1144 delegates needed to win.
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2012 Presidential Primary Filing Deadlines | ||||||
State1 | Contest Date | Filing Deadline | Uncommitted/ No Preference | Write-In | Delegates | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michigan | 2/28 | 12/9 | Uncommitted | -- | 30 | |
Alaska | 3/6 | 2/4 | No preference | -- | 27 | |
Idaho | 3/6 | 2/4 | Uncommitted | -- | 32 | |
Massachusetts | 3/6 | 1/6 | No preference | √ | 41 | |
North Dakota | 3/6 | Ballot set 2/12 | n/a | n/a | 28 | |
Tennessee | 3/6 | 12/6 | Uncommitted3 | √ | 58 | |
Vermont | 3/6 | 1/9 | -- | √ | 17 | |
Virginia | 3/6 | 12/22 | Bill to allow uncommitted | -- | 49 | |
Wyoming | 3/6 | n/a4 | n/a | n/a | 29 | |
Kansas | 3/10 | 12/31 | Uncommitted | -- | 40 | |
Virgin Islands | 3/10 | 2/10 | Uncommitted | -- | 9 | |
Alabama | 3/13 | 1/13 | Uncommitted | √ | 50 | |
American Samoa | 3/13 | n/a | n/a | n/a | 9 | |
Hawaii | 3/13 | 2/285 | Uncommitted6 | √7 | 20 | |
Mississippi | 3/13 | 1/14 | -- | √8 | 40 | |
Missouri | 3/17 | n/a | n/a | n/a | 52 | |
Puerto Rico | 3/18 | 1/18 | n/a | n/a | 23 | |
Illinois | 3/20 | 1/6 | Uncommitted9 | -- | 69 | |
Louisiana | 3/24 | 12/9 | Uncommitted10 | -- | 46 | |
Maryland | 4/3 | 1/11 | Uncommitted11 | √12 | 37 | |
Texas | 4/3 | Uncommitted | √ | 155 | ||
Washington, DC | 4/3 | 1/4 | Uncommitted | -- | 19 | |
Wisconsin | 4/3 | Uninstructed | √ | 42 | ||
Connecticut | 4/24 | 3/2 | Uncommitted | √14 | 28 | |
Delaware | 4/24 | 2/24 | -- | √ | 17 | |
New York | 4/24 | 2/9 | Uncommitted15 | √ | 95 | |
Pennsylvania | 4/24 | 2/14 | Uncommitted16 | √ | 72 | |
Rhode Island | 4/24 | 1/21 | Uncommitted | -- | 19 | |
Indiana | 5/8 | 2/1017 | -- | -- | 46 | |
North Carolina | 5/8 | 3/618 | Uncommitted | -- | 55 | |
West Virginia | 5/8 | 1/28 | Uncommitted19 | √ | 31 | |
Nebraska | 5/1520 | 3/7 | Uncommitted | -- | 35 | |
Oregon | 5/15 | 3/6 | -- | √ | 28 | |
Arkansas | 5/22 | 3/1 | Uncommitted21 | --22 | 36 | |
Kentucky | 5/22 | 1/31 | Uncommitted | --23 | 45 | |
California | 6/5 | 3/23 | Uncommitted | √24 | 172 | |
Montana | 6/5 | 3/1225 | Uncommitted | √ | 26 | |
New Jersey | 6/5 | 4/2 | -- | √ | 50 | |
New Mexico | 6/5 | 3/16 | -- | -- | 23 | |
South Dakota | 6/5 | 3/27 | Uncommitted26 | -- | 28 | |
Utah | 6/26 | 3/15 | -- | -- | 40 | |
Source: FEC, state election law, state party rules
1 States included above are those where there is still an option for a candidate not currently declared in the 2012 Republican presidential nomination (ie: filing deadline has not passed, there is an uncommitted or no preference line on the ballot or where write-in is a possibility).
2 Candidates placed on ballot according to who is an announced candidate by February 1. 3 See Tennessee Code (Title 2, Chapter 13, Part 3).
4 Precinct caucuses begin 2/9.
5 Candidates who enter race after 2/1 can be given an extension. 6 It is not clear whether there is an "uncommitted" line on the Hawaii caucus ballot. The evidence seems to suggest that only votes for actual declared candidates count. That said, delegates do not not have to commit to any candidate, but if they do that delegate is committed to that candidate -- if still in the race -- through the first ballot at the Republican National Convention. The delegates can go to the convention uncommitted, but it is a different process than is being talked about in the other cases where voters are marking a ballot for "uncommitted". 7 Write-in votes are only counted if they are cast for candidates registered with the FEC. 8 See Mississippi Code (Title 23, Chapter 15, Article 13B). 9 Delegates (or slates of delegates) file at the same time as candidates, but those delegates can file as "uncommitted" and is listed as such on the ballot. However, there is no "uncommitted" list on the presidential preference portion of the ballot. 10 There is no uncommitted line on the Louisiana primary ballot, but delegates may be uncommitted if no candidate receives over 25% of the primary vote. Those delegates would go to the national convention uncommitted. The congressional district delegates automatically go to the national convention unpledged. 11 Maryland delegates can run as "uncommitted" and be marked that way on the primary ballot if the party requests such of the State Board of Elections. [Maryland Code Title 8, Subtitle 5, 8-501] There is no evidence that the Maryland GOP has made such a request in 2012. The Maryland Secretary of State's office confirmed to FHQ on February 2, 2012 that only the Democratic presidential primary ballot will include an uncommitted line. The Republican primary ballot will not. 12 Write-ins are allowed if a candidate files a certificate of candidacy to run as a write-in candidate. The deadline for that is the earlier of either within a week of filing with the FEC or the Wednesday before the election. [Maryland Code Title 5, Subtitle 3, 5-303] 13 February 1 is the end of the filing period established by the courts in the Texas redistricting case, but any changes to those districts may ultimately affect both the date of the primary and the close of the filing period. On January 27, the February 1 filing deadline was suspended until further order by the San Antonio court. 14 Write-in votes are allowed so long as the candidate has registered his or her candidacy with the Connecticut secretary of state. 15 The "uncommitted" line is allowed on the presidential primary ballot in New York so long as the procedures to file -- as if a candidate -- are followed. 16 Delegates (or slates of delegates) file as the presidential candidate and indicate whether they are committed or uncommitted which is in turn listed on the ballot. As is the case on the Illinois ballot, there is no line for "uncommitted" on the presidential preference portion of the ballot. 17 Petitions to file for candidacy in Indiana are due to the secretary of state by January 31. 18 The North Carolina State Board of Elections meets to set the ballot based on a list of candidates provided by the state parties and those candidates having filed by petition by the Monday (3/5/12) preceding the Board meeting. 19 The delegates listed on the West Virginia ballot have their presidential preference (or "uncommitted") listed next to their names on the primary ballot, but their is no "uncommitted" line among the presidential preference portion of the ballot. 20 The Nebraska primary is non-binding. All delegates will be allocated at the July state convention. 21 See Arkansas Code (Title 7, Chapter 8, Section 201). 22 See Arkansas Code (Title 7, Chapter 5, Section 525). 23 Write-ins are not expressly forbidden according to Kentucky code, but the allowance and declaration of intent for are only associated with general elections. Recent past presidential primary elections have also had no write-in votes cast. 24 Voters can write in anyone on a ballot, but those ballots will only be counted if the candidate voted for has filed as a write-in candidate with the state. 25 Montana has an advisory/non-binding primary on the Republican side. All delegates are selected at the mid-June state convention. 26 The uncommitted provision in the state law is dependent upon the state parties not having delegate selection rules prohibiting such a designation on the ballot. The South Dakota Republican Party allows uncommitted slates to appear on the ballot. |