2008 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses explained

Election Name:2008 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses
Country:North Dakota
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2004 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses
Previous Year:2004
Next Election:2016 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses
Next Year:2016
Image1:Barack Obama Senate portrait crop.jpg
Candidate1:Barack Obama
Colour1:800080
Home State1:Illinois
Delegate Count1:8
Popular Vote1:11,625
Percentage1:61.15%
Candidate2:Hillary Clinton
Colour2:D4AA00
Home State2:New York
Delegate Count2:5
Popular Vote2:6,948
Percentage2:36.55%
Map Size:320px
Outgoing Members:NY
Elected Members:OK

The 2008 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 5, 2008, one of the many Super Tuesday nominating contests held that day. Barack Obama won the caucuses, securing 8 out of 13 national delegates.[1]

Process

The caucus was a party-run primary, with over 100 locations throughout the state, held between 2:00 pm and 8:00 pm Central Standard Time. Eligible voters included all eligible voters who cast a ballot for a Democrat in the last general election or planned to in the next election, and would not cast a ballot in the Republican caucus. All voters were required to sign a statement of eligibility, but their status was not otherwise checked. All ballots were secret, and unlike most caucuses, North Dakota's featured no physical division into preference groups.[2]

Actual delegates were apportioned at Legislative District conventions held in February and March based on the results of the caucuses in each legislative district. At the state convention in April, delegates from the Legislative District conventions selected pledged delegates to the national convention. A minimum 15% threshold was required at the local caucus, legislative district, and state convention levels.[1] A unique feature of the North Dakota Dem-NPL process was that delegates were elected from Preference Caucuses which may or may not relate to candidates. National convention delegates were elected by an Education Caucus; a Labor Caucus; the Prairie Campaign for Economic Democracy; and Uncommitted, among others. Any group wishing to affiliate and could secure 15% of the state convention votes was allowed to elect two national convention delegates. The delegation was supposed to give collective good-faith consideration to the Feb. 5 presidential preference caucus, which elected no delegates to the district or state conventions.

Results

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

Precinct caucus results

Caucus date: February 5, 2008

National pledged delegates determined: 0 (of 13)

Key: Withdrew
prior to contest
North Dakota Democratic presidential precinct caucuses, 2008[3]
CandidatePrecinct delegatesPercentageEstimated national delegates[4]
Barack Obama11,62561.15%8
Hillary Clinton6,94836.55%5
John Edwards2831.49%0
Dennis Kucinich720.38%0
Mike Gravel310.16%0
Others530.28%0
Totals19,012100.00%13

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: North Dakota Democratic Delegation 2008 . The Green Papers . 2008-02-01.
  2. Web site: Bismarck Tribune .
  3. Web site: Democratic-NPL Party . 2008-02-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080220203708/http://www.demnpl.com/vertical/Sites/%7B69334758-1697-4DC0-A998-EAD4B0C11D10%7D/uploads/%7BD94E6AFA-A2AE-43E9-A316-E6DD0A6190B9%7D.PDF . 2008-02-20 . dead .
  4. Web site: Election Center 2008: North Dakota Election Results . . 2008-02-05 . 2008-02-06.