North Carolina Democratic primary, 2008

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

The 2008 North Carolina Democratic presidential primary took place on May 6, 2008. The state has been allocated 134 delegates to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. 115 delegates are tied to the results of the primary.[1] Registered Democrats and unaffiliated voters (but not registered Republicans) can participate.[2] The polls are open from 6:30 AM to 7:30 PM, Eastern daylight time (UTC-4).[3]

There are 5,811,778 registered voters in 2,817 precincts with turnout at 36.42%.[4][5]

Contents

[edit] Polls

Public opinion polling from early January 2008 through mid-February 2008 generally gave Sen. Hillary Clinton a single digit lead over Sen. Barack Obama.[6] From then on, Obama has had the lead in almost every poll,[7] and as of May 5, is up by 3%, holding 48% to her 45%. 7% are undecided and there is a margin of error of 3%. [8] The new polls gave "fresh hope" to Clinton.[9]

[edit] Robocalls

The North Carolina state board of elections reported that misleading robocalls were made to African-american voters in the days leading up to the primary in late April 2008,[10] which essentially told registered voters that they were not registered.[11] According to NPR [12] and Facing South[13], these calls were made by the organization "Women's Voices Women Vote."[14]

[edit] Results

See also: Results of the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries

Primary date: May 6, 2008

National pledged delegates determined: 115

Key: Withdrew
prior to contest
North Carolina Democratic presidential primary, 2008
100% of 100 counties reporting [15]
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates[16]
Barack Obama 897,017 56.30% 67
Hillary Clinton 660,747 41.47% 48
Mike Gravel 12,448 0.78% 0
No Preference 23,123 1.45% 0
Totals 1,593,335 100.00% 115

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Languages