Now Playing
Connect with Us
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
| All Content |
| RSS |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Most Active Stories
- Getting To Know Midtown's 'Running Superman'
- Collector And Gallerist Byron Cohen Dies At 72
- Liberty Hospital Announces Layoffs, Citing Pending 'Health Care Storm'
- 5 Things You Should Know About The Genetically Modified Food You’re Probably Eating
- Insight Into The Trials And Joys Of Transgender Relationships
The Two-Way
6:22 am
Tue April 24, 2012
Today's Primaries: Gingrich's Swan Song Or Reason To Remain?
Nothing about what happens during today's Republican presidential primaries in five states is expected to change the fact that Mitt Romney is the presumptive/expected/presumed/inevitable (pick your favorite word) nominee.
Polls are open in Connecticut, Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. There are 209 convention delegates at stake and Romney could pull off a five-state sweep.
But — and there's always a but — there's this:
"Newt Gingrich has got a new hope: the tiny but dangerous state of Delaware," Politico reports. While Romney has invested time in the other states, he's mostly ignored Delaware. Gingrich, though, "has spent most of his time recently" in that state. So, there's a chance he could pull off a victory there today.
It's not that a win in Delaware would change anything. Romney would still be on track to have the 1,144 delegates needed for the nomination by some time in May. "But it would be an irritating distraction for the Romney campaign, which continues to struggle with the party's base," Politico writes, and it would give Gingrich something to point to if he decides to stay in the race after today.
But — and there's almost always a second but — there's also this:
If Gingrich doesn't do well in Delaware, his spokesman has "suggested the former House speaker may reassess his candidacy," CBS News says.
Polls close in Delaware at 8 p.m. ET.
Check It's All Politics for more on the 2012 campaign.
9(MDAyNDUyNTY4MDEyNDU5NTA0MzAxYzQ4NQ001))
