Romney wins Nevada, Gingrich vows to stay in the race

Mitt Romney won Nevada's Republican caucuses on Saturday night, grabbing the largest chunk of the state's 28 delegates in the race for the Republican presidential nomination and racking up his second consecutive victory, after winning Florida in the same week.

Speaking at his victory party at the Red Rocks Resort and Casino in Las Vegas, Romney did not mention any of his Republican opponents by name, keeping his remarks focused on President Barack Obama. Romney repeated his vow to repeal the federal health care law, increase job growth and increase military spending.

"This president began his presidency by apologizing for America," Romney said. "He should now be apologizing to America."

Romney addressed Obama directly when he blamed the president for 36 consecutive months of unemployment above 8 percent--"the red line your own administration drew."

"I will not just slow the growth of government. I will cut it," Romney said. "I will not just freeze the government's share of the economy. I will reduce it."

With 100 percent of the precincts reporting, Romney had 50 percent of the vote, Newt Gingrich had 21 percent, Ron Paul had 19 percent and Rick Santorum had 10 percent.

Although Romney's victory is significant in percentage terms, the voter turnout for the caucuses was not substantial. Romney's total number of votes was only 16,486.

Although each of the candidates visited Nevada, the voters in the state did not experience the heavy campaigning that went on during the prior four contests in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida. Gingrich elected not to hold an election-night party in the state, opting instead for a post-election press conference, during which he vowed to press on with his campaign.

"I think we will do better than John McCain did four years ago" in Nevada, Gingrich said. "We will get some delegates here."

Calling himself the true conservative in the race, Gingrich compared himself to Republican titans who fended off moderate challengers in 1964 and 1980. "Reagan had this challenge with John Connally. Goldwater had this challenge with Nelson Rockefeller," Gingrich said, adding, "Reagan lost five straight primaries before he started winning in 1976."

(Ronald Reagan did not, of course, win the Republican presidential nomination in 1976.)

Entrance poll results suggest that Romney benefited from the large number of Republicans in the state who share his faith. About one in four voters were members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, according to poll data analyzed by Langer Research Associates for ABC News.

The number was roughly the same in 2008, when "Romney won 95 percent of Mormons in the 2008 caucuses," Gary Langer of ABC News reports.

Four years ago, Romney won the state's Republican caucuses with 51 percent of the vote. For weeks, public-opinion polls have shown Romney with a comfortable 20-percentage-point lead in Nevada.

"This is not the first time you've given me your vote of confidence," Romney said. "And this time, I'm gonna take it to the White House."

The candidates now turn to the caucuses in Colorado and Minnesota on Tuesday.

Missouri, where Gingrich failed to get his name on the ballot, will hold a non-binding primary on Tuesday.

Read more coverage of the 2012 Nevada caucuses at Yahoo News.

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Nevada's dry heat: Talking with Las Vegas Sun reporter Anjeanette Damon

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