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Paul appears to be contesting Romney in Vermont, with 17 delegates. Paul also intends to make a rare campaign trip to Alaska for the weekend in hopes of gaining his first victory of the year in the state's caucuses. There are 24 delegates up for grabs. Two other caucus states, Idaho, 32 delegates, and North Dakota, 28, were drawing unusual interest from all four contenders. So far, 290 delegates have been awarded, while 419, are on the ballot next Tuesday alone. In the Associated Press tally, Romney now has 167 delegates, Santorum has 87, Gingrich has 32 and Paul has 19. Romney spent much of Wednesday in Ohio, where he campaigned on a promise to help the economy recover from the worst recession in decades. He was asked about other issues as well. Asked by a member of the audience at a town hall-style event how he would protect Second Amendment rights, he replied, "I have guns myself; I'm not going to tell you where they are." Aides later said he owns a pair of handguns but would not say where they are registered. Romney also said that if Iran gains nuclear weapons and there is an attack from a terrorist organization, the Iranian government would "become one in the circle of suspects and America will be free to take action against them just as they would if they launched it themselves." Romney's remark about winning the votes of Michigan primary-goers who said economy and jobs were their top priority was grounded in exit polls, which showed he defeated Santorum among that group, 47 percent to 30 percent. The same surveys suggested a continuing divide within the party that could give Santorum and Gingrich an opportunity to extend the nominating campaign far longer than the customary GOP race. Romney won the votes of Michigan primary voters who said they were somewhat conservative, 50 percent to 32 percent. Santorum topped him among those who said they were very conservative, 50-36. Each group accounted for roughly 30 percent of the overall electorate. Half of all primary-goers said they supported the tea party, and Romney and Santorum split those voters' support down the middle. The same exit poll turned up evidence of dissatisfaction among primary voters with their choices. Slightly more than a third said they had reservations about their candidate. Even so, turnout rose in both Michigan and Arizona over four years ago, a change in a recent trend of diminished voter participation. Roughly one million votes were cast in Michigan, compared to 869,000 four years ago. Turnout in Arizona topped 600,000, up from about 540,000 in 2008.
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