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2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary

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2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary

← 2000 January 27, 2004 (2004-01-27) 2008 →
← IAAZ →

27 Democratic National Convention delegates (22 pledged, 5 unpledged)
The number of pledged delegates received is determined by the popular vote
 
Candidate John Kerry Howard Dean Wesley Clark
Home state Massachusetts Vermont Arkansas
Delegate count 13 9 0
Popular vote 84,377 57,761 27,314
Percentage 38.4% 26.3% 12.4%

 
Candidate John Edwards Joe Lieberman
Home state North Carolina Connecticut
Delegate count 0 0
Popular vote 26,487 18,911
Percentage 12.0% 8.6%

Election results by county Election results by municipality
  John Kerry   Howard Dean   Wesley Clark   Tie   N/A
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The 2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary was held on January 27, 2004. Taking place eight days after the Iowa caucuses, it marked the second contest to take place during the Democratic party's 2004 primary season, as well as the first actual primary to take place.

Polling

Primary polling taken by American Research Group during the last few days of campaigning (January 23 to January 27, 2004) showed that former New Hampshire poll leader as well as national leader Howard Dean was steadily gaining ground to catch up to now front-runner John Kerry.

Candidate January 23 to 25 poll tracking January 24 to 26 poll tracking
John Kerry 38% 35%
Howard Dean 20% 25%
John Edwards 16% 15%
Wesley Clark 15% 13%
Joe Lieberman 5% 6%

Gathered from ARG's 2004 NH Democratic Tracking Poll

Margin of Error +/- 4

Tracking polling showed that Dean had been catching up to Kerry in the days before the primary, cutting Kerry's 18 point lead to 10 points in a matter of days. With Dean dropping and Kerry rising, it became apparent that the battle for 1st place in New Hampshire would be close. Also, for third place, Wesley Clark, John Edwards and Joe Lieberman were the only ones fighting for third. With Clark and Edwards both taking hits going into the primary, and Lieberman on the rise, the fight for 1st place and third place, according to polls would be intense.

Results

As results began to come in during Primary night, it became apparent Kerry had won the primary and was promptly projected the winner by several media outlets. Dean finished in second place. Clark and Edwards were in a dead-lock for third place, with both candidates at 12% during the night. Earlier returns showed Lieberman in a stronger position to tie with Clark and Edwards, allowing him to declare to his supporters that it was "a three-way split decision for third place."

As final results were being tallied, Kerry won the primary with 84,277 votes and 38%, Dean finished second, with 57,761 and 26%, and Clark narrowly defeated Edwards for third place, with 27,314 votes and 12%. Lieberman had fallen back in the count and didn't even reach 10%.

Candidate Votes Percentage Potential
national
delegates
John Kerry 84,377 38.35 13
Howard Dean 57,761 26.25 9
Wesley Clark 27,314 12.41 0
John Edwards 26,487 12.04 0
Joe Lieberman 18,911 8.59 0
Dennis Kucinich 3,114 1.42 0

Exit Polling

Category All Clark Dean Edwards Kerry Lieberman
Male 46% 13% 25% 14% 36% 10%
Female 54% 12% 26% 11% 41% 8%
18-64 Years 89% 12% 25% 13% 39% 8%
65+ Years 11% 10% 28% 10% 38% 13%
Democrat 48% 11% 29% 12% 41% 5%
Republican 4% 10% 8% 9% 29% 26%
Independent 48% 13% 23% 13% 37% 12%

Source: CNN.com 2004 Primaries

Kerry won huge margins of support amongst almost all constituencies, with his only weak point amongst Republicans, who made up 4% of the voting block and was Lieberman's strongest point. Dean repeatedly came distant second or third for almost all categories of voters. Edwards defeated Clark amongst male voters as well as voters under 65, but only by a very tiny margin. Lieberman finished in a distant third in almost all categories except for Republicans, in which he nearly defeated John Kerry.

References

  1. "2004 NH Democratic Tracking".
  2. "Lieberman vows to keep running." CNN. 2004-01-28. Retrieved 2017-05-18.
  3. "2004 Primaries". CNN.
  4. "2004 Primaries". CNN.
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