The AP:

Mitt Romney won the Republican caucus in American Samoa on Tuesday, picking up all nine delegates.

About 70 Republicans in the U.S. territory located 2,300 miles south of Hawaii met at Toa Bar & Grill to discuss the candidates and select delegates for the Republican National Convention in August. At the end, the six delegates chosen and the three superdelegates who will accompany them to the convention all said they would support Romney.

"I believe Romney can fix the U.S. economy that extends to American Samoa. He can turn this country around," said Falemao M. Pili, vice chairman of the local GOP and a delegate.

Only registered Republicans could vote in the caucus, and that's why so few attended. It's rare in American Samoa for anyone to officially register as a Republican or Democrat because local elected officials don't run on party lines.

Last weekend, Romney captured all 18 delegates at caucuses in two other U.S. possessions in the Pacific - Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. Like American Samoa, residents of those islands are U.S. citizens but are not allowed to vote in presidential elections.