By CRISTINA SILVA and SANDRA CHEREB
Associated Press
LAS VEGAS (AP) — The
economy, unemployment and political dislike of President Barack Obama
were on the minds of Nevada Republicans who fanned out across the state
Saturday — some braving freezing temperatures before sunrise, others
braving caucus confusion — to cast their vote for a GOP presidential
nominee.
GOP caucuses began as early as 7 a.m. in the state
capital of Carson City, with a "vote and go" option for shift workers
and others unable to attend the regular caucus meeting. Depending on the
county, caucuses were scheduled at various times throughout the day,
the last scheduled for 7 p.m.
Rita Homer and her husband, Brad, were the first in line when the doors opened in Carson City around sunrise.
For
them, unemployment and immigration are the biggest concerns in this
year's presidential race. They voted for former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich.
"He has some off-the-wall ideas, but I have no problem
with that," said Rita Homer, 60, an office manager and tea party backer.
"If he wants someone on the moon, let's get there first."
By
midday, some caucuses were in full swing, with voters debating the
attributes and shortcomings of the four remaining GOP hopefuls —
Gingrich, Mitt Romney, Ron Paul and Rick Santorum.
Others were
over quickly, sparking anger from latecomers at one site in Henderson.
About three dozen voters were turned away from Green Valley High School
when they showed up after the fact.
Party officials chalked it up
to a learning experience, saying some voters are still unfamiliar with
how caucuses work, believing they can show up at any time and cast a
ballot.
"Contact the party and complain," precinct captain Dale Napier told some disgruntled voters.
Nevada
changed from a presidential primary to a caucus state in 2000 — and
many bemoan the switch. Petitions were being circulated at some GOP
caucuses to go back to primaries.
"This whole process
disenfranchises too many people," said Carol Howell, site manager in
Carson City. "We lose early voting and absentee voting. Most people
don't understand the process."
Statewide, 1,835 GOP precincts were meeting at 125 caucus sites.
More than 1,000 people were at a middle school in Sparks.
Vinney
Tolman, a 35-year-old small business owner, was backing Romney, the
former Massachusetts governor who won Nevada four years ago and was
favored to repeat on Saturday.
"He has some ethics and morals that are going to be a stable foundation for his policies," Tolman said.
Rosemary Millet, 56, liked Romney's business experience.
"We need a financial genius at this point and I think he's it," she said in Carson City.
Charlene
Bybee, a Sparks flight attendant and tea party organizer, said former
House Speaker Gingrich was the better candidate because he talks about
"facts, not rhetoric."
In the Las Vegas community of Summerlin,
Steve Commander bounced around a middle school science classroom wearing
a tea party lapel pin and a tie spangled with $100 bills.
He serenaded volunteers with a rendition of the Sammy Davis Jr. song, "I've Gotta Be Me."
"I'm
excited about the America that was and will be," said Commander, 67, a
former adviser to Sharron Angle in her failed bid to unseat Democratic
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.
Republicans this year are
hoping to generate the kind of buzz and voter enthusiasm that Democrats
garnered in 2008 to propel Obama to the White House.
At
Cimarron-Memorial High School in Las Vegas, about 1,200 people from 26
precincts turned out, and by 10 a.m. most had finished voting.
"We
had some minor issues and had to call the central party office to
verify registered voters," said site manager Tom Thomas. "A few showed
up late after their precincts finished. We didn't turn anyone away."
A
special 7 p.m. caucus was to be held to accommodate religious voters in
Clark County who celebrate the Saturday Sabbath. Caucus results will be
released by the state Party via Twitter and Google.
Romney was a projected favorite, though all of the candidates had their share of backers.
Jeff
Coppens, 45, and his wife decided just before the caucus to support
Santorum, and dismissed talk that Romney was the presumptive Republican
nominee.
"I feel differently that Romney's the only one who can
beat Obama," Coppens said, adding that Santorum "is consistent on what
he says and very tough."
The Nevada caucuses are the first-in-the-West Republican presidential contest and the fifth in the nation.
Romney carried the state four years ago, benefiting in part by the large Mormon presence in Nevada.
Paul,
a Texas congressman, finished second in Nevada in 2008, and was
counting on continued support Saturday from a loyal base and voters like
Ruth Dodrill who are attracted to his libertarian, anti-government and
anti-tax message.
"I doubt he will make it, but I still believe
there are steps this country needs to make to get its economics in
shape," said Dodrill, 76, a former teacher. "Government should not be
running anything. That's unconstitutional."
State GOP leaders
expect 50,000 to 60,000 voters — out of 400,000 active registered
Republicans in Nevada — to participate. At stake are 28 delegates to
this summer's Republican nominating convention that will be awarded
proportionally based on the outcome of Saturday's contest.
All
four candidates crisscrossed the state this week, trying to woo voters
in a state that has been slow to recover from the economic blows of the
Great Recession.
Nevada's unemployment rate has been highest in
the nation since May 2010, soaring to just shy of 15 percent later that
year. By December 2011, the rate receded to 12.6 percent, but more than
166,000 people remained out of work.
The collapse of the housing
market left a majority of homeowners underwater on mortgages, and one in
every 177 homes was in foreclosure in December, also the highest rate
in the nation.