| [[File:Michigan Presidential Election Results 2012.svg|375px]]
| County results
| [[File:MI-12-pres-districts.svg|375px]]
| Congressional district results
| [[File:Michigan Presidential Results 2012 by Municipality.svg|375px]]
| Municipality results
ObamaRomneyTie
The 2012 United States presidential election in Michigan took place on November 6, 2012, as part of the 2012 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Voters chose 16 electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama and his running mate, Vice President Joe Biden, against Republican challenger and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and his running mate, Congressman Paul Ryan. Michigan is also Romney's birth state despite identified his home state of Massachusetts.
Michigan was won by Democrat Barack Obama with 54.21% of the vote to Romney's 44.71%, a victory margin of 9.50%. It was the sixth presidential election in a row where Michigan voted in favor of the Democratic candidate, with Republicans last carrying the state in 1988. Obama's margin of victory was significantly decreased from 2008 when he carried the state by 16.44%, and he lost 26 counties that had voted for him four years prior. Many of those counties had gone Democratic for the first time in decades, such as Berrien County, which had not voted for a Democrat since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.
As of the 2024 presidential election, this is the last time that Wayne County, the state's most populous county and home to Detroit, was the most Democratic county in Michigan; and the last time that Bay County, Calhoun County, Eaton County, Gogebic County, Isabella County, Lake County, Macomb County, Manistee County, Monroe County, Shiawassee County, and Van Buren County voted for the Democratic candidate. It is also the last time either party carried Michigan by more than 3%.
The Democratic Party used a caucus system to determine the proportion of delegates awarded to Democratic candidates. The caucuses took place May 5; as the only Democratic candidate, President Obama won all 183 pledged delegates in the caucus. They, along with the other 20 unpledged delegates, voted for Obama at the 2012 Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The Republican primary took place on February 28, 2012, the same day as the Arizona Republican primary. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney won both of these elections.
This Michigan election used a semi-open primary system (which the state referred to as "closed") in which each voter made a public declaration at their election site and received the ballot for the appropriate party, rather than the fully open system used in the past. The state had 7,286,556 registered voters as of February 15, and delegates were awarded proportionately.
Michigan was given 59 delegates to the Republican (GOP) national convention, but that number was reduced to 30 as a penalty for bringing the election date forward before March 6 as the GOP rules set. The candidate with the greatest number of votes in each of the 14 congressional districts will receive that district's two delegates. Two additional delegates for Michigan were announced by the media to be given proportionally before the election but after the election the Michigan GOP announced there had been an error in the memo published and that the two delegates will be given to the winner, which sparked accusations of Mitt Romney rigging the results from Rick Santorum's team.
Polling
Main article: Statewide opinion polling for the February 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries#Michigan (February 28)
Campaign
While Romney has close ties to Michigan, where he was born and grew up and his father George W. Romney was the Governor, Santorum, who once trailed Romney badly in the state, had a clear lead over him in mid February after Santorum won Colorado, Minnesota, and Missouri caucuses and primary on February 7. And the competition became a statistical tie between these two candidates before the primary.
Since Michigan allows primary voters to declare their affiliation at the time they vote, Santorum campaign paid for robo-calls inviting Democrats to cross over and vote for him. Romney called this tactic "outrageous" and "disgusting" but Santorum defended himself as not doing anything wrong but getting people to vote in an open primary.
Some Democrats also urged their supporters to vote for Santorum in the Republican primary, in hopes of forcing the Republican candidates to use more resources and help make it easier for Barack Obama to win the general election. This is similar to Rush Limbaugh's "Operation Chaos", where Limbaugh urged voters in the 2008 Democratic Presidential primaries to vote for Hillary Clinton, whom he saw as being a weaker candidate than Obama. Michigan has a long history of such crossover voting; in 2000, strong Democratic crossover votes helped Senator John McCain win the Michigan Republican primary. In 1972, Republican crossover votes propelled Governor George Wallace to victory in the Democratic primary.
Results
Polls closed at 8 PM local time on election day. While most of the state is in the Eastern time zone (UTC −5), four counties in the Upper Peninsula are on Central time (UTC −6), so the final closures came at 9 PM Eastern time. As of 2/28, results showed Romney winning 7 congressional districts and Santorum winning 7.
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
Projected delegate count
AP
CNN
GP
[[File:America Symbol.svg
14px]] **Mitt Romney**
409,522
41.10%
16
16
16
Rick Santorum
377,372
37.87%
14
14
14
Ron Paul
115,911
11.63%
0
0
0
Newt Gingrich
65,027
6.53%
0
0
0
Rick Perry (withdrawn)
1,816
0.18%
0
0
0
Buddy Roemer (withdrawn)
1,784
0.18%
0
0
0
Michele Bachmann (withdrawn)
1,735
0.17%
0
0
0
Jon Huntsman (withdrawn)
1,674
0.17%
0
0
0
Herman Cain (withdrawn)
1,211
0.12%
0
0
0
Fred Karger
1,180
0.12%
0
0
0
Gary Johnson (withdrawn)
458
0.05%
0
0
0
Uncommitted
18,809
1.89%
0
0
0
**Unprojected delegates:**
**2**
**0**
**0**
**Total:**
**996,499**
**100.00%**
**30**
**30**
**30**
At the Republican state convention in May, it was reported that of the 30 voting delegates for the national convention in Tampa, 6 were Paul supporters, and 24 were Romney supporters. Paul organizers disputed these numbers, stating that they had actually taken 8 (instead of 6) of the voting delegates, plus several non-voting slots.
Delegate allocation controversy
A controversy arose over the delegate allocation in Michigan, where 28 congressional district delegates and two at-large delegates were awarded. The Republican Party of Michigan rules stated that the two at-large delegates would be awarded proportionally, meaning that Santorum and Romney would get one delegate each for a 15–15 tie. But the following day the party's credentials committee allocated both at-large delegates to Romney, saying it had changed the rules a few weeks prior to award the delegates to the statewide winner but "in error" sent a memo to the candidates saying they would be awarded proportionately. Santorum's campaign protested, saying the committee's six members were mostly Romney supporters, and filed a protest with the Republican National Committee. Santorum's general counsel wrote in a letter to the RNC, "It is our understanding that several public supporters and Michigan surrogates of an opposing campaign voted in favor of the delegate allocation change which assisted their chosen candidate. This request is not about the allocation of a single delegate; it is about ensuring a transparent process, avoiding unscrupulous tactics and backroom deals by establishment figures and campaigns who have not received the result they hoped for at the ballot box." Committee member and former state attorney general Mike Cox endorsed Romney, but said the delegates should have been awarded 15-15: "I have this crazy idea that you follow the rules. I'd love to give the at-large delegates to Mitt Romney, but our rules provide for strict apportionment."
General election
Predictions
Source
Ranking
As of
Huffington Post
November 6, 2012
CNN
November 6, 2012
New York Times
November 6, 2012
Washington Post
November 6, 2012
RealClearPolitics
November 6, 2012
Sabato's Crystal Ball
November 5, 2012
FiveThirtyEight
November 6, 2012
Candidate ballot access
Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan, Republican
Barack Obama/Joseph Biden, Democratic
Virgil Goode/Jim Clymer, US Taxpayers
Jill Stein/Cheri Honkala, Green
Rocky Anderson/Luis J. Rodriguez, Natural Law
Write-in candidate access:
Gary Johnson/James P. Gray, Libertarian
Results
2012 United States presidential election in Michigan
Party
Candidate
Running mate
Votes
Percentage
Electoral votes
**Democratic**
**Barack Obama** **(incumbent)**
**Joe Biden** **(incumbent)**
**2,564,569**
**54.04%**
**16**
Republican
Mitt Romney
Paul Ryan
2,115,256
44.58%
0
Green
Jill Stein
Cheri Honkala
21,897
0.46%
0
Constitution
Virgil Goode
Jim Clymer
16,119
0.34%
0
Libertarian (Write-in)
Gary Johnson
Jim Gray
7,774
0.16%
0
Natural Law
Rocky Anderson
Luis J. Rodriguez
5,147
0.11%
0
Socialist (Write-in)
Stewart Alexander
Alex Mendoza
89
0.00%
0
Socialist Equality
(Write-in)
Jerry White
Phyllis Scherrer
68
0.00%
0
America's (Write-in)
Tom Hoefling
J.D. Ellis
42
0.00%
0
**Totals**
**4,730,961**
**100.00%**
**16**
Voter turnout (registered voters)
63.46%
By county
County
Barack Obama
Democratic
Mitt Romney
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
Margin
Total votes cast
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
Totals
2,564,569
54.04%
2,115,256
44.58%
65,491
1.38%
449,313
9.46%
4,745,316
Alcona
2,472
40.50%
3,571
58.50%
61
1.00%
-1,099
-18.00%
6,104
Alger
2,212
47.90%
2,330
50.45%
76
1.65%
-118
-2.55%
4,618
Allegan
20,806
39.42%
31,123
58.97%
846
1.61%
-10,317
-19.55%
52,775
Alpena
6,549
46.48%
7,298
51.79%
244
1.73%
-749
-5.31%
14,091
Antrim
5,107
38.70%
7,917
60.00%
171
1.30%
-2,810
-21.30%
13,195
Arenac
3,669
46.79%
4,057
51.74%
115
1.47%
-388
-4.95%
7,841
Baraga
1,574
45.10%
1,866
53.47%
50
1.43%
-292
-8.37%
3,490
Barry
11,491
40.15%
16,655
58.20%
471
1.65%
-5,164
-18.05%
28,617
Bay
27,877
52.02%
24,911
46.49%
798
1.49%
2,966
5.53%
53,586
Benzie
4,685
47.32%
5,075
51.26%
141
1.42%
-390
-3.94%
9,901
Berrien
33,465
45.99%
38,209
52.51%
1,088
1.50%
-4,744
-6.52%
72,762
Branch
6,913
40.32%
10,035
58.52%
199
1.16%
-3,122
-18.20%
17,147
Calhoun
29,267
50.18%
28,333
48.58%
727
1.24%
934
1.60%
58,327
Cass
9,591
42.65%
12,659
56.29%
240
1.06%
-3,068
-13.64%
22,490
Charlevoix
5,939
42.05%
8,000
56.64%
186
1.31%
-2,061
-14.59%
14,125
Cheboygan
5,831
43.68%
7,286
54.58%
233
1.74%
-1,455
-10.90%
13,350
Chippewa
7,100
45.34%
8,278
52.86%
282
1.80%
-1,178
-7.52%
15,660
Clare
6,338
46.83%
6,988
51.63%
209
1.54%
-650
-4.80%
13,535
Clinton
18,191
46.36%
20,650
52.63%
394
1.01%
-2,459
-6.27%
39,235
Crawford
2,994
43.94%
3,744
54.95%
76
1.11%
-750
-11.01%
6,814
Delta
8,330
45.95%
9,534
52.59%
266
1.46%
-1,204
-6.64%
18,130
Dickinson
4,952
38.53%
7,688
59.82%
211
1.65%
-2,736
-21.29%
12,851
Eaton
27,913
50.95%
26,197
47.82%
678
1.23%
1,716
3.13%
54,788
Emmet
7,225
40.67%
10,253
57.71%
287
1.62%
-3,028
-17.04%
17,765
Genesee
128,978
63.30%
71,808
35.24%
2,956
1.46%
57,170
28.06%
203,742
Gladwin
5,760
45.78%
6,661
52.94%
162
1.28%
-901
-7.16%
12,583
Gogebic
4,058
53.30%
3,444
45.24%
111
1.46%
614
8.06%
7,613
Grand Traverse
20,875
43.31%
26,534
55.05%
788
1.64%
-5,659
-11.74%
48,197
Gratiot
7,610
47.46%
8,241
51.39%
184
1.15%
-631
-3.93%
16,035
Hillsdale
7,106
37.20%
11,727
61.40%
267
1.40%
-4,621
-24.20%
19,100
Houghton
6,801
44.27%
8,196
53.36%
364
2.37%
-1,395
-9.09%
15,361
Huron
6,518
42.10%
8,806
56.87%
160
1.03%
-2,288
-14.77%
15,484
Ingham
80,847
63.01%
45,306
35.31%
2,157
1.68%
35,541
27.70%
128,310
Ionia
11,018
42.61%
14,315
55.36%
523
2.03%
-3,297
-12.75%
25,856
Iosco
6,242
46.63%
6,909
51.62%
234
1.75%
-667
-4.99%
13,385
Iron
2,687
44.69%
3,224
53.63%
101
1.68%
-537
-8.94%
6,012
Isabella
13,038
53.74%
10,800
44.52%
422
1.74%
2,238
9.22%
24,260
Jackson
32,301
46.35%
36,298
52.09%
1,086
1.56%
-3,997
-5.74%
69,685
Kalamazoo
69,051
55.83%
52,662
42.58%
1,977
1.59%
16,389
13.25%
123,690
Kalkaska
3,272
39.43%
4,901
59.06%
126
1.51%
-1,629
-19.63%
8,299
Kent
133,408
45.35%
155,925
53.00%
4,873
1.65%
-22,517
-7.65%
294,206
Keweenaw
582
41.81%
774
55.60%
36
2.59%
-192
-13.79%
1,392
Lake
2,752
51.83%
2,487
46.84%
71
1.33%
265
4.99%
5,310
Lapeer
18,796
43.60%
23,734
55.05%
585
1.35%
-4,938
-11.45%
43,115
Leelanau
6,576
46.25%
7,483
52.63%
160
1.12%
-907
-6.38%
14,219
Lenawee
21,776
48.47%
22,351
49.75%
801
1.78%
-575
-1.28%
44,928
Livingston
37,216
37.73%
60,083
60.91%
1,341
1.36%
-22,867
-23.18%
98,640
Luce
991
38.17%
1,580
60.86%
25
0.97%
-589
-22.69%
2,596
Mackinac
2,652
43.35%
3,397
55.53%
68
1.12%
-745
-12.18%
6,117
Macomb
208,016
51.30%
191,913
47.33%
5,586
1.37%
16,103
3.97%
405,515
Manistee
6,473
52.19%
5,737
46.26%
192
1.55%
736
5.93%
12,402
Marquette
18,115
56.00%
13,606
42.06%
625
1.94%
4,509
13.94%
32,346
Mason
6,856
46.75%
7,580
51.69%
229
1.56%
-724
-4.94%
14,665
Mecosta
7,515
44.26%
9,176
54.04%
289
1.70%
-1,661
-9.78%
16,980
Menominee
5,242
47.80%
5,564
50.73%
161
1.47%
-322
-2.93%
10,967
Midland
17,450
41.57%
23,919
56.98%
610
1.45%
-6,469
-15.41%
41,979
Missaukee
2,274
32.36%
4,665
66.39%
88
1.25%
-2,391
-34.03%
7,027
Monroe
36,310
49.68%
35,593
48.69%
1,192
1.63%
717
0.99%
73,095
Montcalm
11,430
44.74%
13,621
53.32%
497
1.94%
-2,191
-8.58%
25,548
Montmorency
2,049
40.57%
2,928
57.97%
74
1.46%
-879
-17.40%
5,051
Muskegon
44,436
58.16%
30,884
40.43%
1,077
1.41%
13,552
17.73%
76,397
Newaygo
8,728
40.64%
12,457
58.00%
293
1.36%
-3,729
-17.36%
21,478
Oakland
349,002
53.40%
296,514
45.37%
8,055
1.23%
52,488
8.03%
653,571
Oceana
5,063
44.22%
6,239
54.49%
148
1.29%
-1,176
-10.27%
11,450
Ogemaw
4,791
46.09%
5,437
52.31%
166
1.60%
-646
-6.22%
10,394
Ontonagon
1,586
44.81%
1,906
53.86%
47
1.33%
-320
-9.05%
3,539
Osceola
3,981
38.73%
6,141
59.75%
156
1.52%
-2,160
-21.02%
10,278
Oscoda
1,657
40.88%
2,308
56.95%
88
2.17%
-651
-16.07%
4,053
Otsego
4,681
39.37%
7,011
58.96%
199
1.67%
-2,330
-19.59%
11,891
Ottawa
42,737
32.19%
88,166
66.41%
1,854
1.40%
-45,429
-34.22%
132,757
Presque Isle
3,192
44.97%
3,794
53.45%
112
1.58%
-602
-8.48%
7,098
Roscommon
6,198
47.40%
6,701
51.24%
178
1.36%
-503
-3.84%
13,077
Saginaw
54,381
55.33%
42,720
43.46%
1,191
1.21%
11,661
11.87%
98,292
St. Clair
33,983
45.81%
39,271
52.94%
927
1.25%
-5,288
-7.13%
74,181
St. Joseph
10,112
43.13%
12,978
55.36%
355
1.51%
-2,866
-12.23%
23,445
Sanilac
7,212
39.09%
10,963
59.42%
275
1.49%
-3,751
-20.33%
18,450
Schoolcraft
1,865
45.92%
2,142
52.75%
54
1.33%
-277
-6.83%
4,061
Shiawassee
17,197
51.06%
15,962
47.39%
520
1.55%
1,235
3.67%
33,679
Tuscola
11,425
43.76%
14,240
54.54%
445
1.70%
-2,815
-10.78%
26,110
Van Buren
16,290
49.61%
16,141
49.15%
406
1.24%
149
0.46%
32,837
Washtenaw
120,890
67.04%
56,412
31.28%
2,965
1.68%
64,478
35.76%
180,337
Wayne
595,846
72.83%
213,814
26.13%
8,476
1.04%
382,032
46.70%
818,136
Wexford
6,184
41.51%
8,450
56.72%
264
1.77%
-2,266
-15.21%
14,898
County Flips: {{col-begin}}
DemocraticRepublican
]]
;Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
Alger (largest city: Munising)
Alpena (largest city: Alpena)
Arenac (largest city: Standish)
Benzie (largest city: Frankfort)
Berrien (largest city: Niles)
Cass (largest city: Dowagiac)
Clare (largest city: Clare)
Clinton (largest city: St. Johns)
Delta (largest city: Escanaba)
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)
Mason (largest city: Ludington)
Menominee (largest city: Menominee)
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)
St. Clair (largest city: Port Huron)
By congressional district
Despite losing the state, Romney won nine of 14 congressional districts.
District
Obama
Romney
Representative
45%
**53%**
Dan Benishek
43%
**56%**
Bill Huizenga
46%
**53%**
Justin Amash
46%
**54%**
Dave Camp
**61%**
38%
Dan Kildee
49%
**50%**
Fred Upton
48%
**51%**
Tim Walberg
48%
**51%**
Mike Rogers
**57%**
42%
Sander Levin
44%
**55%**
Candice Miller
47%
**52%**
Kerry Bentivolio
**66%**
33%
John Dingell
**85%**
14%
John Conyers
**81%**
18%
Gary Peters
Analysis
All of the local polling firms had predicted a close election here, some even giving an advantage to native Michigander Romney over Obama; however, statistician Nate Silver pointed out several problems with the local pollsters' methodology and sampling errors, instead giving more credence to the national pollsters who posited a clear victory for Obama (by a mean of 7.3 points and a median of 7.0 over Romney).
In the end, Silver and the National pollsters were correct: Obama defeated Romney by over 9 points in the November 2012 election. Obama dominated the population centers that had traditionally anchored Democratic strength in the state—Detroit, Lansing, Ann Arbor, and Flint—but he also retained two populous counties that had been Republican strongholds in the 1970s and 1980s, the Detroit-area suburban counties of Oakland and Macomb. Even in Kent County, which flipped back to the Republican column, Romney substantially underperformed what Bush had done in 2000 and 2004. While Romney did better in more rural areas, without better strength in some of the state's population centers, Romney was unable to flip the state.
Anuzis, Saul. (May 19, 2012). "Romney Dominates Michigan Convention winning 24 delegates to Paul's 6 delegates. MI GOP fired up to help elect President Romney!".
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