The North Dakota caucus is scheduled to take place on Super Tuesday, March 6. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum made a campaign stop in Tioga, N.D., Wednesday, where he discussed how people should pay for their own health care with the only exceptions being made for catastrophic costs and those medical costs which are "unanticipated," according to CBS News Political Hotsheet.
Here's some practical and historical information on this upcoming contest.
* There are 28 delegates up for grabs, and all of them are unbound, according to Free Republic.
* This state is the only one in America which doesn't have voter registration.
* The North Dakota Secretary of State's website says that mandatory voter registration in the state was repealed in 1951. Currently, North Dakota Century Code Section 40-21-10 allows for municipalities to choose if and when they want to implement voter registration.
* Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, are the only two major GOP presidential candidates running this time around that ran in 2008. Four years ago, Romney won with 36 percent of the votes, while Paul finished third with 21 percent.
* A Gallup poll taken in 2011 shows that this state is one of the most Republican and/or GOP-leaning states in the country, where 49 percent surveyed see themselves favoring that political persuasion, while only 31 percent are Democrats or lean to the Democratic Party.
* The 2010 U.S. Census shows that males make up the majority of the state's population, for females only make up 49.5 percent. The largest ethnic group is whites, who make up 90 percent of the populace. The largest minority group is "American Indian and Alaska Native persons," who make up 5.4 percent of the population.
* There are 47 districts in the state which will hold caucuses from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. local time (the state is in two time zones, MST and CST). Absentee voting isn't allowed, but those who will be 18 years old on Election Day can participate, according to the North Dakota Republican Party (NDGOP).
* North Dakota Republican Sen. John Hoeven has already endorsed Romney. Other high-profile endorsements have come from the state's attorney general, insurance commissioner, auditor, and agriculture commissioner, according to KFYR-TV.




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