Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Ohio primary results

  • The Ohio primary results have all eyes on the Buckeye State on Super Tuesday. According to the latest polls, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum went into the contest running extremely competitively against one another.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • Here are the results for the 2012 Ohio Republican primary. Former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) went into the Buckeye state contest virtually tied with Mitt Romney, the former governor of Massachusetts and current GOP frontrunner.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • In Ohio's Republican primary, preliminary exit poll results find that more than half of voters pick Romney as the candidate best able to defeat Barack Obama in November, more than twice as many as see Rick Santorum as most electable.
  • (ABC News)
  • President Barack Obama were the most important factors guiding decisions of voters in Ohio's Republican primary, according to early results from an exit poll Tuesday.
  • (Cincinnati.com)
  • Eleven states -- Alaska, Georgia, Idaho, Massachusetts, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia and Wyoming, held their Republican primary elections on evening progresses to find the latest results.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • (Democrats are accounting for a very small share in this open primary, as is typical for Ohio.) Romney generally has done better with mainline Republicans than with non-Republicans this year.
  • (YAHOO!)
  • so-called super delegates whose votes at the convention will not be tied to Ohios primary results. They are state party chairman Kevin DeWine, former state party chairman Bob Bennett and former Ohio Speaker of the House Jo Ann Davidson.
  • (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum face a potentially-decisive primary today in Ohio, and Attorney General Eric Holders Department of Justice (DOJ) officials are on the ground in Ohio to make sure voter discrimination doesnt affect the results.
  • (Daily Oklahoman)
  • The polling for Tuesday's presidential primary in Ohio shows a close race What is most striking looking at the county-level results from 2008 is the urban-rural divide. Mr.
  • (New York Times)

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