Politics & Government

Romney Wins Florida GOP Primary; Northdale Resident Reacts

Mitt Romney earns a convincing victory over Newt Gingrich and other Republican nominees in Florida's Presidential Preference Primary.

Mitt Romney won the Florida Presidential Preference Primary on Tuesday, earning the state's 50 delegates and distancing himself from Newt Gingrich as the Republican front-runner for 2012.

The Associated Press projected Romney's commanding victory shortly after 8 p.m. when the final polls closed in Florida's Panhandle.

The former Massachusetts governor had taken 46 percent of the vote to 31 percent for Gingrich after returns from 99 percent of the polls were in. Rick Santorum had 13 percent, and Ron Paul 7 percent.

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"Florida, you're the best," a victorious Romney told a crowd gathered at his  at the downtown Tampa Convention Center.

"I voted for Mitt, and actually, I am very pleased," said Pamela St. John of Northdale. "I really didn’t have any projections in terms of how far ahead he’d be of Gingrich. When you mix in Gingrich with Santorum, there’s still less of a percentage of Mitt all by himself. That speaks very well to Mitt Romney."

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Despite Romney's win, St. John thinks the race for the White House is far from over.

"I think this thing is going to be a rocky road," she said. "I think we’re going to see a lot of back and forth."

How Hillsborough Voted

Unofficial results from the Hillsborough County Supervisor of Elections showed Romney took 47.6 percent of the vote, topping Gingrich's 28.2 percent.

Romney garnered more than 42,300 of the nearly 90,000 votes cast by Hillsborough County Republicans.

The Importance of Florida

The "Interstate 4 corridor" and the Tampa Bay area in particular had been prime territory for some of the candidates' campaigns in the days and weeks leading up to Tuesday's vote.

Romney, who established a campaign headquarters in South Tampa, made visits and and held a at the downtown convention center.

Gingrich attended , and in Tampa, along.

The win in Florida would have been even bigger for Romney, but the state was penalized by the Republican National Committee for moving up its primary date, getting stripped of half of its 99 delegates.

Florida is expected to again be a battleground state in the 2012 general election. In 2008, Barack Obama took 50 percent of the vote, narrowly edging Republican Sen. John McCain's 48 percent.

What's Next

Romney has taken 84 delegates — but needs a total of 1,144 to win the Republican nomination.

Now the campaign trail shifts to Nevada and Maine for their caucuses on Feb. 4.

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