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2008 United States presidential election in Colorado

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2008 United States presidential election in Colorado

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FieldValue
election_name2008 United States presidential election in Colorado
countryColorado
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2004 United States presidential election in Colorado
previous_year2004
next_election2012 United States presidential election in Colorado
next_year2012
election_dateNovember 4, 2008
image_sizex200px
image1Obama portrait crop.jpg
nominee1**Barack Obama **
party1Democratic Party (United States)
home_state1Illinois
running_mate1**Joe Biden**
electoral_vote1**9**
popular_vote1**1,288,633**
percentage1**53.66%**
image2John McCain official portrait 2009 (cropped).jpg
nominee2John McCain
party2Republican Party (United States)
home_state2Arizona
running_mate2Sarah Palin
electoral_vote20
popular_vote21,073,629
percentage244.71%
map_image{{Switcher
map_caption
titlePresident
before_electionGeorge W. Bush
before_partyRepublican Party (United States)
after_electionBarack Obama
after_partyDemocratic Party (United States)

Main article: 2008 United States presidential election

| [[File:Colorado Presidential Election Results 2008.svg|280px]] | County results |[[File:2008 US Presidential election in Colorado by congressional district.svg|280px]] |Congressional district results | [[File:CO President 2008.svg|280px]] | Precinct results Obama McCain Tie/No Data The 2008 United States presidential election in Colorado took place on November 4, 2008, as a part of the 2008 United States presidential election throughout all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Colorado was won by Democratic nominee Barack Obama by a margin of victory of 8.95%. Obama took 53.66% of the vote to McCain's 44.71%. The state was heavily targeted by both campaigns, although, prior to the election, all 17 news organizations actually considered this a state Obama would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. While George W. Bush narrowly carried the state in 2004, Colorado ultimately flipped to Obama. This was the first time since 1992 in which the state was won by a Democrat in a presidential election, as well as the first of currently five consecutive times since 1944 in which it voted differently than Montana, another Rocky Mountain state.

Key to Obama's victory was Democratic dominance in the Denver area, sweeping not just the city but also the heavily populated suburban counties around Denver, particularly Adams, Arapahoe, and Jefferson counties, as well as winning Larimer County, home to Fort Collins. Obama also took over 70% of the vote in Boulder County, home to Boulder. McCain's most populated county wins were in El Paso County, where Colorado Springs is located, and Weld County, home to Greeley.

Colorado served as the tipping-point state for Obama's overall victory in the presidential election - that is, the first state to give a candidate their 270th electoral vote when all states are arranged by their margins of victory.

Caucuses

Campaign

Predictions

There were 16 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day:

SourceRanking
D.C. Political Report
Cook Political Report
The Takeaway
Electoral-vote.com
The Washington PostWashington Post
Politico
RealClearPolitics
FiveThirtyEight
CQ Politics
The New York Times
CNN
NPR
MSNBC
Fox News
Associated Press
Rasmussen Reports

Polling

Main article: Statewide opinion polling for the 2008 United States presidential election#Colorado

Pre-election polling taken in Colorado prior to the election mostly showed Obama with a slight lead. He led every poll after September 25. The average of the last three polls showed Obama leading McCain 52% to 45%.

Fundraising

John McCain raised a total of $3,491,086. Barack Obama raised almost $11 million.

Advertising and visits

Obama and his interest groups spent $10,410,669. McCain and his interest groups spent $9,818,077. McCain/Palin visited the state 13 times. Obama/Biden visited the state 8 times.

Analysis

Main article: Politics of Colorado

Changing demographics and a growing Hispanic population made the state more favorable to the Democrats, although Republicans still had a hold on the state due to the party's conservative stances on social issues like abortion, gay rights, and gun control. Like most of the Mountain West, Colorado had been traditionally Republican beginning with the Eisenhower landslide of 1952, in which Eisenhower overperformed throughout the region. Between 1952 and 2004, inclusive, Democrats prevailed in Colorado only in 1964 and 1992—the former, a national Democratic landslide; the latter, a three-way contest in which independent candidate Ross Perot had disproportionate strength in the West. In addition, Republicans had mostly held control of the state legislature and most statewide offices since the 1960s. Although Democrats had bases of support in Adams and Pueblo Counties and in the south of the state, and generally carried Denver (albeit often by narrow margins), this was generally no match for Republican dominance of the Denver suburbs, El Paso County (Colorado Springs), Larimer County (Fort Collins), and, until Dukakis flipped it in 1988, Boulder County, as well as of most of the rural areas of the state.

Recently, however, there had been a growing population of Hispanic Americans, young professionals, and an influx of people from other states - all of whom tend to vote Democratic. These demographic changes caused the state's political ideology to shift. While Republicans still enjoyed an advantage in voter registration statewide, Democrats had been closing the gap. There had also been an increasing number of unaffiliated, independent-minded voters. Since 2004, Democrats had won the governorship, both Senate seats, three House seats, and control of both chambers in the state legislature.

At the presidential level, Colorado voted for Bush by 8.36% in 2000, making it the second-closest of the states carried by Dole in 1996 (behind only Virginia). Moreover, his 50.75% vote share was his lowest in any of the states carried by Dole in 1996, with Ralph Nader posting a relatively strong showing in the state in 2000. Colorado was not seriously contested in 2004, but Kerry cut Bush's margin down to 4.67% in the state, as Kerry flipped a number of ski-resort counties, scored the best showings in Denver and Boulder County of any presidential nominee in decades, and narrowed Bush's margins in the Denver-area suburban counties of Jefferson and Arapahoe, as well as in Larimer.

Bush's relatively narrow margin in the state in 2004, along with the demographic changes of the prior four years, led Colorado to become a crucial swing state in 2008. Both Barack Obama and John McCain campaigned extensively in the state. Several factors in the campaign favored the Democrat. Barack Obama did very well in the caucus, defeating opponent Hillary Clinton with almost 67% of the vote. On the other hand, John McCain badly lost the state to opponent Mitt Romney, who gained 60% of the vote. Moreover, the 2008 Democratic National Convention was held in Denver. The publicity generated from the event provided a strong boost to Obama. According to Real Clear Politics polling averages, Obama and McCain were neck-to-neck through the summer and early September. However, as the 2008 financial crisis hit, Obama's numbers in Colorado jumped to over 50%.

During the campaign, several media organizations reported on voting machine problems. There was also reporting on the controversial practice of "purging" voter registration lists.

On election day, Obama won by a comfortable margin, greater than his national average. Obama improved on John Kerry's performance throughout the state. He won landslides in the Democratic strongholds of Denver and Boulder; in both areas, Obama took more than 70% of the vote. He also further built upon Kerry's strength in a number of rich counties dominated by ski resorts along the Front Range; and continued to dominate the traditionally Democratic areas of Pueblo County, Adams County, and the thinly populated, Latino counties of southern Colorado.

McCain did best in the rural, conservative areas next to Kansas and Utah, where he won by landslide margins. In Rio Blanco County, Mesa County, Yuma County, Washington County, Lincoln County, Bent County, Crowley County, and tiny Dolores County, Phillips County, Cheyenne County, and Kiowa County, he managed a slightly greater vote share than Bush in 2000. Voters in more populated El Paso County, home to conservative Colorado Springs, gave McCain a 19% margin, which, while a comfortable win, was far less than Bush's 35% margin in 2004. McCain also won two other relatively populated counties, Douglas County and Weld County, both outer suburbs of the Denver area—although, again, by substantially reduced margins compared to Bush in 2004. However, the largest suburban counties of the area, traditionally Republican Jefferson, Larimer, and Arapahoe Counties voted Democratic for the first time since 1964. Broomfield County, which cast its first presidential vote for Bush in 2004, also flipped to Obama. Altogether, this was more than enough to overcome Republican advantages elsewhere in the state, as Obama won it by a nearly nine-point margin.

Elsewhere in the state, Democrats also did well. Democrat Mark Udall defeated Republican Bob Schaffer for an open U.S. Senate seat; his vacated House seat was also won by Democrat Jared Polis. In addition, Democrat Betsy Markey defeated incumbent Republican Marilyn Musgrave, by 12 points for Colorado's 4th Congressional District seat. At the state level, Democrats picked up one seat in the Colorado Senate, but lost two seats in the Colorado House of Representatives.

Obama's 65.8% victory in Summit County was the highest percentage win by a Democratic presidential nominee in the county since Woodrow Wilson won the county with 70.3% of the vote back in 1916.

Results

2008 United States presidential election in ColoradoPartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
**Democratic****Barack Obama****Joe Biden****1,288,633****53.66%****9**
RepublicanJohn McCainSarah Palin1,073,62944.71%0
IndependentRalph NaderMatt Gonzalez13,3520.56%0
LibertarianBob BarrWayne Allyn Root10,8980.45%0
ConstitutionChuck BaldwinDarrell Castle6,2330.26%0
America's IndependentAlan KeyesBrian Rohrbough3,0510.13%0
GreenCynthia McKinneyRosa Clemente2,8220.12%0
New American IndependentFrank McEnultyDavid Mangan8290.03%0
Boston TeaCharles JayDan Sallis Jr.5980.02%0
HeartQuake '08Jonathan AllenJeffrey Stath3480.01%0
ObjectivistTom StevensAlden Link3360.01%0
SocialistBrian MooreStewart Alexander2260.01%0
Socialism and LiberationGloria La RivaEugene Puryear1580.01%0
Socialist WorkersJames HarrisAlyson Kennedy1540.01%0
PacifistBradford LyttleAbraham Bassford1100
ProhibitionGene AmondsonLeroy Pletten850
**Totals****2,401,462****100.00%****9**
Voter turnout65.0%

By county

CountyBarack Obama
DemocraticJohn McCain
RepublicanVarious candidates
Other partiesMarginTotal votes cast#%#%#%#%Total1,288,63353.66%1,073,62944.71%39,2001.63%215,0048.95%2,401,462
Adams93,44558.22%63,97639.86%3,0801.92%29,46918.36%160,501
Alamosa3,52156.01%2,63541.92%1302.07%88614.09%6,286
Arapahoe148,22455.69%113,86842.78%4,0641.53%34,35612.91%266,156
Archuleta2,83642.81%3,63854.91%1512.28%-802-12.10%6,625
Baca53624.64%1,57272.28%673.08%-1,036-47.64%2,175
Bent79941.61%1,07756.09%442.29%-278-14.48%1,920
Boulder124,15972.29%44,90426.14%2,7001.57%79,25546.15%171,763
Broomfield16,16854.89%12,75743.31%5281.79%3,41111.58%29,453
Chaffee4,86249.01%4,87349.12%1862.28%-11-0.11%9,921
Cheyenne19817.82%89080.11%232.07%-692-62.29%1,111
Clear Creek3,33257.78%2,30039.88%1352.34%1,03217.90%5,767
Conejos2,15455.60%1,65342.67%671.73%50112.93%3,874
Costilla1,24573.36%41524.45%372.28%83048.91%1,697
Crowley55235.43%97662.64%301.93%-424-27.21%1,558
Custer91234.69%1,67263.60%451.71%-760-28.91%2,629
Delta5,08432.94%10,06765.23%2831.83%-4,983-32.29%15,434
Denver204,88275.45%62,56723.04%4,0841.50%142,31552.41%271,533
Dolores36930.32%81867.21%302.47%-449-36.89%1,217
Douglas61,96040.81%88,10858.03%1,7511.15%-26,148-17.22%151,819
Eagle13,19160.91%8,18137.77%2861.32%5,01023.14%21,658
El Paso108,89939.86%160,31858.69%3,9581.45%-51,419-18.83%273,175
Elbert3,81928.92%9,10868.97%2792.11%-5,289-40.05%13,206
Fremont6,84434.36%12,66863.60%4072.04%-5,824-29.24%19,919
Garfield11,35749.20%11,35949.21%3661.59%-2-0.01%23,082
Gilpin1,99059.07%1,28338.08%962.85%70720.99%3,369
Grand4,03748.59%4,12849.68%1441.73%-91-1.09%8,309
Gunnison5,55762.64%3,13135.29%1832.06%2,42627.35%8,871
Hinsdale24040.07%34457.43%152.50%-104-17.36%599
Huerfano1,98954.60%1,58043.37%742.03%40911.23%3,643
Jackson27730.31%62468.27%131.42%-347-37.96%914
Jefferson158,15853.60%131,62844.61%5,2821.79%26,5308.99%295,068
Kiowa17820.89%65076.29%242.82%-472-55.40%852
Kit Carson91226.50%2,45571.32%752.18%-1,543-44.82%3,442
La Plata16,05757.39%11,50341.11%4191.50%4,55416.28%27,979
Lake1,85961.93%1,07835.91%652.17%78126.02%3,002
Larimer89,82353.99%73,64244.26%2,9101.75%16,1819.73%166,375
Las Animas3,56252.68%3,08645.64%1131.67%4767.04%6,761
Lincoln54623.70%1,71774.52%411.78%-1,171-50.82%2,304
Logan2,84631.70%6,00266.86%1291.44%-3,156-35.16%8,977
Mesa24,00834.48%44,57864.02%1,0451.50%-20,570-29.54%69,631
Mineral27043.34%33453.61%193.05%-64-10.27%623
Moffat1,58226.95%4,13570.43%1542.62%-2,553-43.48%5,871
Montezuma4,66139.42%6,96158.87%2031.72%-2,300-19.45%11,825
Montrose6,49533.91%12,19963.69%4592.40%-5,704-29.78%19,153
Morgan3,81337.26%6,27261.29%1491.46%-2,459-24.03%10,234
Otero3,54743.98%4,39354.47%1251.55%-846-10.49%8,065
Ouray1,63653.46%1,36744.67%571.86%2698.79%3,060
Park4,25045.29%4,89652.18%2372.53%-646-6.89%9,383
Phillips62227.51%1,61371.34%261.15%-991-43.83%2,261
Pitkin7,34973.74%2,48424.92%1331.33%4,86548.82%9,966
Prowers1,48732.22%3,04365.94%851.84%-1,556-33.72%4,615
Pueblo41,09756.74%30,25741.78%1,0731.48%10,84014.96%72,427
Rio Blanco65520.81%2,43777.44%551.75%-1,782-56.63%3,147
Rio Grande2,44844.97%2,93053.82%661.21%-482-8.85%5,444
Routt8,27062.66%4,72535.80%2041.55%3,54526.86%13,199
Saguache1,73062.91%95634.76%642.33%77428.15%2,750
San Juan26453.23%21843.95%141.92%469.28%496
San Miguel3,34976.99%93321.45%681.56%2,41655.54%4,350
Sedgwick46834.64%85763.43%261.92%-389-28.79%1,351
Summit9,80265.79%4,88332.77%2141.44%4,91933.02%14,899
Teller4,51334.97%8,14663.12%2471.91%-3,633-28.15%12,906
Washington52921.05%1,94977.56%351.39%-1,420-56.51%2,513
Weld47,29244.67%56,52653.39%2,0481.93%-9,234-8.72%105,866
Yuma1,11724.92%3,28673.30%801.78%-2,169-48.38%4,483
County Flips: {{col-begin}}

Democratic Republican ]]

;Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

  • Alamosa (largest city: Alamosa)
  • Arapahoe (largest city: Aurora)
  • Broomfield
  • Huerfano (largest city: Walsenburg)
  • Jefferson (largest city: Lakewood)
  • Larimer (largest city: Fort Collins)
  • Ouray (largest city: Ouray)

By congressional district

While Barack Obama won the state's popular vote and nine electoral votes, John McCain carried four of the state's seven congressional districts, including two seats held by Democrats.

DistrictMcCainObamaRepresentative
24.25%**74.20%**Diana DeGette
34.10%**64.22%**Mark Udall ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Jared Polis ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
**50.44%**47.90%John Salazar
**49.54%**48.66%Marilyn Musgrave ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Betsy Markey ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
**58.57%**39.89%Doug Lamborn
**52.48%**46.17%Tom Tancredo ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Mike Coffman ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
39.49%**58.56%**Ed Perlmutter

Electors

Main article: List of 2008 United States presidential electors

Technically the voters of Colorado cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Colorado is allocated 9 electors because it has 7 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 9 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 9 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.

The electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 15, 2008, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.

The following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 9 were pledged to Obama and Biden:

  1. Wellington Webb
  2. Terry Phillips
  3. Camilla Auger
  4. Pam Shaddock
  5. Jennifer Trujillo-Sanchez
  6. Don Strickland
  7. Ann Knollman
  8. Polly Baca
  9. Margaret Atencio

References

tags--

References

  1. (2009-01-01). "D.C.'s Political Report: The complete source for campaign summaries.".
  2. (2015-05-05). "Presidential".
  3. (2009-04-22). "Vote 2008 - The Takeaway - Track the Electoral College vote predictions".
  4. "Electoral-vote.com: President, Senate, House Updated Daily".
  5. Based on Takeaway
  6. "POLITICO's 2008 Swing State Map - POLITICO.com".
  7. "RealClearPolitics - Electoral Map".
  8. "CQ Presidential Election Maps, 2008".
  9. (2008-11-04). "The Electoral Map: Key States". The New York Times.
  10. (2008-10-31). "October – 2008 – CNN Political Ticker - CNN.com Blogs". CNN.
  11. (April 27, 2010). "Winning The Electoral College". Fox News.
  12. "roadto270".
  13. "Election 2008: Electoral College Update - Rasmussen Reports".
  14. "2008 - Colorado: McCain vs. Obama | RealClearPolitics".
  15. "Presidential Campaign Finance".
  16. "Map: Campaign Ad Spending - Election Center 2008 from CNN.com". CNN.
  17. "Map: Campaign Candidate Visits - Election Center 2008 from CNN.com". CNN.
  18. Schaller, Thomas. ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=TmgGcP6pK6AC&q=Whistling+Past+Dixie Past Dixie]''. Simon & Schuster, 2006. 184.
  19. Schaller, Thomas. ''Whistling Past Dixie''. Simon & Schuster, 2006.
  20. (2008-06-07). "Obama, McCain look west". [[Rocky Mountain News]].
  21. [http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2008/president/co/colorado_mccain_vs_obama-546.html RealClearPolitics - Election 2008 - Colorado: McCain vs. Obama]
  22. Williams, David. (2008-08-27). "Palast uses DNC to tout 'Steal Back Your Vote' project". Colorado Independent.
  23. "Colorado 2008 General Election". The Green Papers.
  24. "Electoral College". [[California Secretary of State]].
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