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Republican Party rules mandate changes to delegate allocation methods happen by September 30. The primaries will conclude with a final vote on the nominee by a majority of delegates, at the newly elected Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, which will be held July 15–18. [248] [249] [better source needed]
Under RNC rules, states holding contests before March 15 must use a proportional allocation method, and can use a threshold of no more than 20% of the vote for a candidate to qualify for delegates.
68.1% 12 delegates 761,163 votes: 26.6% 4 delegates 297,124 votes: 0.2% 2,348 votes: 1.2% 13,456 votes: 0.3% 3,702 votes: 0.1% 1,077 votes: 3.4% 38,443 votes [h] March 2 (125) 39 Michigan (caucus) 97.8% 39 delegates 1,575 votes: 2.2% 36 votes: Not on ballot (withdrawn) Not on ballot: 32 Idaho: 84.9% 32 delegates 33,603 votes: 13.2% 5,221 votes ...
Performing well in primaries and caucuses equals delegates, and the larger goal is amassing the magic number of delegates to secure a nomination before delegate voting at the party convention.
States choose to allocate Republican delegates to candidates either on a winner-take-all method or proportionally
The 2024 New Hampshire Republican presidential primary was held on January 23, 2024, [1] as part of the Republican Party primaries for the 2024 presidential election. 22 delegates to the 2024 Republican National Convention were allocated on a proportional basis, as long as the candidate received at least 10% of the statewide vote.
The state GOP gets to send a total of 35 delegates, 32 of them elected (including 16 elected delegates and 16 "alternates") and three more who go by virtue of their party positions: National ...
Trump won 20 delegates, Ron DeSantis won nine, Nikki Haley won eight, and Vivek Ramaswamy won three. [5] Trump also became the first Republican ever to win a contested Iowa caucus with a majority of the vote, and third person of either major political party to do so (the others being Tom Harkin in 1992 , and Al Gore in 2000 ).