Misplaced Pages

2008 Georgia Democratic presidential primary

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

2008 Georgia Democratic presidential primary

← 2004 February 5, 2008 (2008-02-05) 2012 →
← DEID (caucus) →

102 Democratic National Convention delegates (87 pledged, 15 unpledged)
The number of pledged delegates received is determined by the popular vote
 
Candidate Barack Obama Hillary Clinton
Home state Illinois New York
Delegate count 60 27
Popular vote 704,247 330,026
Percentage 66.39% 31.11%

Primary results by county
Clinton:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Obama:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Elections in Georgia
Federal government
Presidential elections
Presidential primaries
Democratic
2000
2004
2008
2016
2020
2024
Republican
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024
U.S. Senate elections
U.S. House elections
Special elections
Senate
1796
1806
1807
1809
1813
1816
1818
1819
1821
1824
1828
1829
1833
1835
1837
1845
1880
1882
1894
1907
1911
1914
1922
1932
1972
2000
2020
House
At-large
1801
1802
1803
1806
1812
1813
1816
1819
1824
1829
1831
1835
1836
1837
1841
1843
1844
1st
1792
1827
1879
1906
1931
2nd
1827
1910
1913
1953
3rd
1846
1896
1932
4th
1871
1872
1918
1939
5th
1870
1929
1946
1977
2020
6th
1870
1932
1999
2017
7th
1958
1983
8th
1873
1882
1917
1940
9th
1875
1877
2010
10th
1895
1933
2007
State government
State elections
Gubernatorial elections
Lieutenant gubernatorial elections
Secretary of State elections
Attorney General elections
State Senate elections
House of Representatives elections
Judicial elections
Special elections
Ballot measures
2004
2020
Atlanta
City elections
Mayoral elections
Savannah
Mayoral elections
Mableton
Mayoral elections

The 2008 Georgia Democratic presidential primary took place on Super Tuesday, February 5, 2008, and had a total of 87 delegates at stake. The winner in each of Georgia's 13 congressional districts was awarded all of that district's delegates, totaling 57. Another 30 delegates were awarded to the statewide winner, Barack Obama. The 87 delegates represented Georgia at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado. Sixteen other unpledged delegates, known as superdelegates, also attended the convention and cast their votes as well.

Polls

Main article: Statewide opinion polling for the Super Tuesday Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2008 § Georgia

Results

See also: Results of the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Georgia Democratic Presidential Primary Results – 2008
Party Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates
Democratic Barack Obama 704,247 66.39% 60
Democratic Hillary Clinton 330,026 31.11% 27
Democratic John Edwards 18,209 1.72% 0
Democratic Joe Biden 2,538 0.24% 0
Democratic Dennis Kucinich 2,096 0.20% 0
Democratic Bill Richardson 1,879 0.18% 0
Democratic Mike Gravel 952 0.09% 0
Democratic Christopher Dodd 904 0.09% 0
Totals 1,060,851 100.00% 87
Voter turnout %

Analysis

Georgia, with its heavily African American population, gave Barack Obama one of his largest victories in a primary during the course of the Democratic Presidential Primary as he solidly defeated Hillary Clinton by more than a two-to-one margin of victory. According to exit polls, 51 percent of voters in the Georgia Democratic Primary were African Americans and they opted for Obama by a margin of 88-11 compared to the 43 percent of Caucasian voters who backed Clinton by a margin of 53-43. Obama won all age groups, educational attainment levels and socioeconomic classes in Georgia except senior citizens aged 65 and over who backed Clinton by a margin of 55-45. Obama won all ideological groups and self-identified Democrats by a margin of 67-32 and Independents by a similar 63-33 percent margin of victory. Obama also swept every major religious denomination – Protestants went for Obama 52-46; Roman Catholics 56-44; other Christians 77-22; other religions 71-24; and atheists/agnostics 69-30.

Obama performed extremely well throughout the state of Georgia and won over three-quarters of its counties. He performed best in Atlanta where he won 76 percent of the vote as well as its suburbs which backed him 66-32. Central Georgia also strongly favored Obama by a margin of 69-31. Obama did best in the state’s major urban areas like Atlanta, Savannah, Columbus, Augusta, and Athens as well as a majority of the rural counties that were predominantly African American. Clinton performed extremely well in North Georgia, mostly in the more rural, white and conservative parts of the state which are considered to be an extreme part of Appalachia, a region where she consistently did well during the course of the primaries; she defeated Obama by a margin of 48-45 percent in North Georgia.

Obama received a major endorsement from U.S. Representative John Lewis of Atlanta, a former civil rights activist.

See also

References

  1. "RESULTS: Georgia". CNN. February 6, 2008. Retrieved February 6, 2008.
(← 2004)   2008 Democratic presidential primaries   (2012 →)
States
Other
Democratic Party of Georgia
Chairs
House Leaders
Senate Leaders
Presidential primaries
Other
Categories: