2008 South Carolina Democratic primary Contents Candidates Campaign Finances Polling leading up to...

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South Carolina Democratic primary, 2008







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January 26, 2008 (2008-01-26)
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Barack Obama.jpg

Hillary Rodham Clinton-cropped.jpg

John Edwards, official Senate photo portrait.jpg
Nominee

Barack Obama

Hillary Clinton

John Edwards
Home state

Illinois

New York

North Carolina
Delegate count

25
12
8
Popular vote

295,214
141,217
93,576
Percentage

55.4%
26.5%
17.6%




SouthCarolinaPresidentialPrimaryResults2008.svg
Election results by county. Purple denotes counties won by Obama, gold denotes those won by Clinton, and orange denotes those won by Edwards.
















The 2008 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary took place on January 26, 2008. Senator Barack Obama of Illinois won the primary's popular vote by a 28.9% margin.


For both parties in 2008, South Carolina's was the first primary in a Southern state and the first primary in a state in which African Americans make up a sizable percentage of the electorate. For Democrats, it was also the last primary before 22 states hosted their primaries or caucuses on February 5, 2008 (Super Tuesday).


South Carolina's 45 delegates to the 2008 Democratic National Convention were awarded proportionally based on the results of the primary. The state also sent nine superdelegates.[1]




Contents






  • 1 Candidates


    • 1.1 Remaining


    • 1.2 Eliminated




  • 2 Campaign Finances


  • 3 Polling leading up to primary


  • 4 Final Campaigning


    • 4.1 Obama Campaign


    • 4.2 Clinton Campaign


    • 4.3 Edwards Campaign




  • 5 Results


    • 5.1 Results by county




  • 6 See also


  • 7 References


  • 8 See also


  • 9 External links





Candidates



Remaining



  • New York Senator Hillary Clinton

  • Former North Carolina Senator John Edwards

  • Former Alaska Senator Mike Gravel

  • Illinois Senator Barack Obama



Eliminated




  • Delaware Senator Joe Biden Dropped out on January 4, 2008 [2]


  • Connecticut Senator Chris Dodd Dropped out on January 4, 2008


  • New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson Dropped out on January 10, 2008 [3]


  • Ohio Representative Dennis Kucinich Dropped out on January 25, 2008 [4]


  • New York Comedian Stephen Colbert Denied Ballot (13-3) on November 1, 2007 [5] and dropped out November 5, 2007 [6]



Campaign Finances


On the day of the South Carolina primary, Senator John Edwards led in fund raising from the state of South Carolina, followed by Barack Obama and Bill Richardson.


Obtained from CNN as of January 26, 2008[7]



































Candidate
Money raised (US$)

John Edwards
$316,319

Barack Obama
$257,118

Bill Richardson
$196,850

Hillary Clinton
$131,950

Joe Biden
$55,350

Chris Dodd
$22,750

Dennis Kucinich
$3,750


Polling leading up to primary



All monthly averages were retrieved from RealClearPolitics.[8]































Candidate
November
December
January
Final 3 Polls Averages
Hillary Clinton 40% 34% 27% 28%
Barack Obama 27% 33% 41% 48%
John Edwards 11% 15% 17% 23%


     Denotes Leader during Poll Average

Despite maintaining a major early lead in the polls, Senator Clinton rapidly fell after the Iowa Caucuses, as Barack Obama skyrocketed and John Edwards began to receive a gradual increase in the polling.


However, in the last three polls taken before the South Carolina Primary, Barack Obama took a commanding lead over both Edwards and Clinton. Also, Former Senator John Edwards had come into the margin of error with Senator Clinton for second place in the South Carolina Primary.



Final Campaigning



Obama Campaign





Presidential candidate Barack Obama addresses supporters the night before South Carolina's primary


Throughout the South Carolina campaign, most pundits had predicted Barack Obama the winner, primarily because of the state's large African-American population. For this reason, Obama was shown to be significantly ahead of his two rivals, John Edwards, who carried the state in 2004, and Hillary Clinton, whose husband was popular in the African-American community. In early polls taken in the weeks leading up to the primary, Clinton had a double-digit lead over both Edwards and Obama (see poll averages above).


During a majority of the final campaigning, the attacks between the Clinton campaign and the Obama campaign highly intensified by the candidates as well as the media coverage. Barack Obama began to attack former President Bill Clinton for his comments which were taken as racist. These comments are considered by analyst and historians alike as the turning point of the South Carolina primary and ultimately the cause of Clinton's loss of support from the black community.[citation needed]


Despite the increasing tensions between the Clinton and Obama camps, Obama continued to widely lead in the polls (despite a surge by Edwards). Into the final days of the campaign in South Carolina, it became apparent that Obama would win by a rather wide margin. The final tally had Obama winning by 28.9% over his closest rival, Hillary Clinton.



Clinton Campaign



In the early months of the campaign, Clinton enjoyed a steep lead over Senator Obama, and a 30-point lead over former Senator John Edwards. However, after Obama's win in Iowa, Clinton's campaign in South Carolina began to fall apart by the Obama political machine rolling into South Carolina with force.


For Clinton, despite winning the popular vote in Nevada, the fact that she had lost Nevada's National Delegates, receiving 12 compared to Obama's 13 still lingered in the media. This, combined with the fact of Bill Clinton's continuing negative publicity from "injecting race into the campaign" as several people called Bill Clinton's actions in his wife's campaign.


Between battling media scrutiny on Bill Clinton, constant attacks between the Obama and Clinton campaigns, and a surging John Edwards which threatened a Clinton second-place finish, poll number began to plunge, with a poll taken by Reuters-Cspan-Zogby showing Clinton in the margin of error for second place with Edwards, with Edwards at 21% and Clinton at 25%. This was also combined with the fact of Edwards's constant barrage of attacks claiming Clinton (and Obama's) big city politics were "too good for the people of South Carolina".


However, despite the attacks from opponents that Bill Clinton's attacks largely alienated African-Americans, Clinton was able to keep a 35% support amongst that key constituency, while losing the white vote to Edwards, In the end, Clinton's African-American support was able to place her in a clear second-place finish, finishing 9 points ahead of John Edwards despite losing to Obama by 29 points.



Edwards Campaign



After the terrible results for the Edwards Campaign during the Nevada caucuses, in which Edwards finished in third with 4% of the state delegation and received no national delegates, South Carolina began to look as a state where he needed a strong finish, after finishing in third in the last three primaries which took place, and trailing in the number of total national delegates.


South Carolina was the state in which Edwards was born and raised. In 2004, Edwards won the South Carolina Primary, with 45% of the vote to John Kerry's 30% and Al Sharpton's 10%. While entering South Carolina, it become apparent that he needed a first-place finish, which seemed impossible, or a second-place finish, which seemed more within grasp.


Before the CNN South Carolina Debate in Myrtle Beach on Monday, January 21, 2008, John Edwards was placing a distant third in a poll taken before the debates on January 19, in which he placed third with 15% compared to Hillary Clinton's second place with 27%.[9] However, after the South Carolina debates, the tone of the campaign severely shifted.


During the South Carolina Democratic Debate in Myrtle Beach, Edwards sought to distinguish himself from Senators Obama and Clinton, and criticized them for their attacks and "big city" politics. As soon as he began to question how the attacks helped, he was widely cheered by the audience for in what many people thought was what distinguished Edwards from negative campaigning. Saying "This kind of squabbling, how many children are going to get healthcare? How many people are going to get an education from this? How many kids are going to be able to go to college because of this? We have got to understand and I respect both of my fellow candidates, but we have got to understand that this is not about us personally, it is about what we are trying to do for this country and what we believe in", Edwards began to get applause from several members of the audience.[10]


After the debate, John Edwards began to see a major influx of money and in turn, poll numbers began to rise rapidly in Edwards's favor. Along with the debate performance, Bill Clinton's remarks began to alienate black supporters from Clinton, and white supporters from Obama. As a result, Edwards won amongst white voters ages 30 to 50, while receiving the same amount of support from white 60+ year olds as Hillary Clinton according to CNN Exit Polls [11]


However, Edwards was not able to get much support from non-whites, and according to Exit Polls, received only 2% of the non-white support, while receiving 40% of the white support.



Results



Barack Obama won the primary, taking 44 of the 46 counties; Edwards won in his native Oconee County, while Clinton won in Horry County, which contains Myrtle Beach.[12] Those in italics are candidates who have withdrawn from the race but still remained on the ballot.





























































































South Carolina Democratic Presidential Primary Results – 2008
Party
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
Delegates
Projected national delegates


Democratic

Barack Obama

295,214

55.44%

25

33


Democratic

Hillary Clinton
141,217
26.52%
12
12


Democratic

John Edwards
93,576
17.57%
8
0


Democratic

Bill Richardson

727

0.14%

0

0


Democratic

Joe Biden

694

0.13%

0

0


Democratic

Dennis Kucinich

552

0.1%

0

0


Democratic

Christopher Dodd

247

0.05%

0

0


Democratic

Mike Gravel
241
0.05%
0
0



Totals

532,468

100.00%

45

45


Results by county



















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































County
Clinton
%
Edwards
%
Obama
%
Others
Totals
Turnout
Margin
Abbeville 738 20.74% 802 22.54%
2,006

56.38%
12
3,558
28.06%
33.84%
Aiken 4,901 33.53% 1,866 12.77%
7,768

53.14%
83
14,618
17.89%
19.61%
Allendale 392 27.07% 92 6.35%
951

65.68%
13
1,448
28.15%
38.60%
Anderson 5,485 31.43% 5,603
32.11%
6,315

36.18%
49
17,452
20.02%
4.08%
Bamberg 751 27.57% 222 8.15%
1,720

63.14%
31
2,724
34.35%
35.57%
Barnwell 820 29.93% 273 9.96%
1,632

59.56%
15
2,740
23.68%
29.64%
Beaufort 5,115 30.10% 2,239 13.18%
9,550

56.20%
90
16,994
21.50%
26.10%
Berkeley 3,880 23.48% 2,676 16.19%
9,869

59.72%
101
16,526
22.06%
36.24%
Calhoun 699 25.57% 413 15.11%
1,607

58.78%
15
2,734
30.78%
33.21%
Charleston 11,287 23.49% 6,438 13.40%
30,073

62.59%
246
48,044
27.24%
39.10%
Cherokee 1,238 25.95% 1,495
31.34%
2,025

42.45%
12
4,770
18.81%
11.11%
Chester 1,089 25.19% 650 15.04%
2,558

59.17%
26
4,323
26.73%
33.98%
Chesterfield 1,468 26.56% 1,290 23.34%
2,737

49.51%
33
5,528
28.83%
22.96%
Clarendon 1,155 19.00% 803 13.21%
4,079

67.11%
41
6,078
31.96%
48.11%
Colleton 1,119 22.46% 855 17.16%
2,979

59.78%
30
4,983
25.89%
37.33%
Darlington 1,911 21.43% 1,282 14.37%
5,672

54
8,919


Dillon 814 19.06% 692 16.20%
2,749

16
4,271


Dorchester 3,231 25.03% 2,444 18.93%
7,165

68
12,908


Edgefield 754 25.81% 243 8.32%
1,908

16
2,921


Fairfield 996 20.04% 537 10.81%
3,410

26
4,969


Florence 3,700 22.09% 2,222 13.26%
10,768

62
16,752


Georgetown 1,951 21.90% 1,573 17.66%
5,334

51
8,909


Greenville 11,918 27.93% 9,047 21.20%
21,532

180
42,677


Greenwood 1,528 20.68% 1,436 19.44%
4,373

51
7,388


Hampton 726 21.73% 362 10.84%
2,232

21
3,341


Horry 9,983 38.57% 7,249 28.01%
8,541

107
25,880


Jasper 577 18.76% 190 6.18%
2,285

24
3,076


Kershaw 2,285 27.97% 1,505 18.42%
4,353

26
8,169


Lancaster 2,318 30.75% 1,678 22.26%
3,505

37
7,538


Laurens 1,599 22.91% 1,719 24.63%
3,639

22
6,979


Lee 650 17.20% 427 11.30%
2,673

30
3,780


Lexington 7,887 34.50% 5,591 24.46%
9,303

80
22,861


Marion 955 14.88% 786 12.25%
4,633

44
6,418


Marlboro 1,000 23.38% 760 17.77%
2,501

17
4,278


McCormick 382 21.52% 186 10.48%
1,195

12
1,775


Newberry 1,200 26.37% 1,120 24.61%
2,209

22
4,551


Oconee 2,106 28.99% 3,257
44.83%
1,884

18
7,265


Orangeburg 4,581 24.51% 1,634 8.74%
12,373

99
18,687


Pickens 2,521 30.47% 2,815
34.03%
2,904

33
8,273


Richland 14,888 23.46% 6,192 9.76%
42,146

235
63,461


Saluda 662 27.34% 465 19.21%
1,279

15
2,421


Spartanburg 7,719 30.43% 6,326 24.94%
11,250

74
25,369


Sumter 2,870 19.16% 1,294 8.64%
10,765

49
14,978


Union 908 21.62% 1,224
29.15%
2,048

19
4,199


Williamsburg 1,266 17.40% 578 7.95%
5,380

51
7,275


York 6,967 36.02% 3,250 16.80%
9,020

106
19,343


Total 140,990 26.49% 93,801 17.63%
294,898

55.42%
2,462
532,151
23.69%
28.92%

Delegates: The South Carolina Democratic Party - State Election Results



See also



  • South Carolina primary

  • South Carolina Republican primary, 2008



References





  1. ^ "CNN Election Center 2008: Primary Results". Retrieved May 23, 2010..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "Obama, Huckabee win Iowa".


  3. ^ "New Mexico Gov. Richardson drops out of '08 Race". CNN. January 10, 2008. Retrieved May 23, 2010.


  4. ^ "Kucinich Drops Out". The Washington Post. January 25, 2008. Retrieved May 23, 2010.


  5. ^ "SC Democrats reject Colbert's candidacy". CNN. Retrieved May 23, 2010.


  6. ^ "Colbert on Democratic Rejection". CNN. Retrieved May 23, 2010.


  7. ^ "CNN Map: Campaign money race-". Retrieved May 23, 2010.


  8. ^ "RealClear Politics- Election 2008- South Carolina".


  9. ^ "Pollster.com".


  10. ^ "John Edwards for President- South Carolina".


  11. ^ "CNN Election Center 2008: Primary Exit Poll". Retrieved May 23, 2010.


  12. ^ "SC Dem. Party Election Results".




See also





External links



  • US Election Atlas

  • South Carolina Democratic Party

  • 2008 SC Primary




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