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2008 United States presidential election in Virginia

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2008 United States presidential election in Virginia

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FieldValue
election_name2008 United States presidential election in Virginia
countryVirginia
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2004 United States presidential election in Virginia
previous_year2004
next_election2012 United States presidential election in Virginia
next_year2012
election_dateNovember 4, 2008
turnout74.0% 3.2
<!-- Barack Obama -->image_sizex200px
image1Obama portrait crop.jpg
nominee1**Barack Obama**
party1Democratic Party (United States)
home_state1Illinois
running_mate1**Joe Biden**
electoral_vote1**13**
popular_vote1**1,959,532**
percentage1**52.63%**
<!-- John McCain -->image2John McCain official portrait 2009 (cropped).jpg
nominee2John McCain
party2Republican Party (United States)
home_state2Arizona
running_mate2Sarah Palin
electoral_vote20
popular_vote21,725,005
percentage246.33%
map_image{{Switcher
map_size436px
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:Virginia Presidential Election Results 2008.svg|436px]] | County and independent city results |[[File:2008 US Presidential election in Virginia by congressional district.svg|436px]] |Congressional district results | [[File:2008 Presidential election in Virginia.svg|436px]] |Precinct results}} Obama McCain Tie/No Data

The 2008 United States presidential election in Virginia took place on November 4, 2008, which was part of the 2008 United States presidential election. Voters chose 13 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Virginia was won by Democratic nominee Barack Obama by a 6.3% margin of victory. Prior to the election, 16 of 17 news organizations considered this a state Obama would win, or otherwise a likely blue state, despite the fact that Virginia had not voted for a Democratic presidential nominee since Lyndon B. Johnson's 44-state landslide in 1964. The 2008 financial crisis, changing demographics, and population increases in voter-rich Northern Virginia helped make the state more competitive for Obama. His victory marked a powerful shift in the political climate in Virginia, as the state would go on to vote for the Democratic presidential nominee in every election thereafter.

In contrast to Virginia, West Virginia voted for McCain. This was the first time Virginia voted Democratic and West Virginia voted Republican since 1924. Starting in 2008, Virginia has always voted for the Democratic nominee and West Virginia has always voted for the Republican nominee.

Despite Obama's victory, Virginia's margin was 0.97% more Republican than the national average, the most recent time Virginia has voted further to the right than the nation at-large. , this is the last election in which King and Queen County voted for the Democratic candidate.

Primaries

Campaign

Virginia was one of the first Southern states to break away from its traditional Democratic roots. It voted for Dwight Eisenhower by a convincing margin in 1952, and voted for every Republican nominee since then save for Johnson's massive landslide in 1964.

However, the Democrats had made big gains in recent years by winning two gubernatorial races in a row, regaining control of the Virginia Senate, and electing Democrat Jim Webb to the U.S. Senate over incumbent Republican George Allen in 2006. Democrats made such gains in part due to the ever-expanding Northern Virginia, particularly the suburbs surrounding Washington, D.C. Historically, this area was strongly Republican. However, in recent years it has been dominated by white liberals who tend to vote Democratic. It was, ultimately, this rapid demographic change that provided a huge new influx of Democratic voters to Virginia.

Both presidential campaigns and the mainstream media treated Virginia as a swing state for most of the campaign. Obama campaigned extensively in Virginia and counted on the booming northern parts of the state for a Democratic victory. Victory in the presidential election for McCain would have been extremely difficult without Virginia; he would have had to win every swing state as well as at least one Democratic-leaning state.

Predictions

There were 16 news organizations that 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 United States presidential election, 2008#Virginia

After McCain clinched the Republican Party nomination in early March, he took a wide lead in polls against Obama, averaging almost 50%. But through the summer, polling was nearly dead even, with McCain only slightly leading Obama. After the Lehman Brothers went bankrupt, Obama took a wide lead in the polls. In October, Obama won every single poll taken but one, and reached over 50% in most of them. The final three polls averaged Obama leading 51% to 46%.

Fundraising

Obama raised $17,035,784. McCain raised $16,130,194.

Spending and visits

Obama spent over $26 million to McCain spending just $14 million. The Obama-Biden ticket visited the state 19 times compared to just 10 times for McCain-Palin.

Analysis

Voters wait in queue at a polling station on the campus of [[George Mason University

On Election Day, early returns showed McCain ahead. This was due in large part to the fact that many of the rural areas began to report first. However, Obama swamped McCain by scoring a near-sweep in Northern Virginia, which reported its returns last.

Obama did exceptionally well throughout the most populous regions of the state. Northern Virginia overwhelmingly supported Obama. In Arlington County and the independent city of Alexandria, the most traditionally Democratic jurisdictions in the region, Obama got over 70% of the vote, improving on Kerry by between 4% and 5% in both. In Fairfax County (the largest county in the state, and a then-traditionally Republican county that Kerry had become the first Democrat in 40 years to carry in 2004) Obama exceeded 60%, improving on Kerry's percentage by just shy of 7%. Just beyond Fairfax, to its south and west, Obama flipped the large counties of Loudoun and Prince William, becoming the first Democrat to carry either since 1964. He also won the independent cities of Harrisonburg for the first time since 1940, Hopewell since 1952, Manassas Park since 1976, Staunton since 1944, and Winchester since 1964.

The two other major metropolitan areas in the eastern part of the state, Richmond and Hampton Roads, are somewhat less Democratic than Northern Virginia. In both areas, Obama improved significantly on John Kerry's performance. While Obama easily won Richmond itself (which is 57% African American), he also made significant inroads into Richmond's traditionally heavily Republican suburbs. He carried Henrico County with 57% of the vote; that county last supported a Democrat with Harry S. Truman in 1948. In Chesterfield County, Obama did almost 20 points better than Kerry. Both counties had historically been strongly Republican at the national level; Chesterfield had given George W. Bush his largest raw vote margin in Virginia in both 2000 and 2004.

Obama also did very well in Hampton Roads. The four Democratic-leaning cities along the harbor - Hampton, Newport News, Norfolk, and Portsmouth - gave him margins exceeding 60%. Obama also split the Republican-leaning cities of Chesapeake and Virginia Beach; he barely won the former and barely lost the latter. Obama's strong performance in the area likely contributed to Democrat Glenn Nye unseating two-term Republican incumbent Thelma Drake in the , a heavy military district which includes all of Virginia Beach and large portions of Norfolk and Hampton. Outside Virginia's three major metropolitan areas, Obama also significantly outperformed Kerry in Albemarle and Montgomery Counties and in a series of independent cities around the state, most significantly Roanoke. Albemarle County surrounds Charlottesville, home to the University of Virginia, and Montgomery County is home to Virginia Tech.

Elsewhere in rural Virginia, however, McCain did well. In the Shenandoah Valley and Southside Virginia, both traditional bases for the Republican Party in Virginia, Obama ran roughly evenly with Kerry; but in southwestern Virginia—at the time one of the more traditionally Democratic regions of the state—McCain outperformed Bush in 2004, even flipping two counties (Buchanan and Dickenson), both of which last voted Republican in 1972; Obama thus became the first Democrat to win the White House without carrying the aforementioned two counties since Woodrow Wilson in 1916. However, without the support of suburban voters in the eastern metropolitan areas of the commonwealth, McCain was ultimately unable to hold Virginia.

During the same election, former Democratic Governor Mark Warner solidly defeated former Governor (and his predecessor) Republican Jim Gilmore by a two-to-one margin for the open U.S. Senate seat vacated by incumbent Republican John Warner (no relation to Mark Warner). Warner received 65.03% of the vote while Gilmore took in 33.73%. Warner won all but five counties in the state. Democrats also picked up three seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. At the state level, Democrats picked up one seat in the Virginia House of Delegates.

Results

United States presidential election in Virginia, 2008PartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
**Democratic****Barack Obama****Joe Biden****1,959,532****52.63%****13**
RepublicanJohn McCainSarah Palin1,725,00546.33%0
IndependentRalph NaderMatt Gonzalez11,4830.31%0
LibertarianBob BarrWayne Allyn Root11,0670.30%0
ConstitutionChuck BaldwinDarrell Castle7,4740.20%0
GreenCynthia McKinneyRosa Clemente2,3440.06%0
Write-insWrite-ins6,3550.17%0
**Totals****3,723,260****100.00%****13**
Voter turnout (Voting age population)65.1%

By city and county

County/CityBarack Obama
DemocraticJohn McCain
RepublicanVarious candidates
Other partiesMarginTotal#%#%#%#%Totals1,959,53252.63%1,725,00546.33%38,7231.04%234,5276.30%3,723,260
Accomack7,60748.69%7,83350.14%1831.17%-226-1.45%15,623
Albemarle29,79258.43%20,57640.36%6161.21%9,21618.07%50,984
Alexandria50,47371.73%19,18127.26%7101.01%31,29244.47%70,364
Alleghany3,55348.22%3,71550.41%1011.37%-162-2.19%7,369
Amelia2,48838.11%3,97060.81%711.08%-1,482-22.70%6,529
Amherst6,09441.46%8,47057.62%1360.92%-2,376-16.16%14,700
Appomattox2,64134.61%4,90364.26%861.13%-2,262-29.65%7,630
Arlington78,99471.71%29,87627.12%1,2831.17%49,11844.59%110,153
Augusta9,82529.47%23,12069.35%3931.18%-13,295-39.88%33,338
Bath1,04342.89%1,34955.47%401.64%-306-12.58%2,432
Bedford11,01730.75%24,42068.16%3931.09%-13,403-37.41%35,830
Bedford City1,20844.18%1,49754.75%291.07%-289-10.57%2,734
Bland86429.20%2,03168.64%642.16%-1,167-39.44%2,959
Botetourt5,69332.71%11,47165.90%2421.39%-5,778-33.19%17,406
Bristol2,66536.21%4,57962.22%1151.57%-1,914-26.01%7,359
Brunswick4,97362.84%2,87736.35%640.81%2,09626.49%7,914
Buchanan4,06346.52%4,54151.99%1301.49%-478-5.47%8,734
Buckingham3,48949.89%3,42849.01%771.10%610.88%6,994
Buena Vista1,10845.73%1,28252.91%331.36%-174-7.18%2,423
Campbell8,09131.34%17,44467.58%2791.08%-9,353-36.24%25,814
Caroline7,16355.45%5,61743.48%1391.07%1,54611.97%12,919
Carroll4,10932.67%8,18765.08%2832.25%-4,078-32.41%12,579
Charles City2,83868.34%1,28831.01%270.65%1,55037.33%4,153
Charlotte2,70543.93%3,37254.77%801.30%-667-10.84%6,157
Charlottesville15,70578.35%4,07820.35%2611.30%11,62758.00%20,044
Chesapeake53,99450.22%52,62548.94%9020.84%1,3691.28%107,521
Chesterfield74,31045.85%86,41353.31%1,3650.84%-12,103-7.46%162,088
Clarke3,45746.52%3,84051.68%1341.80%-383-5.16%7,431
Colonial Heights2,56228.95%6,16169.62%1261.43%-3,599-40.67%8,849
Covington1,30455.40%1,02043.33%301.27%28412.07%2,354
Craig87733.46%1,69564.67%491.87%-818-31.21%2,621
Culpeper8,80244.59%10,71154.26%2281.15%-1,909-9.67%19,741
Cumberland2,25547.73%2,41851.19%511.08%-163-3.46%4,724
Danville12,35259.13%8,36140.02%1770.85%3,99119.11%20,890
Dickenson3,27848.54%3,32449.22%1512.24%-46-0.68%6,753
Dinwiddie6,24648.45%6,52650.62%1200.93%-280-2.17%12,892
Emporia1,70265.04%89734.28%180.68%80530.76%2,617
Essex2,93454.70%2,37944.35%510.95%55510.35%5,364
Fairfax310,35960.12%200,99438.93%4,9010.95%109,36521.19%516,254
Fairfax City6,57557.69%4,69141.16%1321.15%1,88416.53%11,398
Falls Church4,69569.56%1,97029.19%851.25%2,72540.37%6,750
Fauquier14,61642.71%19,22756.19%3761.10%-4,611-13.48%34,219
Floyd2,93739.08%4,44159.09%1381.83%-1,504-20.01%7,516
Fluvanna6,18548.57%6,42050.41%1301.02%-235-1.84%12,735
Franklin9,61837.86%15,41460.68%3691.46%-5,796-22.82%25,401
Franklin City2,81963.68%1,57635.60%320.72%1,24328.08%4,427
Frederick12,96138.56%20,14959.95%5021.49%-7,188-21.39%33,612
Fredericksburg6,15563.60%3,41335.27%1091.13%2,74228.33%9,677
Galax1,05243.80%1,31754.83%331.37%-265-11.03%2,402
Giles3,19240.95%4,46257.24%1411.81%-1,270-16.29%7,795
Gloucester6,91635.98%12,08962.89%2171.13%-5,173-26.91%19,222
Goochland4,81338.31%7,64360.84%1060.85%-2,830-22.53%12,562
Grayson2,48034.35%4,54062.88%2002.77%-2,060-28.53%7,220
Greene3,17438.43%4,98060.29%1061.28%-1,806-21.86%8,260
Greensville3,12263.88%1,72935.38%360.74%1,39328.50%4,887
Halifax8,12648.23%8,60051.04%1240.73%-474-2.81%16,850
Hampton46,91769.05%20,47630.14%5500.81%26,44138.91%67,943
Hanover18,44732.80%37,34466.39%4570.81%-18,897-33.59%56,248
Harrisonburg8,44457.54%6,04841.21%1831.25%2,39616.33%14,675
Henrico86,32355.70%67,38143.48%1,2620.82%18,94212.22%154,966
Henry11,11844.09%13,75854.56%3391.35%-2,640-10.47%25,215
Highland59037.97%93059.85%342.18%-340-21.88%1,554
Hopewell5,28555.49%4,14943.56%900.95%1,13611.93%9,524
Isle of Wight8,57342.87%11,25856.30%1660.83%-2,685-13.43%19,997
James City17,35244.95%20,91254.17%3390.88%-3,560-9.22%38,603
King and Queen1,91851.77%1,76347.58%240.65%1554.19%3,705
King George4,47342.71%5,88856.22%1131.07%-1,415-13.51%10,474
King William3,34439.87%4,96659.20%780.93%-1,622-19.33%8,388
Lancaster3,23546.63%3,64752.57%560.80%-412-5.94%6,938
Lee3,21934.89%5,82563.13%1831.98%-2,606-28.24%9,227
Lexington1,54362.24%91436.87%220.89%62925.37%2,479
Loudoun74,84553.67%63,33645.42%1,2780.91%11,5098.25%139,459
Louisa6,97845.45%8,18253.29%1931.26%-1,204-7.84%15,353
Lunenburg2,70347.84%2,90051.33%470.83%-197-3.49%5,650
Lynchburg16,26947.37%17,63851.36%4341.27%-1,369-3.99%34,341
Madison2,86242.72%3,75856.10%791.18%-896-13.38%6,699
Manassas7,51855.17%5,97543.85%1340.98%1,54311.32%13,627
Manassas Park2,46359.49%1,63439.47%431.04%82920.02%4,140
Martinsville4,13963.48%2,31135.44%701.08%1,82828.04%6,520
Mathews1,93435.55%3,45663.53%500.92%-1,522-27.98%5,440
Mecklenburg7,12747.26%7,81751.83%1380.91%-690-4.57%15,082
Middlesex2,39139.81%3,54559.02%701.17%-1,154-19.21%6,006
Montgomery21,03151.73%19,02846.81%5941.46%2,0034.92%40,653
Nelson4,39153.99%3,64744.84%951.17%7449.15%8,133
New Kent3,49334.96%6,38563.91%1131.13%-2,892-28.95%9,991
Newport News51,97263.93%28,66735.26%6560.81%23,30528.67%81,295
Norfolk62,81971.03%24,81428.06%8130.91%38,00542.97%88,446
Northampton3,80057.70%2,71341.19%731.11%1,08716.51%6,586
Northumberland3,31244.72%4,04154.56%530.72%-729-9.84%7,406
Norton74349.14%74449.21%251.65%-1-0.07%1,512
Nottoway3,41348.84%3,49950.07%761.09%-86-1.23%6,988
Orange7,10744.98%8,50653.83%1881.19%-1,399-8.85%15,801
Page4,23540.76%6,04158.15%1131.09%-1,806-17.39%10,389
Patrick2,87933.75%5,49164.37%1611.88%-2,612-30.62%8,531
Petersburg13,77488.64%1,58310.19%1831.17%12,19178.45%15,540
Pittsylvania11,41537.51%18,73061.55%2880.94%-7,315-24.04%30,433
Poquoson1,74824.74%5,22974.01%881.25%-3,481-49.27%7,065
Portsmouth32,32769.27%13,98429.97%3540.76%18,34339.30%46,665
Powhatan4,23729.31%10,08869.78%1310.91%-5,851-40.47%14,456
Prince Edward5,10154.34%4,17444.46%1131.20%9279.88%9,388
Prince George7,13044.55%8,75254.68%1240.77%-1,622-10.13%16,006
Prince William93,43557.52%67,62141.63%1,3900.85%25,81415.89%162,446
Pulaski5,91839.32%8,85758.85%2751.83%-2,939-19.53%15,050
Radford2,93053.97%2,41844.54%811.49%5129.43%5,429
Rappahannock2,10547.79%2,22750.56%731.65%-122-2.77%4,405
Richmond1,61843.20%2,09255.86%350.94%-474-12.66%3,745
Richmond City73,62379.09%18,64920.03%8130.88%54,97459.06%93,085
Roanoke19,81238.87%30,57159.97%5921.16%-10,759-21.10%50,975
Roanoke City24,93461.15%15,39437.76%4441.09%9,54023.39%40,772
Rockbridge4,34742.64%5,73256.22%1161.14%-1,385-13.58%10,195
Rockingham10,45331.36%22,46867.40%4131.24%-12,015-36.04%33,334
Russell4,93242.91%6,38955.59%1731.50%-1,457-12.68%11,494
Salem5,16441.63%7,08857.13%1541.24%-1,924-15.50%12,406
Scott2,72527.59%6,98070.68%1701.73%-4,255-43.09%9,875
Shenandoah6,91235.96%12,00562.45%3061.59%-5,093-26.49%19,223
Smyth4,23934.46%7,81763.54%2462.00%-3,578-29.08%12,302
Southampton4,40248.55%4,58350.55%820.90%-181-2.00%9,067
Spotsylvania24,89746.05%28,61052.91%5621.04%-3,713-6.86%54,069
Stafford25,71646.37%29,22152.69%5180.94%-3,505-6.32%55,455
Staunton5,56950.56%5,33048.39%1161.05%2392.17%11,015
Suffolk22,44656.24%17,16543.01%2970.75%5,28113.23%39,908
Surry2,62660.72%1,66338.45%360.83%96322.27%4,325
Sussex3,30161.55%2,02637.78%360.67%1,27523.77%5,363
Tazewell5,59632.80%11,20165.65%2641.55%-5,605-32.85%17,061
Virginia Beach98,88549.14%100,31949.85%2,0451.01%-1,434-0.71%201,249
Warren6,99743.39%8,87955.06%2501.55%-1,882-11.67%16,126
Washington8,06332.91%16,07765.62%3601.47%-8,014-32.71%24,500
Waynesboro3,90644.09%4,81554.35%1391.56%-909-10.26%8,860
Westmoreland4,57754.64%3,71944.40%810.96%85810.24%8,377
Williamsburg4,32863.77%2,35334.67%1060.95%1,97529.10%6,787
Winchester5,26852.02%4,72546.66%1331.32%5435.36%10,126
Wise4,99535.33%8,91463.05%2291.62%-3,919-27.72%14,138
Wythe4,10732.88%8,20765.70%1771.42%-4,100-32.82%12,491
York13,70040.42%19,83358.51%3641.07%-6,133-18.09%33,897
Gain from Democratic}} {{col-end}}

;Counties and independent cities that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Buchanan (largest city: Grundy)
  • Dickenson (largest borough: Clintwood)

;Counties and independent cities that flipped from Republican to Democratic

  • Buckingham (largest borough: Buckingham)
  • Caroline (largest borough: Bowling Green)
  • Chesapeake (independent city)
  • Essex (largest borough: Tappahannock)
  • Harrisonburg (independent city)
  • Henrico (largest borough: Richmond)
  • Hopewell (independent city)
  • King and Queen (largest borough: King and Queen Courthouse)
  • Loudoun (largest borough: Leesburg)
  • Manassas (independent city)
  • Manassas Park (independent city)
  • Montgomery (largest borough: Blacksburg)
  • Prince William (largest borough: Manassas)
  • Radford (independent city)
  • Staunton (independent city)
  • Suffolk (independent city)
  • Westmoreland (largest borough: Montross)
  • Winchester (independent city)

By congressional district

Barack Obama carried six of the state's 11 congressional districts. Both candidates carried two districts won by the other party.

DistrictMcCainObamaRepresentative
**51.35%**47.67%Jo Ann Davis ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Rob Wittman ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
48.48%**50.45%**Thelma Drake ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Glenn Nye ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
23.74%**75.52%**Bobby Scott
48.80%**50.33%**Randy Forbes
**50.59%**48.29%Virgil Goode ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Tom Perriello ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))
**56.93%**41.85%Bob Goodlatte
**53.16%**45.89%Eric Cantor
29.65%**69.28%**Jim Moran
**58.71%**39.60%Rick Boucher
46.06%**52.90%**Frank Wolf
42.06%**57.01%**Thomas M. Davis ([110th Congress](110th-united-states-congress))
Gerry Connolly ([111th Congress](111th-united-states-congress))

Electors

Main article: List of 2008 United States presidential electors

Technically the voters of Virginia cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Virginia is allocated 13 electors because it has 11 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 13 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 13 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 13 were pledged to Barack Obama and Joe Biden:

  1. Christia Rey
  2. Sandra Brandt
  3. Betty Squire
  4. Susan Johnston Rowland
  5. Marc Finney
  6. Dorothy Blackwell
  7. James Harold Allen Boyd
  8. Marian Van Landingham
  9. Robert Edgar Childress
  10. Rolland Winter
  11. Janet Carver
  12. Michael Jon
  13. Sophie Ann Salley

References

References

  1. "Registration/Turnout Reports - Summary of Virginia Registration & Turnout Statistics".
  2. Skelley, Geoffrey. (July 13, 2017). "The New Dominion: Virginia's Ever-Changing Electoral Map".
  3. (12 July 2007). "Back to the Future - The American Prospect".
  4. Continetti, Matthew. (October 2, 2006). "George Allen Monkeys Around".
  5. (2009-01-01). "D.C.'s Political Report: The complete source for campaign summaries.".
  6. (2015-05-05). "Presidential".
  7. (2009-04-22). "Vote 2008 - The Takeaway - Track the Electoral College vote predictions".
  8. "Electoral-vote.com: President, Senate, House Updated Daily".
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