2008 Illinois Democratic presidential primary explained

Election Name:2008 Illinois Democratic presidential primary
Country:Illinois
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2004 Illinois Democratic presidential primary
Previous Year:2004
Next Election:2012 Illinois Democratic presidential primary
Next Year:2012
Candidate1:Barack Obama
Colour1:800080
Home State1:Illinois
Popular Vote1:1,318,234
Percentage1:64.66%
Delegate Count1:104
Candidate2:Hillary Clinton
Colour2:D4AA00
Home State2:New York
Popular Vote2:667,930
Percentage2:32.76%
Delegate Count2:49
Map Size:280px
Outgoing Members:ID
Elected Members:KS

The 2008 Illinois Democratic presidential primary took place on Super Tuesday, February 5, 2008, with 153 delegates at stake. Each of Illinois's 19 congressional districts was proportionally allocated to candidates who had received 15% or more of the vote in that district, totaling 100. Another 53 delegates were also proportionally allocated to candidates who had received 15% or more of the vote statewide. The 153 delegates represented Illinois at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado. Thirty-two other unpledged delegates, known as superdelegates, also attended the convention and cast their votes as well.

Polls

Polls indicated that then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama was leading then-U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton by double digits in the days before the contest in his home state of Illinois.[1]

Results

See also: Results of the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries.

2008 Illinois Democratic Presidential Primary Results
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageDelegates
DemocraticBarack Obama1,318,234 64.66%104
DemocraticHillary Clinton667,93032.76%49
DemocraticJohn Edwards39,7191.95%0
DemocraticDennis Kucinich4,2340.21%0
DemocraticJoe Biden3,7880.19%0
DemocraticBill Richardson3,5380.17%0
DemocraticChristopher Dodd1,1710.06%0
Totals2,038,614100.00%153
Voter turnout%

Chicago Public Radio reported on March 13, 2008, that the delegate counts were recalculated and Obama won 106 delegates to 47 forClinton.[2]

Analysis

It was no surprise that Barack Obama cruised to a landslide victory in Illinois, the state he had represented in the U.S. Senate since 2005. He enjoyed massive support in his state among all demographics. According to exit polls, 57 percent of voters in the Illinois Democratic Primary were white and they opted for Obama 57–41; 24 percent of voters were African American and they, too, backed Obama 93–5; and 17 percent of voters in the primary were Hispanic/Latino and they narrowly backed Obama 50–49. Obama won all age groups but tied Clinton among senior citizens aged 65 and over. He won all voters in the state of all educational attainment levels as well as income/socioeconomic classes. He won all ideological groups and voters from both parties as well as self-identified Independents. Regarding religion, Obama won every major denomination except Roman Catholics, who narrowly backed Clinton 50-48 percent. Obama won Protestants by a margin of 58–38, other Christians 79–19, other religions 82–17, and atheists/agnostics 78–21.

Obama performed extremely well statewide and racked up massive victories in his home city of Chicago as well as its suburbs and the metropolitan area. He also won Northern Illinois as well as the collar counties by substantial victories. Clinton's best performance was in Southern Illinois among the more rural and conservative counties that are majority white, although Obama still won the region as a whole.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Illinois Democratic Primary . Real Clear Politics . 2008-02-04.
  2. Web site: Clinton Loses Two Illinois Delegates . Chicago Public Radio (WBEZ) . 2008-04-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080314121045/http://www.wbez.org/Content.aspx?audioID=19503 . 2008-03-14 . dead .