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2008 United States presidential election in Michigan

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2008 United States presidential election in Michigan

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FieldValue
election_name2008 United States presidential election in Michigan
countryMichigan
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2004 United States presidential election in Michigan
previous_year2004
next_election2012 United States presidential election in Michigan
next_year2012
turnout66.2%
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**17**
popular_vote1**2,872,579**
percentage1**57.33%**
image2John McCain official portrait 2009 (cropped).jpg
nominee2John McCain
party2Republican Party (United States)
home_state2Arizona
running_mate2Sarah Palin
electoral_vote20
popular_vote22,048,639
percentage240.89%
map_image{{Switcher
map_caption

Main article: 2008 United States presidential election

| [[File:Michigan Presidential Election Results 2008.svg|375px]] | County results |[[File:2008 US Presidential election in Michigan by congressional district.svg|375px]] |Congressional district results | [[File:Michigan Presidential Results 2008 by Municipality.svg|375px]] | Municipality results Obama McCain Tie The 2008 United States presidential election in Michigan took place on November 4, 2008. It was part of the 2008 United States presidential election which happened throughout all 50 states and D.C. Voters chose 17 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Michigan was won by Democratic nominee Barack Obama by a 16.4% margin of victory. Due to the worsening of the state's economy, and an extremely high unemployment rate and anti-incumbent backlash in the state following the Great Recession, Democrats were heavily favored to win the state. Prior to the election, all 17 news organizations considered this a state Obama would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. Michigan had leaned Democratic for the last couple decades, as it voted for the Democratic presidential nominee in every election since 1992.

In the end, Obama won Michigan by a larger-than-expected margin of victory, winning by 823,940 votes. As of 2024, this is the last election that a Democrat won Alger, Alpena, Arenac, Benzie, Berrien, Cass, Clare, Clinton, Delta, Gladwin, Iosco, Iron, Jackson, Lenawee, Mason, Menominee, Oceana, Ogemaw, Ontonagon, Presque Isle, Roscommon, St. Clair, and Schoolcraft counties. Kent and Leelenau counties wouldn’t vote for a Democrat again until 2020.

Primaries

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#Michigan

Very early on, polling was tight as Obama was having a difficult time getting support from the pessimistic state. Since September 21, Obama swept all the polls taken from the state. The final 3 polls averaged Obama leading 54% to 40%.

Fundraising

John McCain raised a total of $4,330,872 in the state. Barack Obama raised $7,299,275.

Advertising and visits

Obama and his interest groups spent $12,995,614. McCain and his interest group spent $13,332,086. The Democratic ticket visited the state 10 times to McCain's 9 times.

Analysis

Michigan had not supported a Republican for president since 1988, and would not do so again until 2016. However, the state's 17 electoral votes had been continually a prime target for Republicans, and the Democratic margin of victory incrementally decreased from 1996 to 2004. In 2008, Republican presidential nominee John McCain put an early effort into winning Michigan, hoping to convert blue-collar voters disaffected by Obama's unfamiliarity as a liberal African-American from Chicago. Macomb County, a populous blue-collar suburb of Detroit, was a large target.

A major problem for the Obama campaign was the 2008 Michigan Democratic presidential primary. Obama removed his name from the ballot after state officials moved up the primary in violation of party rules. As a result, Hillary Rodham Clinton won the state with 55%. This led to the McCain campaign focusing heavily on winning Michigan in the general election. In May 2008, McCain was leading in a Rasmussen poll with 45% to 44%. After the September financial crisis, however, McCain's general campaign fell into trouble. Polls showed Michigan, a state especially affected by the economy, turning away from McCain. Voters blamed Republicans for the crisis. In early October, with polls showing him falling further behind Obama, McCain pulled out of the state, essentially ceding it to Obama. This was widely publicized, and more than likely contributed to Obama's landslide victory.

On Election Day, Barack Obama won by a double-digit margin of 16%. The state was called for Obama almost as soon as the polls closed. In Wayne County, home to Detroit, Obama piled up a 3–1 margin. Democratic strongholds Washtenaw County (home to Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan), Ingham County (home to Lansing and Michigan State) and Genesee County (home to Flint) gave Obama 65-70% of the vote. Macomb County, which McCain had focused so intensely on, voted Democratic by a comfortable margin of 9%. Oakland County, once a bastion of suburban conservatism, went for Obama by 15 points. Obama also carried Kent County (home to Grand Rapids and former President Gerald Ford) by a very narrow 0.5% margin of victory, or 1,573 votes, the first time that a Democrat had done so since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964. He was also the first Democrat to carry Berrien, Clinton, Eaton, Jackson, and Leelanau counties since 1964.

Republican support in the state collapsed; McCain was only able to win two counties with margins of more than 10,000 votes. This result signified continued evidence of Michigan's Democratic tilt, anchored by the heavily Democratic cities of Detroit, Lansing, Ann Arbor, and Flint. Barack Obama won 46 Michigan counties compared to 37 for John McCain. The largest county with a very close winning margin was a 49.3% vs. 48.8% plurality for Obama in Kent County. , this is the last presidential election in which Alger County, Alpena County, Arenac County, Benzie County, Berrien County, Cass County, Clare County, Clinton County, Delta County, Gladwin County, Gratiot County, Iosco County, Iron County, Jackson County, Lenawee County, Mason County, Menominee County, Oceana County, Ogemaw County, Ontonagon County, Presque Isle County, Roscommon County, Schoolcraft County, and St. Clair County voted for the Democratic candidate. This is also the last presidential election in which the Democratic candidate won the Upper Peninsula, or a majority of congressional districts in the state.

At the same time as Obama swept the state, Democrats made more gains in Michigan. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Carl Levin was reelected with 62.65% of the vote over Republican Jack Hoogendyk's 33.84%. Democrats also picked up two U.S. House seats in Michigan in the 7th District and the 9th District, with Mark Schauer and Gary Peters knocking off Tim Walberg and Joe Knollenberg, respectively. This gave Democrats the majority in Michigan's U.S. House delegation. In addition, Democrats picked up nine seats in the Michigan House of Representatives.

Results

2008 United States presidential election in MichiganPartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
**Democratic**Barack ObamaJoe Biden**2,872,579****57.33%****17**
RepublicanJohn McCainSarah Palin2,048,63940.89%0
Natural LawRalph NaderMatt Gonzalez33,0850.66%0
LibertarianBob BarrWayne Allyn Root23,7160.47%0
ConstitutionChuck BaldwinDarrell Castle14,6850.29%0
GreenCynthia McKinneyRosa Clemente8,8920.18%0
Write-InsWrite-Ins1700.00%0
**Totals****5,010,129 ****100.00%****17**
Voter turnout (Voting age population)66.9%

By county

CountyBarack Obama
DemocraticJohn McCain
RepublicanVarious candidates
Other partiesMarginTotal votes cast#%#%#%#%Totals2,872,57957.33%2,048,63940.89%89,3881.78%823,94016.44%5,010,606
Alcona2,89645.11%3,40453.02%1201.87%-508-7.91%6,420
Alger2,47252.04%2,18846.06%901.89%2845.98%4,750
Allegan24,16543.63%30,06154.28%1,1542.09%-5,896-10.65%55,380
Alpena7,70550.95%7,12547.11%2941.94%5803.84%15,124
Antrim6,07943.89%7,50654.19%2671.93%-1,427-10.30%13,852
Arenac4,15551.12%3,80746.84%1662.04%3484.28%8,128
Baraga1,72547.22%1,84650.53%822.25%-121-3.31%3,653
Barry13,44943.91%16,43153.65%7492.44%-2,982-9.74%30,629
Bay32,58956.59%23,79541.32%1,2042.09%8,79415.27%57,588
Benzie5,45152.88%4,68745.47%1711.66%7647.41%10,309
Berrien40,38151.88%36,13046.42%1,3231.70%4,2515.46%77,834
Branch8,41346.01%9,53452.14%3381.85%-1,121-6.13%18,285
Calhoun34,56153.84%28,55344.48%1,0821.69%6,0089.36%64,196
Cass12,08351.25%11,11447.14%3791.61%9694.11%23,576
Charlevoix6,81747.35%7,30650.74%2751.91%-489-3.39%14,398
Cheboygan6,72048.34%6,92049.78%2611.88%-200-1.44%13,901
Chippewa8,18448.98%8,26749.48%2571.54%-83-0.50%16,708
Clare7,49651.32%6,79346.51%3162.17%7034.81%14,605
Clinton20,00549.54%19,72648.85%6501.61%2790.69%40,381
Crawford3,44147.94%3,56149.61%1762.45%-120-1.67%7,178
Delta9,97452.32%8,76345.97%3271.72%1,2116.35%19,064
Dickinson5,99545.04%7,04952.96%2672.00%-1,054-7.92%13,311
Eaton30,74253.36%25,90044.95%9741.69%4,8428.41%57,616
Emmet8,51546.92%9,31451.32%3201.76%-799-4.40%18,149
Genesee143,92765.27%72,45132.86%4,1171.87%71,47632.41%220,495
Gladwin6,59049.77%6,39148.27%2601.96%1991.50%13,241
Gogebic4,75757.44%3,33040.21%1942.35%1,42717.23%8,281
Grand Traverse23,25847.62%24,71650.60%8691.78%-1,458-2.98%48,843
Gratiot9,10551.33%8,32246.92%3111.75%7834.41%17,738
Hillsdale8,76542.86%11,22154.87%4632.27%-2,456-12.01%20,449
Houghton7,47646.81%8,10150.72%3952.47%-625-3.91%15,972
Huron8,36748.83%8,43449.22%3341.95%-67-0.39%17,135
Ingham93,99465.72%46,48332.50%2,5491.78%47,51133.22%143,026
Ionia12,56545.93%14,15651.74%6382.33%-1,591-5.81%27,359
Iosco7,30951.38%6,58346.28%3332.34%7265.10%14,225
Iron3,08049.98%2,94747.83%1352.19%1332.15%6,162
Isabella16,67958.71%11,22039.49%5111.80%5,45919.22%28,410
Jackson37,48050.19%35,69247.79%1,5072.02%1,7882.40%74,679
Kalamazoo77,05158.79%51,55439.34%2,4561.87%25,49719.45%131,061
Kalkaska3,78044.48%4,52753.27%1922.25%-747-8.79%8,499
Kent149,90949.34%148,33648.83%5,5541.83%1,5730.51%303,799
Keweenaw61043.26%75653.62%443.12%-146-10.36%1,410
Lake2,91955.16%2,26942.88%1041.98%65012.28%5,292
Lapeer21,45747.30%22,83150.33%1,0742.37%-1,374-3.03%45,362
Leelanau7,35550.85%6,93847.97%1711.18%4172.88%14,464
Lenawee24,64051.48%22,22546.43%1,0002.09%2,4155.05%47,865
Livingston42,34942.39%55,59255.64%1,9651.97%-13,243-13.25%99,906
Luce1,19143.47%1,49054.38%592.15%-299-10.91%2,740
Mackinac3,02747.23%3,26850.99%1141.78%-241-3.76%6,409
Macomb223,78453.26%187,66344.66%8,7292.08%36,1218.60%420,176
Manistee7,23555.62%5,51042.36%2642.02%1,72513.26%13,009
Marquette19,63559.03%12,90638.80%7192.17%6,72920.23%33,260
Mason7,81751.29%7,14746.89%2771.82%6704.40%15,241
Mecosta9,10148.68%9,23849.41%3581.91%-137-0.73%18,697
Menominee5,98154.02%4,85543.85%2362.13%1,12610.17%11,072
Midland20,70147.26%22,26350.83%8341.91%-1,562-3.57%43,798
Missaukee2,89838.68%4,46959.65%1251.67%-1,571-20.97%7,492
Monroe39,18051.13%35,85846.79%1,5932.08%3,3224.34%76,631
Montcalm13,20848.75%13,29149.05%5972.20%-83-0.30%27,096
Montmorency2,40344.83%2,84153.00%1162.17%-438-8.17%5,360
Muskegon53,82163.73%29,14534.51%1,4901.76%24,67629.22%84,456
Newaygo10,79046.52%11,86251.14%5442.34%-1,072-4.62%23,196
Oakland372,56656.42%276,95641.94%10,8731.64%95,61014.48%660,395
Oceana6,40551.20%5,86046.85%2441.95%5454.35%12,509
Ogemaw5,39149.93%5,13347.54%2742.53%2582.39%10,798
Ontonagon1,96650.60%1,82346.92%962.48%1433.68%3,885
Osceola4,85544.03%5,97354.17%1981.80%-1,118-10.14%11,026
Oscoda1,88743.42%2,32053.38%1393.18%-433-9.96%4,346
Otsego5,63444.55%6,75253.39%2612.06%-1,118-8.84%12,647
Ottawa50,82837.23%83,33061.03%2,3811.74%-32,502-23.80%136,539
Presque Isle3,72249.55%3,60648.01%1832.44%1161.54%7,511
Roscommon7,08250.24%6,72747.72%2872.04%3552.52%14,096
Saginaw60,27657.80%42,22540.49%1,7821.71%18,05117.31%104,283
St. Clair40,67750.28%38,53647.63%1,6872.09%2,1412.65%80,900
St. Joseph12,32247.81%12,88650.00%5632.19%-564-2.19%25,771
Sanilac9,04744.86%10,67952.95%4432.19%-1,632-8.09%20,169
Schoolcraft2,18450.38%2,05847.47%931.95%1262.91%4,335
Shiawassee19,39753.27%16,26844.67%7502.06%3,1298.60%36,415
Tuscola13,50348.48%13,74049.33%6112.19%-237-0.85%27,854
Van Buren18,58853.47%15,53444.68%6441.85%3,0548.79%34,766
Washtenaw130,57869.62%53,94628.76%3,0241.62%76,63240.86%187,548
Wayne660,08574.02%219,58224.62%12,0641.36%440,50349.40%891,731
Wexford7,37946.88%8,04451.10%3182.02%-665-4.22%15,741
County Flips: {{col-begin}}

Democratic Republican ]]

;Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

  • Alpena (largest city: Alpena)
  • Benzie (largest city: Frankfort)
  • Berrien (largest city: Niles)
  • Cass (largest city: Dowagiac)
  • Calhoun (largest city: Marshall)
  • Clare (largest city: Clare)
  • Clinton (largest city: St. Johns)
  • Delta (largest city: Escanaba)
  • Eaton (largest city: Charlotte)
  • Gladwin (largest city: Gladwin)
  • Gratiot (largest city: Alma)
  • Iosco (largest city: East Tawas)
  • Iron (largest city: Iron River)
  • Jackson (largest city: Jackson)
  • Kent (largest city: Grand Rapids)
  • Leelanau (largest settlement: Greilickville)
  • Lenawee (largest city: Adrian)
  • Macomb (largest city: Warren)
  • Mason (largest city: Ludington)
  • Manistee (largest city: Manistee)
  • Menominee (largest city: Menominee)
  • Monroe (largest city: Monroe)
  • Oceana (largest city: Hart)
  • Ogemaw (largest city: West Branch)
  • Ontonagon (largest village: Ontonagon)
  • Presque Isle (largest city: Rogers City)
  • Roscommon (largest settlement: Houghton Lake)
  • Schoolcraft (largest city: Manistique)
  • Shiawassee (largest city: Owosso)
  • St. Clair (largest city: Port Huron)
  • Van Buren (largest city: South Haven)

By congressional district

Barack Obama carried 12 of the 15 congressional districts, including four held by Republicans.

DistrictMcCainObamaRepresentative
48.11%**49.93%**Bart Stupak
**50.85%**47.50%Peter Hoekstra
**49.43%**48.84%Vern Ehlers
48.19%**50.09%**Dave Camp
34.71%**63.67%**Dale Kildee
44.18%**54.12%**Fred Upton
46.50%**51.73%**Tim Walberg ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Mark Schauer ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
45.72%**52.58%**Mike Rogers
42.83%**55.79%**Joe Knollenberg ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Gary Peters ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
**49.85%**48.23%Candice Miller
44.56%**53.78%**Thaddeus McCotter
33.23%**65.05%**Sander Levin
14.47%**84.71%**Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick
13.45%**85.77%**John Conyers Jr.
32.48%**65.80%**John Dingell

Electors

Main article: List of 2008 United States presidential electors

Technically the voters of Michigan cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Michigan is allocated 17 electors because it has 15 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 17 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 17 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 17 were pledged to Obama and Biden:

  1. Brenda Abbey
  2. Dallas Dean
  3. Ida DeHaas
  4. Ron Gettelfinger
  5. James Hoffa
  6. Kenneth Paul Jenkins
  7. Harry Kalogerakos
  8. Jessica Mistak
  9. Arturo Reyes
  10. Griffin Rivers
  11. Gary Shepherd
  12. Roger Short
  13. Arthur Shy
  14. Richard West
  15. Whitney Randall Wolcott
  16. David Woodward
  17. Charlene Yarbrough

References

References

  1. "SOS - General Election Voter Registration/Turnout Statistics".
  2. (2009-01-01). "D.C.'s Political Report: The complete source for campaign summaries.".
  3. (2015-05-05). "Presidential".
  4. (2009-04-22). "Vote 2008 - The Takeaway - Track the Electoral College vote predictions".
  5. "Electoral-vote.com: President, Senate, House Updated Daily".
  6. Based on Takeaway
  7. "POLITICO's 2008 Swing State Map - POLITICO.com".
  8. "RealClearPolitics - Electoral Map".
  9. "CQ Presidential Election Maps, 2008".
  10. (2008-11-04). "The Electoral Map: Key States". The New York Times.
  11. (2008-10-31). "October – 2008 – CNN Political Ticker - CNN.com Blogs". CNN.
  12. (April 27, 2010). "Winning The Electoral College". Fox News.
  13. "roadto270".
  14. "Election 2008: Electoral College Update - Rasmussen Reports".
  15. [http://uselectionatlas.org/POLLS/PRESIDENT/2008/pollsa.php?fips=26 Election 2008 Polls - Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections]
  16. "Presidential Campaign Finance".
  17. "Map: Campaign Ad Spending - Election Center 2008 from CNN.com". CNN.
  18. "Map: Campaign Candidate Visits - Election Center 2008 from CNN.com". CNN.
  19. "Rasmussen Reports: The Most Comprehensive Public Opinion Site.".
  20. "McCain pulling out of Michigan - Yahoo! News".
  21. "Election Results 2008". The New York Times.
  22. Dave Leip. "2008 Presidential General Election Data Graphs - Michigan". Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.
  23. "Electoral College". [[California Secretary of State]].
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