2008 Nebraska Democratic presidential caucuses explained

Election Name:2008 Nebraska Democratic presidential caucuses
Country:Nebraska
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2004 Nebraska Democratic presidential caucuses
Previous Year:2004
Next Election:2016 Nebraska Democratic presidential caucuses and primary
Next Year:2016
Image1:Barack Obama Senate portrait crop.jpg
Candidate1:Barack Obama
Colour1:800080
Home State1:Illinois
Delegate Count1:16
Popular Vote1:26,126
Percentage1:67.56%
Candidate2:Hillary Clinton
Colour2:D4AA00
Home State2:New York
Delegate Count2:8
Popular Vote2:12,445
Percentage2:32.18%
Map Size:300px
Outgoing Members:LA
Elected Members:VI

The 2008 Nebraska Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 9, 2008, where 24 of the state's 31 convention delegates were chosen.[1] [2] Like he did throughout many other states that held caucuses instead of primaries, Barack Obama won the Nebraska Democratic Caucus by more than a two-to-one margin of victory over Hillary Clinton. On May 13, 2008, the state also held a non-binding primary election which Obama also won but the margin of victory was considerably smaller.

Process

The Nebraska Democratic Caucus was open to all registered Democratic voters. Voters who were eligible to vote in the general election but were unregistered or registered with another party could register as Democrats at the caucus. Absentee votes for the disabled, those on active military duty, and full-time students were permitted.

After signing in, participants gathered into preference groups for each candidate. A minimum 15 percent of participants was required for viability. Only members of non-viable groups were permitted to realign to other viable groups. Afterwards, delegates were divided and elected to the county conventions in June.[3] [4]

The primary election held on May 13 was not binding on any county delegates, all of whom had been selected at the caucuses. However, it may have played a role in showing superdelegates to the Democratic National Convention the preference of Nebraska Democrats.[5]

County delegates were committed to vote in the county conventions for the candidate they had supported during the caucuses. However, the same viability rules applied as at the precinct caucuses.[6] The county conventions elected delegates to the Nebraska Democratic Party State Convention which took place June 20–22, who then elected delegates to the Democratic National Convention.[3] [7] The State Convention chose eight delegates pledged to Clinton and 16 pledged to Obama, the same number as the estimates following the main caucuses.

Results

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

Precinct Caucus Results

Caucus Date: February 9, 2008National Pledged Delegates Determined: 16 (of 24)

2008 Nebraska Democratic Presidential Caucus Results
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageDelegates
DemocraticBarack Obama26,126 67.56%16
DemocraticHillary Clinton12,44532.18%8
DemocraticUncommitted 99 0.26%0
Totals38,670100.00%24
Voter turnout%

Primary

The Nebraska Democratic Party does not use the results of the primary to determine its delegates.

Primary Date: May 13, 2008National Pledged Delegates Determined: 0 (of 24)

2008 Nebraska Democratic Presidential Primary Results
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageDelegates
DemocraticBarack Obama46,670 49.06%0
DemocraticHillary Clinton43,97946.24%0
Democratic3,886 4.09%0
Democratic584 0.61%0
Totals95,119100.00%0
Voter turnout%

Analysis

Barack Obama performed extremely well throughout the state of Nebraska in the caucus, winning a majority of counties. His large margin of victory can be attributed to his overwhelming wins in Douglas County, which contains Omaha, where he won with 77.12 percent of the vote, as well as in Lancaster County, which contains the state capital of Lincoln and is home to the University of Nebraska. Most of Clinton's wins in the state came in the far more rural counties in Western Nebraska. However, during the non-binding primary, Clinton carried almost every county in Nebraska except for Douglas and Lancaster counties which gave Obama the edge and narrow victory.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Nebraska Democratic Delegation 2008 . 2008-02-06 . The Green Papers.
  2. Web site: 2008 Presidential Caucus Results. Nebraska Democratic Party. 2008-02-10. 2008-02-10. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080211095045/http://www.nebraskademocrats.org/content/1391/2008-Presidential-Caucus-Results. 2008-02-11.
  3. Web site: Archived copy . 2008-02-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080508030754/http://www.nebraskademocrats.org/page/-/APPROVED-CAUCUS-RULES.pdf . 2008-05-08 . dead .
  4. http://www.thegreenpapers.com/P08/NE-D.phtml#0209 Nebraska Democratic Delegation 2008
  5. News: Nebraska Democratic Primary Might Still Count . Associated Press . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080309132136/http://www.kolnkgin.com/news/headlines/16387216.html . 2008-03-09 .
  6. Web site: 2008 Nebraska Democratic Party 2008 Presidential Caucus & Presidential Preference Process Rules . Nebraska Democratic Party. 2007-06-15. 2009-01-15.
  7. http://www.thegreenpapers.com/P08/NE-D.phtml#0209 Nebraska Democratic Delegation 2008