2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries

(Redirected from Democratic Party's US presidential nomination in 2008)

The Democratic Party presidential primaries of 2008 was an American political event. In various states, various Democratic candidates asked people and delegates to vote for them in primaries and caucuses. Candidates won delegates based on a percentage of votes (in primaries). There were 4,233 delegates. A candidate would have to get 2,110 delegates to win the nomination. The two front-runners of the campaign were New York Senator Hillary Clinton and Illinois Senator Barack Obama. Although Clinton led in the beginning, Obama soon gained the lead. Obama went on to become the first African-American presidential candidate in American history.

2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries

← 2004 January 3 – June 3, 2008 2012 →
  Barack Obama Senate portrait crop.jpg Hillary Rodham Clinton-cropped.jpg
Candidate Barack Obama Hillary Clinton
Home state Illinois New York
Delegate count 2,272.5 1,978
Contests won 33 23
Popular vote 17,535,458 17,493,836<
Percentage 48.0%

Democratic presidential primary, 2008.svg
First place by first-instance vote

     Barack Obama (33)      Hillary Clinton (23)


HillaryObamaPrimaries2008PopularVote.svg
Popular vote margins

Clinton      0–10%      10–20%      20–30%      30–85%

Obama      0–10%      10–20%      20–30%      30–85%

(popular vote winners and delegate winners differ in five contests: NH, NV, MO, TX, and GU)

Previous Democratic nominee

John Kerry

Democratic nominee

Barack Obama

Template:Joe Biden


2008 Democratic Party Presidential Primaries Media