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Florida and Michigan were penalized by the Democratic party, and under the rules as they existed at the time of the elections, the delegates were not to be seated at the Democratic Convention. Toward the end of the primary season, on May 31, the Democratic National Committee restored "half votes" to the disputed primaries, as well as accepting ...
Below are the results for the state primaries and caucuses held by the Democratic Party in 2008 for the presidential primaries. [1] [2] Clinton won one territorial contest, Puerto Rico , whilst Obama won Guam , the US Virgin Islands and American Samoa .
On August 19, 2007, Nunn said he would not decide on a presidential bid until after the 2008 primary season, when presumptive nominees by both parties would emerge. [71] However, speculation over a Nunn White House bid ended on April 18, 2008, when he endorsed Democratic presidential contender Barack Obama. [72] U.S Senator from Georgia (1972 ...
2008 District of Columbia Democratic Presidential Primary Results Party Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates Democratic: Barack Obama: 93,386: 75.31%: 12: Democratic: Hillary Clinton: 29,470 23.77% 3 Democratic: John Edwards: 347 0.28% 0 Democratic: Uncommitted 339 0.27% 0 Democratic: Dennis Kucinich: 193 0.16% 0 Democratic: Bill Richardson ...
Pages in category "2008 United States Democratic presidential primaries by state" The following 56 pages are in this category, out of 56 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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Then-Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama visited Charlotte during an election eve campaign stop in November 2008. He’s the last Democratic presidential candidate to win North Carolina.
The 2008 California Democratic presidential primary took place on February 5, 2008, also known as Super Tuesday. California offered the most delegates out of any nominating contest. [1] Hillary Clinton won the primary with 51.47% of the vote, winning 204 delegates, while Barack Obama got 43.16% of the vote and won 166 delegates.