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2004 California Democratic presidential primary

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FieldValue
election_name2004 California Democratic presidential primary
countryCalifornia
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2000 California Democratic presidential primary
previous_year2000
next_election2008 California Democratic presidential primary
next_year2008
election_date
votes_for_election441 [Democratic National Convention](2004-democratic-national-convention) delegates (370 pledged, 17 unpledged)
The number of pledged delegates received is determined by the popular vote
image1File:John F. Kerry (closein cropped 3x4).jpg
image_size160x160px
candidate1**John Kerry**
colour100539f
popular_vote1**2,002,539**
percentage1**64.44%**
delegate_count1**288**
home_state1Massachusetts
image2File:John Edwards, official Senate photo portrait (cropped).jpg
candidate2John Edwards
colour2e50100
home_state2North Carolina
popular_vote2614,441
percentage219.77%
delegate_count282
outgoing_members[UT](2004-utah-democratic-caucuses)
elected_members[CT](2004-connecticut-democratic-primary)
map_imageFile:California Democratic presidential primary election results by county margins, 2004.svg
map_size300px
map_captionPrimary results by county
**Kerry:**

The number of pledged delegates received is determined by the popular vote Kerry: The 2004 California Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2, 2004, the same day as the Republican primary. Senator John Kerry overwhelmingly won the primary over rivals Senator John Edwards, Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and Reverend Al Sharpton. The primary was open to both registered Democrats and unaffiliated voters. 440 delegates were at stake, with 370 tied to the March primary.

Candidates

Remaining

  • Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts
  • Senator John Edwards of North Carolina
  • Congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio
  • Reverend Al Sharpton of New York

Dropped out

  • Governor Howard Dean of Vermont dropped out on February 17, 2004.
  • NATO Commander Wesley Clark of Arkansas dropped out on February 11, 2004.
  • Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut dropped out on February 3, 2004.
  • Congressman Dick Gephardt of Missouri dropped out on January 20, 2004.
  • Senator Carol Moseley Braun of Illinois dropped out on January 15, 2004.

Campaign

With the Wisconsin primary results, which pitted John Kerry and John Edwards in a close fight, and Dean's withdrawal from the race, the campaign moved to Super Tuesday contests. California shared its primary with 9 other states, including New York and Ohio who also placed their primaries on March 2, 2004, or Super Tuesday.

For months Governor Dean had been leading in California, but since he's fall and Kerry's rise, polls in California were mixed. However, when Dean exited the race polls showed Kerry with over 2:1 leads over contender John Edwards.

John Kerry campaign

Main article: John Kerry 2004 presidential campaign

Following victories in Idaho, Utah and Hawaii, Kerry moved into the Super Tuesday contests swiftly and with major momentum. With polls showing him ahead in big Super Tuesday states such as California, New York, and Ohio, Kerry was positive on big wins in all three.

Kerry campaigned hard in California and didn't take competition from Edwards and Kucinich lightly. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Senator had spent 5 additional days in the state than any other candidate competing in the state as well as the fact that Kerry has increased State Staffers by 25 and increased Volunteer Numbers by hundreds in mid-February to ensure a sweep through the California Primary.

John Edwards campaign

Main article: John Edwards 2004 presidential campaign

John Edwards, having come out with a strong second place showing in Wisconsin (losing to Kerry 40%–34%), claimed significant momentum heading into California and other Super Tuesday nominating contests on the same day.

Edwards, not having as much popularity out west as in the Rust Belt, South, and Mid-West, did not focus on California until his unexpected final surge in Wisconsin, beating one-time California and national front-runner Howard Dean. Edwards sent Elizabeth Edwards out west to help campaign as well as opened Campaign offices across the state in a last-ditch effort for a final surge.

When the Democrats debated on February 26, 2004, in Los Angeles, Edwards hoped to score points by attacking John Kerry like in the New York debate. However, by the time of the debate, Kerry was already ahead of Edwards by 40 points.

Polling data

CandidateCalifornia Statewide Survey 2/12*Los Angeles Times* Poll 2/20Average
**John Kerry****56%****56%****56%**
John Edwards10%24%17.5%
Howard Dean11%0% (dropped out)N/A

Source USA ELECTION POLLS

Exit polling

Classification% of allJohn KerryJohn EdwardsDennis Kucinich
*Male*47%65%18%5%
*Female*53%65%20%3%
**Democrat **75%70%18%3%
**Republican**4%33%24%3%
**Independent**21%53%23%6%

Source CNN EXIT POLLING

Results

**Key:***Withdrew*
prior to contest
2004 California Democratic presidential primaryCandidateVotesPercentageNational delegates
**John Kerry****2,002,539****64.44%**288
John Edwards614,44119.77%82
Dennis Kucinich144,9544.66%0
Howard Dean130,8924.21%0
Al Sharpton59,3261.91%0
Joe Lieberman52,7801.70%0
Wesley Clark51,0841.64%0
Carol Moseley Braun24,5010.79%0
Dick Gephardt19,1390.62%0
Lyndon LaRouche7,9530.26%0
Katarina Dunmar (write-in)60.00%0
James Alexander-Pace (write-in)40.00%0
Bill Pand (write-in)40.00%0
David Giacomuzzi (write-in)30.00%0
Fern Penna (write-in)30.00%0
**Totals****3,107,629****100.00%****370**

Analysis

On Super Tuesday, Kerry swept all the primaries and eventually won the nomination the next day. He won California by a landslide. He won with nearly 65% of the vote, including every county in the state and every congressional district with over 60% except California's 2nd congressional district. Kerry's only legit opponent left, John Edwards, received under 20% of the vote, insuring his major defeat.

References

References

  1. (November 2018). "Kerry wins Wisconsin; Dean drops out}}{{Dead link".
  2. (February 10, 2004). "CNN Kerry wins in south; Clark to drop out".
  3. (February 3, 2004). "FOXNews.com Lieberman Drops Out". Fox News.
  4. (January 18, 2004). "Gephardt to drop out of race". CNN.
  5. "PBS NEWSHOUR Braun Drops out".
  6. "2004 Primaries California Primary Recap". CNN.
  7. (February 26, 2004). "Dems to debate ahead of Super Tuesday Contests". CNN.
  8. "California Polls 2004 Primary USA ELECTION POLLS".
  9. "2004 Primaries California Exit Poll". CNN.
  10. "The Statement of Vote". [[Secretary of State of California]].
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