Gingrich hopeful for Delaware primary upset
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| WILMINGTON, Del.
Republican presidential candidate聽Newt聽Gingrich is about to learn whether the time and attention he has devoted will resonate with the state's presidential primary voters.
Delaware聽Republicans began voting Tuesday in the GOP primary, with 17 winner-take-all delegates at stake.
Gingrich, the former House speaker, has been crisscrossing the state in recent weeks, hoping a victory inDelaware聽will provide momentum for him to continue campaigning in other states after Tuesday.
The only other visit to聽Delaware聽by a GOP presidential candidate was a brief stop by GOP front-runner Mitt Romney earlier this month in Wilmington, just hours after his closest rival, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, abandoned the race.
In the days leading up to Tuesday's primary, Gingrich's focus on聽Delaware聽paid off with endorsements from two GOP officials who previously had endorsed Romney, including Republican National Committeewoman Priscilla Rakestraw, a longtime leader in the state Republican Party.
"Just the fact that he's been so committed to聽Delaware聽has been really great," said Sen. Colin Bonini, R-Dover, a longtime Gingrich supporter who introduced Gingrich at his first campaign appearance and was the first elected official in聽Delaware聽to endorse him.
"We're going to try to deliver this for you, Mr. Speaker," Bonini told Gingrich on Monday night during his finalDelaware聽campaign appearance.
Gingrich has visited聽Delaware聽at least eight times in the past month, spreading his message about the need for limited government, balanced budgets and American energy independence.
"It's the kind of state where people actually know each other," he said Monday, extolling the virtues of the Brandywine Zoo and the museum at Dover Air Force Base.
Delaware聽is holding its Republican presidential primary Tuesday along with Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island.聽Delaware's聽polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday in all three counties. Only Republicans, who account for about 178,000 of the state's 613,000 registered voters, are allowed to vote in the GOP primary.