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2008 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary

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FieldValue
election_name2008 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary
countryWisconsin
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2004 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary
previous_year2004
next_election2012 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary
next_year2012
election_date
image1Barack Obama Senate portrait crop.jpg
candidate1**Barack Obama**
colour1800080
home_state1Illinois
popular_vote1**646,851**
percentage1**58.08%**
delegate_count1**42**
image2Hillary_Rodham_Clinton-cropped.jpg
candidate2Hillary Clinton
colour2D4AA00
home_state2New York
popular_vote2453,954
percentage240.76%
delegate_count232
map_image[[File:Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary by county margins, 2008.svg260px]]
map_size280px
map_captionCounty results
**Obama:**
**Clinton:**
outgoing_members[HI](2008-hawaii-democratic-presidential-caucuses)
elected_members[OH](2008-ohio-democratic-presidential-primary)

Obama:
Clinton:
The 2008 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary took place on February 19, 2008. 74 pledged delegates were at stake. The 2008 Hawaii Democratic presidential caucuses took place the same day.

The Wisconsin primary came after Senator Barack Obama had won the majority of delegates and votes in 8 straight primaries and caucuses; his wins in Wisconsin, and Hawaii extended his winning streak to 10 and reinforced his front-runner status.

In the days leading up to the primary the Hillary Clinton campaign ran television ads criticizing Obama on healthcare and for not agreeing to more candidate debates. This caused the Obama campaign to launch a response ad that mentioned the 18 debates already held and 2 more scheduled. The Clinton campaign also charged Obama using lines in a speech similar to words spoken by Massachusetts Governor and Obama friend Deval Patrick; Patrick responded by saying he and Obama often swap ideas, and that he had willingly shared lines without asking for credit to be given. Barack Obama was the winner.

Polls

Main article: Statewide opinion polling for the February 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries#Wisconsin

Polls taken throughout 2007 consistently put Hillary Clinton in the lead, but during February 2008 most polls showed Barack Obama with the advantage. A Rasmussen poll taken February 13 reported that almost one-fourth of those polled said there was a good chance they might change their mind. It also found that while Clinton was doing well among women, with a 10-point advantage over Obama, Obama was polling 23 points higher than her among men.

Results

**Key:***Withdrew*
prior to contest
2008 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primaryCandidateVotesPercentageNational delegates
**Barack Obama****646,851****58.08%****42**
Hillary Clinton453,95440.76%32
*John Edwards**6,693**0.60%**0*
*Dennis Kucinich**2,625**0.24%**0*
*Joe Biden**755**0.07%**0*
*Bill Richardson**528**0.05%**0*
Mike Gravel5170.05%0
*Christopher Dodd**501**0.04%**0*
Uninstructed8610.08%0
**Totals****1,113,285****100%****74**

Analysis

In the weeks and days leading up to the Wisconsin Democratic Primary, most pundits agreed that it was Hillary Clinton's chance to halt Obama's momentum after winning contests in Washington, Louisiana, Nebraska, Virginia, Maryland, Washington, D.C. following Super Tuesday.

Hillary Clinton enjoyed healthy leads among white voters in previous states and hoped that winning Wisconsin or at least the white vote would allow for a victory of sorts. However, CNN Exit Polls showed that Obama won the white vote (which comprised 87% of the electorate on primary day) 54%-45%. Also, other key Clinton constituencies showed Obama making significant strides such as the female vote which split 50%-50%, the 54-65 Age Group which voted for Obama 54%-45%.

After the victory in Wisconsin as well as Caucuses in Washington and a primary in Hawaii held on the same day gave Obama the momentum of winning 10 straight contests. The Pledged delegate standing after the Wisconsin Primary was Obama leading 1154-1011.

2008 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primaryDemographic subgroupObamaClinton% ofSexAgeMarital statusFamily incomeReligionEducationParty affiliationPolitical philosophyWhich issue is the most important facing the country?Candidate quality that matters most
Total vote5841100
Male613543
Female514957
18–64 years old613772
65 and older396028
Married534563
Single583937
Less than $50,000514941
$50,000 or more593959
Protestant/Other Christian574332
Catholic495140
None533811
High school graduate445225
Some college or associate degree574331
College graduate594122
Postgraduate study643220
Democrat504964
Independent / Other633427
Liberal564047
Moderate544640
Conservative524813
The economy554343
The war in Iraq574029
Health care514825
Can bring about needed change772052
Cares about people like me534616
Has the right experience59524

References

References

  1. Hirsh, Michael. (2008-02-19). "Barack Obama: Front Runner". Newsweek.
  2. Baldwin, Tom. (2008-02-20). "Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton trade blows as Wisconsin decides". Times.
  3. (2008-02-19). "Democrats Vote In Wisconsin And Hawaii". 9 News.
  4. (2008-02-19). "Clinton Fingerprints on Plagiarism Flap". Associated Press.
  5. (2008-02-19). "RESULTS: Wisconsin". CNN.
  6. (2008-02-19). "Obama wins Wisconsin primary poll". BBC.
  7. "2008 Wisconsin Democratic Presidential Primary". Pollster.
  8. (2008-02-13). "Wisconsin Democratic Presidential Primary". Rasmussen Reports.
  9. "Wisconsin State Elections Board".
  10. [http://www.thegreenpapers.com/P08/WI-D.html The Green Papers]
  11. "CNN EXIT POLLS".
  12. (2008-02-20). "Obama extends streak with Wis., Hawaii wins". NBC News.
  13. "Election Guide 2008 - Presidential Election - Politics - Results - The New York Times".
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