2008 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary explained

Election Name:2008 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary
Country:Oklahoma
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2004 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary
Previous Year:2004
Next Election:2012 United States presidential election in Oklahoma#Republican primary
Next Year:2012
Candidate1:John McCain
Colour1:ce5c17
Home State1:Arizona
Delegate Count1:32
Popular Vote1:122,772
Percentage1:36.64%
Color2:990000
Candidate2:Mike Huckabee
Home State2:Arkansas
Delegate Count2:6
Popular Vote2:111,899
Percentage2:33.40%
Color3:85bb65
Candidate3:Mitt Romney
Home State3:Massachusetts
Delegate Count3:0
Popular Vote3:83,030
Percentage3:24.78%
Elected Members:TN
Outgoing Members:NY
Map Size:275px

The 2008 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary was held on February 5, with 41 delegates at stake.[1] It was a closed primary, meaning only registered Republicans could vote in the election. The primary was on Super Tuesday on the same day as twenty-three other states. John McCain won Oklahoma's primary with 37% of the vote, although Mike Huckabee picked up some delegate votes as well by receiving 33% of the vote.

Eleven candidates appeared on the Oklahoma Republican Party primary: John McCain, Tom Tancredo (withdrawn), Duncan Hunter (withdrawn), Ron Paul, Rudy Giuliani (withdrawn), Jerry Curry, Mitt Romney, Alan Keyes, Fred Thompson (withdrawn), Daniel Ayers Gilbert, and Mike Huckabee.[2]

The filing period ended December 5, 2007, after which candidate was allowed to be added to the ballot. No candidate could withdraw his name after the withdrawal deadline of December 7, 2007. Consequently, four candidates' names appeared on the ballot despite their withdrawal from the election.[3]

Polling

Early polling in Oklahoma showed Oklahoma Republicans preferred Rudy Giuliani over John McCain. A February 9–13, 2007 by the American Research Group showed Oklahoma Republicans preferred Rudy Giuliani, 37%, over John McCain, 21%.[4] Three months later, a May 16, 2007 Tulsa World/KOTV poll showed Rudy Giuliani, 32%, retained his lead over John McCain, 23%.[5]

By December 2007, Mike Huckabee had started to make headway in both national polling and in Oklahoma. A December 16–19, 2007 Tulsa World/KOTV poll showed Mike Huckabee 29%, John McCain 17%, and Rudy Giuliani 11%.[6] Huckabee retained his lead leading into mid-January. A January 11–13, 2008 Survey USA poll showed Mike Huckabee 31% and John McCain 29%. Rudy Giuliani had slipped to fourth with 11%.[7]

With the primaries less than two weeks away, John McCain started polling better than Mike Huckabee. A January 27, 2008 poll by Survey USA showed Mike Huckabee with 28% and John McCain 37%.[8] With just two days before the Oklahoma Republican primary, another Survey USA poll showed John McCain retained his lead at 37% and Mike Huckabee at 32%.[9]

Allocation of delegates

Oklahoma sent 41 delegates to the 2008 Republican National Convention:

In the event of a brokered convention, all of Oklahoma's 41 delegates may vote for any Republican presidential candidate regardless of the state primary results.

Results

Key: Withdrew
prior to contest
2008 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary[12]
CandidateVotesPercentageNational delegates
John McCain122,77236.64%32
Mike Huckabee111,89933.40%6
Mitt Romney83,03024.78%0
Ron Paul11,1833.34%0
Rudy Giuliani2,4120.72%0
Fred Thompson1,9240.57%0
Alan Keyes8170.24%0
Thomas L. Kane3870.12%0
Duncan Hunter3170.09%0
Tom Tancredo1890.06%0
Daniel Gilbert1240.04%0
Totals335,054100.00%38

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: The Primary Season: 2008 Republican Calendar. 2008-01-19 . The New York Times.
  2. Web site: Presidential Preferential Primary Election February 5, 2008 . Oklahoma State Election Board.
  3. http://www.ok.gov/~elections/08cal.html 2008 ELECTION CALENDAR
  4. http://americanresearchgroup.com/pres08/okrep8-701.html Oklahoma Republican Presidential Preference
  5. http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?articleID=070516_238_A1_hREPU14234 Tulsa World: Race for President: Poll reveals early leaders
  6. Web site: Tulsa World . February 5, 2008 . March 3, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080303151407/http://www.tulsaworld.com/common/printerfriendlystory.aspx?articleID=071226_1_A1_hButC86400 . dead .
  7. http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=ac9c6387-bf8e-4fe2-a109-997a13ada84c SurveyUSA Election Poll #13165
  8. http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=7708abda-ffe8-4f6d-bf3b-986ed87f2b73 SurveyUSA Election Poll #13248
  9. http://www.surveyusa.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=511fb808-a90f-4f22-aaae-23bbb2048781 SurveyUSA Election Poll #13301
  10. http://www.thegreenpapers.com/P08/OK-R.phtml Oklahoma Republican Delegation 2008
  11. News: RESULTS: Oklahoma . CNN . 2008-02-05 . 2008-02-05.
  12. Web site: Presidential Preferential Primary Election . OKLAHOMA STATE ELECTION BOARD . 2008-02-05 . 2008-02-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080208121156/http://www.ok.gov/~elections/08ppp.html . 2008-02-08.