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Primary results by county Clinton: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% 90–100% Obama: 50–60% | |||||||||||||||||||
The2008 Kentucky Democratic presidential primary took place May 20, 2008, and had 51 delegates at stake. The winner in each ofKentucky's six congressional districts was awarded all of that district's delegates, totaling 34. Another 17 delegates were awarded to the statewide winner,Hillary Clinton. The 51 delegates represented Kentucky at theDemocratic National Convention inDenver, Colorado. Nine other unpledged delegates, known assuperdelegates, also attended the convention and cast their votes as well.[1]
Kentucky had aclosed primary, meaning it was open only to registered Democrats. Those wishing to participate in the primary had to register as Democrats 28 days prior to the primary.[1]
There were 3,545 precincts in 120 counties with 1,629,845 Democratic registered voters, and the turnout was 43.0% of the registered voters.[2]
According to a poll fromRasmussen Reports taken before the primary, Hillary Clinton led Barack Obama 56-31 percent in Kentucky with 13 percent undecided.[3]
As of April 30, twosuperdelegates had pledged support for Obama while three had endorsed Clinton.[1]
Primary Date: May 20, 2008
National Pledged Delegates Determined: 51
| Kentucky Democratic Presidential Primary Results – 2008 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | Delegates | ||
| Democratic | Hillary Clinton | 459,511 | 65.48% | 37 | ||
| Democratic | Barack Obama | 209,954 | 29.92% | 14 | ||
| Democratic | Uncommitted | 18,091 | 2.58% | 0 | ||
| Democratic | John Edwards | 14,212 | 2.03% | 0 | ||
| Totals | 701,768 | 100.00% | 51 | |||
| Voter turnout | 43.00% | — | ||||
Hillary Clinton won a decisive two-to-one victory in Kentucky, a state located inthe Appalachian region which had many of the demographics in her favor. According to exit polls, 89 percent of voters in the Kentucky Democratic Primary werewhite and they opted for Clinton by a margin of 72–23 compared to the 9 percent ofAfrican American voters who backed Obama by a margin of 90–7. Clinton won all age groups, all socioeconomic/income classes and educational attainment ladders of voters. Registered Democrats, who comprised 84 percent of the turnout, backed Clinton by a margin of 68–30. She also won all ideological groups. Regarding religion, Clinton dominated all major denominations by two-to-one margins, includingProtestants which backed her 66–28,Roman Catholics supported her 66–31, and other Christians favored Clinton by a margin of 66–30. It was a conclusive landslide victory for Clinton.
Clinton performed extraordinarily well throughout the state of Kentucky, carrying all but two counties:Jefferson County, which containsLouisville, andFayette County which containsLexington. Her best performance was in Southeast Kentucky, located in the heart of Appalachia, an area made up of less educated, lower-income, working-class whites. In fact, it was here where Clinton received her largest margin of victory in a county nationwide:Magoffin County gave Clinton 92.98 percent of the vote while Obama only received a meager 5.00 percent.
Kentucky was another state that highlighted Barack Obama's growing problem among working-class whites, a swing voting bloc also referred to asReagan Democrats who Clinton claimed were crucial to Democrats winning back the White House. Exit polls in Kentucky supported Clinton's claim – of Kentucky voters who voted for Clinton, only one-third of voters said they would vote for Obama should he become the nominee while another one-third said they would vote for presumptiveRepublican presidential nomineeJohn McCain and another one-third said they would not vote at all.