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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

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Last night, McCain had significant victories in Virginia, Maryland and Washington, DC. Below is an summary of the state of the race for the Republican nomination. Including the delegates won last night, John McCain is now close to securing the number of delegates needed to be the Republican nominee. In addition, it is now mathematically impossible for Mike Huckabee to win enough delegates to secure the Republican nomination; there simply aren’t enough delegates left at stake for him to win. Review the following chart:
Results based on AP reportingCurrent Delegate CountRemaining Delegates Needed for NominationAvailable Delegates% Needed to Win
McCain Delegate Count83935277435%
Huckabee Delegate Count241950123%
1,191 delegates are needed for the nomination. Despite the apparent favorable mathematical position for McCain, with Mike Huckabee still campaigning, John McCain must continue to compete actively in the upcoming states, including Wisconsin, Washington, Ohio, Texas, Vermont and Rhode Island. With delegates being held by other former candidates and by Huckabee, if McCain fails to garner 352 of the remaining 774 delegates, then a brokered convention will be at hand at least in the initial voting rounds. With Fred Thompson endorsement of McCain a few of his delegates could be released to McCain. If Huckabee does well in the final primaries, Mitt Romney, who suspended his campaign but did not withdraw, could become a key player with his delegates in the nomination process. Based on Romney's prior CPAC statement, he would lean to a decision that provides for the the greatest national security for Americans.

Tags: delegates, Fred Thompson, GOP, John McCain, Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney, presidential candidates, Election 2008 To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. Thanks!

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