caucuses and primaries was disrupted, however, when it was announced that the Republican Party of Florida had decided to move up its primary to January 31, in an attempt to bring attention to its own primary contest, and attract the presidential candidates to visit the state.[11] Because of the move, the Republican National Committee decided to strip Florida of half of its delegates.[12] Also as a result, the Nevada Republican Party, along with Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, then sought to move their caucuses back into early January.[12] All but Nevada, who agreed to follow Florida,[13] confirmed their caucus and primary dates to take place throughout January, with Nevada deciding to hold their contest on February 4, 2012.[14]

The caucuses for 1,835 precincts in 125 sites were scheduled: voting from 9 AM - 1 PM, ballots handling 9-10 AM and to conclude by 3 PM at the latest on February 4, with results for almost all counties to be announced by the party at 5 PM.

Clark County

For Clark County, a special caucus was held at the Adelson Educational Campus at 7 PM, intended to accommodate those who observe Saturday Sabbath.[15] According to Philip Kantor, an Orthodox Jew, the goal of the after-work caucus was to prevent electoral fraud "It has everything to do with not being deprived of a vote, being disenfranchised".[16] This late caucus allowed a timely vote for Seventh-day Adventists, Orthodox Jews and other who don't vote until Sabbath is over.[17] Adelson campus caucus attendees were required to sign affidavits stating that they had not already cast their ballot in an earlier caucus, that day.[15] There was only one nationwide televised (by CNN) public vote-count.[citation needed] That Adelson caucus count provided the following Candidate vote results: Ron Paul 181, Mitt Romney 61, Newt Gingrich 57, and Rick Santorum 16 votes.[citation needed] The results of this special caucus were announced Feb 4 near 11 PM.[citation needed] Paul got second place in Clark County, but Gingrich was ahead of Paul by a larger margin in the rest of the state and therefore ended up beating Paul statewide for second place.[citation needed]

Results

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Turnout was 8.23%. 1,800 of 1,800 precincts (100%) reporting.[18]
The voting-eligible population (400,310 registered Nevada Republicans).[7]
125 caucus sites.

Nevada Republican caucuses, February 4, 2012[19]
Candidate Votes Percentage Projected delegate count Actual Delegates
[20][21]
AP
[22]
CNN
[23]
MSNBC
[24]
America Symbol.svg Mitt Romney 16,486 50.02% 14 14 14 20
Newt Gingrich 6,956 21.10% 6 6 6 0
Ron Paul 6,175 18.73% 5 5 5 8
Rick Santorum 3,277 9.94% 3 3 3 0
No Vote 67 0.20% 0 0 0 0
Unprojected delegates: 0 0 0 0
Total: 32,961 100% 28 28 28 28

This final result was announced by Twitter and the Nevada Republican Party on Monday February 6, at 01:01 am PST (local time).[25] The actual Republican National Convention delegates from Nevada are mostly Ron Paul supporters (22 of 28), which were elected by state convention on May 6. The Nevada Republican Party's rules state that most elected delegates to the RNC are still bound to vote for Romney (in the first round of voting), because of Romney's statewide caucuses winning.

Nevada State Convention Delegates May 6, 2012
Candidate Supporters for this candidate who are Delegates from NV to the RNC [26][27][28][29][30][31]
America Symbol.svg Ron Paul 22
Mitt Romney 6
Totals: 28

Controversy

Allegations of voter fraud have arisen due to a recount of Clark County ballots despite there being no official contest from any of the campaigns. One reason given by the GOP was that there were more ballots cast than people "signed in" at some precincts.[32]

See also

References

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External links

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  5. Nevada Republican - The Green Papers
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  7. 7.0 7.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Active Voters by Party and Age
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  15. 15.0 15.1 Molly Ball (27 January 2012), "In Nevada, Sheldon Adelson Gets His Very Own Caucus" The Atlantic.
  16. Las Vegas Review Journal Adelson distances himself from GOP special caucus decision
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  20. AJC, "[1]" (May 6, 2012). AJC.
  21. Portland Press Herald, "[2]" (May 7, 2012). Portland Press Herald.
  22. USA Today, "[3]" (February 4, 2012). USA Today.
  23. CNN, "Republican Caucuses" (February 4, 2012). CNN.
  24. MSNBC, "MSNBC Republican Caucuses" (February 4, 2012). MSNBC.
  25. https://twitter.com/NVVoteCount/status/166446518109356032 @NVVoteCount NV Caucus Results B 00 TOTAL 32963 IN 1800 OF 1800 GIN 6956 PAU 6175 ROM 16486 SAN 3277 NOV 69 (1/1)
  26. "Ron Paul supporters capture majority of Nevada’s national delegates" accessdate=May 8, 2012. LasVegasSun.
  27. "Ron Paul’s stealth state convention takeover" accessdate=May 8, 2012. Washington Post.
  28. "Ron Paul wins big in Maine and Nevada" accessdate=May 8, 2012. ChristianScienceMonitor.
  29. "Ron Paul's Maine, Nevada, and Iowa Victories (Despite Romney Dirty Tricks) accessdate=May 8, 2012. reason.com"
  30. "Libertarians Find Their Audience In 2012 Race" accessdate=May 8, 2012. npr.
  31. "Ron Paul at Nevada State Convention 2012 " accessdate=May 8, 2012. Video of NV convention Speech.
  32. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]