+0000c31obeMon, 19 May 2008 20:19:08 +0000 5, 2006...10:00PMay

PRIMARY SEASON ELECTION RESULTS, PART 6

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All Dates Current Coming Contests Obama_65x45 Clinton_65x45 Edwards_65x45   Mccain_65x45 Paul_65x45 Huckabee_65x45 Romney_65x45 Giuliani_65x45
Date State Barack Obama Hillary Clinton John Edwards   John McCain Ron Paul Mike Huckabee Mitt Romney Rudy Giuliani
 
May 13 West Virginia primary results » 26% 67% 7%   76% 5% 10% 4% 2%
May 6 Indiana results » 49 51 -   78 8 10 5 -
May 6 North Carolina results » 56 42 -   74 8 12 - -
May 3 Guam results (D) » 50 50 -   See results below on March 8
Apr 22 Pennsylvania results » 45 55 -   73 16 11 - -
Apr 5 Virgin Islands results (R) » See results below on February 9   31 3 - 19 -
Mar 11 Mississippi results » 61 37 1   79 4 13 2 1
Mar 8 Guam results (R) » See results above on May 3   Results not available.
Mar 8 Wyoming results (D) » 61 38 -   See results below on January 5
Mar 4 Ohio results » 44 54 2   60 5 31 3 -
Mar 4 Rhode Island results » 40 58 1   65 7 22 4 -
Mar 4 Texas primary results » 47 51 1   51 5 38 2 0
Mar 4 Vermont results » 59 39 1   72 7 14 5 2
Feb 23 American Samoa results (R) » See results below on February 5   100 - - - -
Feb 19 Hawaii results (D) » 76 24 0   Republican caucus: May 17
Feb 19 Wisconsin results » 58 41 1   55 5 37 2 0
Feb 12 District of Columbia results » 75 24 0   68 8 16 6 2
Feb 12 Maryland results » 61 36 1   55 6 29 7 1
Feb 12 Virginia results » 64 35 1   50 4 41 4 0
Feb 10 Maine results (D) » 59 40 -   See results below on February 1
Feb 9 Kansas results (R) » See results below on February 5   24 11 60 3 0
Feb 9 Louisiana results » 57 36 3   42 5 43 6 1
Feb 9 Nebraska results (D) » 68 32 -   Republican caucus: July 12
Feb 9 Virgin Islands results (D) » 90 8 -   See results above on April 5
Feb 9 Washington caucus results » 68 31 0   26 22 24 15 -
Feb 5 Alabama results » 56 42 1   37 3 41 18 0
Feb 5 Alaska results » 75 25 0   16 17 22 44 -
Feb 5 American Samoa results (D) » 42 57 -   See results above on February 23
Feb 5 Arizona results » 42 50 5   47 4 9 35 3
Feb 5 Arkansas results » 27 70 2   20 5 60 14 0
Feb 5 California results » 43 51 4   42 4 12 35 4
Feb 5 Colorado results » 67 32 -   18 8 13 60 -
Feb 5 Connecticut results » 51 47 1   52 4 7 33 2
Feb 5 Delaware results » 53 42 1   45 4 15 33 2
Feb 5 Democrats Abroad results (D) » 67 33 -    
Feb 5 Georgia results » 66 31 2   32 3 34 30 1
Feb 5 Idaho results (D) » 80 17 1   Republican primary: May 27
Feb 5 Illinois results » 65 33 2   47 5 16 29 1
Feb 5 Kansas results (D) » 74 26 0   See results above on February 9
Feb 5 Massachusetts results » 41 56 2   41 3 4 51 1
Feb 5 Minnesota results » 66 32 0   22 16 20 41 0
Feb 5 Missouri results » 49 48 2   33 4 32 29 1
Feb 5 Montana results (R) » Democratic primary: June 3   22 25 15 38 -
Feb 5 New Jersey results » 44 54 1   55 5 8 28 3
Feb 5 New Mexico results (D) » 48 49 1   Republican primary: June 3
Feb 5 New York results » 40 57 1   52 6 11 28 4
Feb 5 North Dakota results » 61 37 1   23 21 20 36 -
Feb 5 Oklahoma results » 31 55 10   37 3 33 25 1
Feb 5 Tennessee results » 40 54 4   32 6 34 24 1
Feb 5 Utah results » 57 39 3   5 3 1 89 0
Feb 5 West Virginia caucus results » Democratic primary May 15.   1 0 52 47 -
Feb 1 Maine results (R) » See results above on February 10   21 18 6 52 0
Jan 29 Florida results » 33 50 14   36 3 13 31 15
Jan 26 South Carolina results (D) » 55 27 18   See results below on January 19
Jan 19 Nevada results » 45 51 4   13 14 8 51 4
Jan 19 South Carolina results (R) » See results above on January 26   33 4 30 15 2
Jan 15 Michigan results » - 55 -   30 6 16 39 3
Jan 8 New Hampshire results » 36 39 17   37 8 11 32 9
Jan 5 Wyoming results (R) » See results above on March 8   0 0 0 67 0
Jan 3 Iowa results » 38 29 30   13 10 34 25 3
 
 
Coming contests
May 17 Hawaii (R) See results above on February 19   20 delegates
May 20 Kentucky 60 delegates   45 delegates
May 20 Oregon 65 delegates   30 delegates
May 27 Idaho (R) See results above on February 5   32 delegates
Jun 1 Puerto Rico (D) 63 delegates    
Jun 3 Montana (D) 24 delegates   See results above on February 5
Jun 3 New Mexico (R) See results above on February 5   32 delegates
Jun 3 South Dakota 23 delegates   27 delegates
Jul 12 Nebraska (R) See results above on February 9   33 delegates

 

INDIANA PRIMARY RESULTS:

Results

Democrats

72 pledged delegates, 13 unpledged
Candidate Vote % Delegates
Hillary Rodham Clinton 641,734 50.7% 38  
Barack Obama 623,294 49.3    34  

Republicans

27 pledged delegates, 30 unpledged
Candidate Vote % Delegates
John McCain 318,374 77.6% 27  
Mike Huckabee 41,063 10.0    0  
Ron Paul 31,557 7.7    0  
Mitt Romney 19,507 4.8    0  

 

Profile of the Voters

 

Democrats


Based on questionnaires filled out by voters across the state.
% of total Clinton Obama
14    17-29 years old 42    58   
23    30-44 years old 43    57   
34    45-59 years old 51    49   
29    60 years old and older 67    33   
85    Less than $100,000 52    47   
15    $100,000 or more 52    48   
17    Today/In the last three days 62    38   
82    Sometime last week or earlier 50    50   

 

Details of the Nominating Process

 

Democrats

May 6, 2008

72 pledged
delegates

 

13 unpledged
delegates

 

Primary (Open)

Of Indiana’s 72 pledged delegates, 47 are assigned based on the outcome of the primaries in each Congressional district, and the remaining 25 are assigned proportionally based on the vote statewide. The 13 unpledged delegates include 12 party leaders and elected officials and one other individual elected at the state convention.

Republicans

May 6, 2008

27 pledged
delegates

 

30 unpledged
delegates

 

Primary (Open)

 

 

 

 

Winners of Previous Primaries

Democrats

2004 John Kerry
2000 Al Gore
1992 Bill Clinton

Republicans

2000 George W. Bush
1996 Bob Dole
1988 George Bush
WEST VIRGINIA PRIMARY RESULTS:

Democrats

28 pledged delegates, 11 unpledged
Candidate Vote % Delegates
Hillary Rodham Clinton 239,062 67.0% 20  
Barack Obama 91,652 25.7    8  
John Edwards 26,076 7.3    0  

Republicans

27 pledged delegates, 3 unpledged
Candidate Vote % Delegates
John McCain 89,683 76.0% 9  
Mike Huckabee 12,175 10.3    0  
Ron Paul 5,914 5.0    0  
Mitt Romney 5,188 4.4    0  
Rudolph W. Giuliani 2,831 2.4    0  
Alan Keyes 1,427 1.2    0  
Others 727 0.6    0  

 

Caucus Results

Democrats

Democrats did not hold a caucus.

Republicans

Candidate Vote % Delegates
Mike Huckabee 567 51.5% 18  
Mitt Romney 521 47.4    0  
John McCain 12 1.1    0  
Ron Paul 0 0.0    0  
Others 0 0.0    0  
Vote totals are the presidential preferences of the approximately 1,400 delegates at the state convention on Feb. 5. Eighteen delegates will be awarded to the candidate who gets more than half of the vote.

 

Profile of the Voters

Democrats

Democratic primary scheduled for May 13

Republicans

Mr. Huckabee won West Virginia’s Republican nominating convention, walking away with 18 of the state’s 30 delegates and handing Mr. Romney something of an upset. Neither candidate has spent much time in West Virginia, but Mr. Romney’s staff members said theirs was really the only game in town, a campaign with hundreds of volunteers, radio advertisements and direct-mail operations. Mr. Romney visited a state fair in August and told voters that West Virginia coal was crucial to his national energy plan. Nine more delegates are up for grabs in May, when the heavily Democratic state holds its Republican presidential primary. In 2000, George W. Bush won the Republican primary, which meant little because he had already locked up his party’s nomination.

Details of the Nominating Process

 

Democrats

May 13, 2008

28 pledged
delegates

 

11 unpledged
delegates

 

Primary (Semi-closed)

Based on the results of the May 13 primary, 28 delegates are allocated proportionally to presidential candidates receiving at least 15 percent of the vote. Of these delegates, 18 are allocated based on the primary vote in each of the state’s three Congressional districts, while 10 delegates are allocated based on the primary vote statewide. At the state convention June 13-14, the 18 pledged Congressional-district level delegates are selected in district-level caucuses. The state executive committee selects 11 delegates, the 10 pledged at-large delegates and one unpledged delegate. In addition, 10 party leaders automatically serve as unpledged delegates.

Republicans

May 13, 2008

27 pledged
delegates

 

3 unpledged
delegates

 

Caucus (Closed)

At the state convention held Feb. 5, 18 delegates to the national convention are selected by a roll call vote. If a presidential candidate receives more than 50 percent of the first vote, that candidate gets all 18 delegates. If no candidate gets 50 percent of the vote, a second vote is taken that includes only the three candidates who received the most votes. If any of those candidates receives more than 50 percent of the second vote, that candidate gets all 18 delegates. If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote on the second vote, a third vote is taken that includes only the two candidates who received the most votes. The candidate receiving more than 50 percent of that vote receives all 18 delegates. On May 13, nine delegates (three from each Congressional district) are elected in the presidential primary. The presidential candidate receiving the most votes in each Congressional district gets all three of the district’s delegates. In addition, three party leaders automatically become unpledged delegates.

SOURCE:  THE NEW YORK TIMES:   http://politics.nytimes.com/election-guide/2008/results/votes/index.html

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