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2008 Republican Party presidential primaries

From January 3 to June 3, 2008, voters of the Republican Party chose their nominee for president in the 2008 United States presidential election. Senator John McCain of Arizona was selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 2008 Republican National Convention held from Monday, September 1, through Thursday, September 4, 2008, in Saint Paul, Minnesota. President George W. Bush was ineligible to be elected to a third term due to the term limits established by the 22nd Amendment.

2008 Republican Party presidential primaries

← 2004 January 3 to June 3, 2008 2012 →

2,173 delegates to the Republican National Convention
1,087 delegates votes needed to win
 
Candidate John McCain Mitt Romney
Home state Arizona Massachusetts
Delegate count 1,575 271
Contests won 37 11
Popular vote 9,902,797[1] 4,699,788
Percentage 46.7% 22.2%

 
Candidate Mike Huckabee Ron Paul
Home state Arkansas Texas
Delegate count 278 35
Contests won 8 0
Popular vote 4,276,046 1,160,403
Percentage 20.1% 5.6%

2008 California Republican presidential primary2008 Oregon Republican presidential primary2008 Washington Republican presidential caucuses and primary2008 Idaho Republican presidential primary2008 Nevada Republican presidential caucuses2008 Utah Republican presidential primary2008 Arizona Republican presidential primary2008 Montana Republican presidential caucuses and primary2008 Wyoming Republican presidential caucuses2008 Colorado Republican presidential caucuses2008 New Mexico Republican presidential primary2008 North Dakota Republican presidential caucuses2008 South Dakota Republican presidential primary2008 Nebraska Republican presidential primary2008 Kansas Republican presidential caucuses2008 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary2008 Texas Republican presidential primary2008 Minnesota Republican presidential caucuses2008 Iowa Republican presidential caucuses2008 Missouri Republican presidential primary2008 Arkansas Republican presidential primary2008 Louisiana Republican presidential caucuses and primary2008 Wisconsin Republican presidential primary2008 Illinois Republican presidential primary2008 Michigan Republican presidential primary2008 Indiana Republican presidential primary2008 Ohio Republican presidential primary2008 Kentucky Republican presidential primary2008 Tennessee Republican presidential primary2008 Mississippi Republican presidential primary2008 Alabama Republican presidential primary2008 Georgia Republican presidential primary2008 Florida Republican presidential primary2008 South Carolina Republican presidential primary2008 North Carolina Republican presidential primary2008 Virginia Republican presidential primary2008 West Virginia Republican presidential caucuses and primary2008 District of Columbia Republican presidential primary2008 Maryland Republican presidential primary2008 Delaware Republican presidential primary2008 Pennsylvania Republican presidential primary2008 New Jersey Republican presidential primary2008 New York Republican presidential primary2008 Connecticut Republican presidential primary2008 Rhode Island Republican presidential primary2008 Vermont Republican presidential primary2008 New Hampshire Republican presidential primary2008 Maine Republican presidential caucuses2008 Massachusetts Republican presidential primary2008 Alaska Republican presidential caucuses2008 Hawaii Republican presidential caucuses2008 Puerto Rico Republican presidential caucuses2008 United States Virgin Islands Republican presidential caucuses2008 Northern Mariana Islands Republican presidential caucuses2008 American Samoa Republican presidential caucuses2008 Guam Republican presidential caucuses
First place by popular vote and plurality of delegates

Previous Republican nominee

George W. Bush

Republican nominee

John McCain

In a crowded primary of several prominent Republicans eyeing the nomination, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani was the early frontrunner.[2] However, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee won the Iowa Caucuses as he gained momentum just two months prior to the primary. Moderate U.S. Senator and former presidential candidate John McCain won the New Hampshire and Florida primaries. After failing to win in Florida, Giuliani ended his campaign.

McCain ultimately won the nomination after winning most of the primaries on Super Tuesday. He was officially nominated at the 2008 Republican National Convention on September 4, 2008, but went on to lose the general election to Barack Obama.

Candidates edit

Notes for the following table: Delegate counts is the final estimated delegate count.[3]

Nominee edit

The vast majority of primaries were of the "winner-take-all" variety, and convention rules meant that no one with less than five states in their "pockets" would be allowed to have their names placed in nomination. This guaranteed that the primary season would be very short. McCain won New Hampshire, South Carolina and Florida and thus became nearly unstoppable. After decisive victories on super Tuesday and the potomac primary McCain became the presumptive nominee. Candidates are listed by delegate counts.

Candidate Most recent office Home state Estimated delegate count (RCP) Candidacy Delegations with plurality Running mate
 
McCain, JohnJohn McCain
U.S. Senator from Arizona
(1987–2018)
 
Arizona
1,575
72.5%
[4]
 
Secured nomination:
March 4, 2008

(Campaign)
31
  NH, SC, FL, NY, CA, IL, MO, OK, CT, AR, NJ, DE  
WA, VA, MD, WI, VT, RI, OH, TX, MS, PA, IN
NC, NE, HI, KY, OR, ID, SD, NM
Non-states: DC, PR, MP, AS, VI, GU
Sarah Palin

Withdrew during primaries edit

Candidate Most recent office Home state Estimated delegate count (RCP) Candidacy Delegations with plurality
 
Huckabee, MikeMike Huckabee
Governor of Arkansas
(1996–2007)
 
Arkansas
278
12.8%
 
Withdrew:
March 4, 2008
(Campaign)
[5]
8
AL, AR, GA, IA, WV, TN
KS, LA
 
Romney, MittMitt Romney
Governor of Massachusetts
(2003–2007)
 
Massachusetts
271
12.5%
 
Withdrew:
February 7, 2008
(Campaign)
11
MI, NV, WY, ME, MA, MT
UT, MN, CO, ND, AK
 
Paul, RonRon Paul
U.S. Representative
from Texas

(1976–1977, 1979–1985, 1997–2013)
 
Texas
35
1.6%
 
Lost nomination:
June 12, 2008
(Campaign)
0
 
Thompson, FredFred Thompson
U.S. Senator from Tennessee
(1994–2003)
 
Tennessee
11
0.5%
 
Withdrew:
January 22, 2008
(Campaign)
0
 
Keyes, AlanAlan Keyes
Asst. Secretary of State
 for International Organization Affairs 

(1985–1987)
 
Maryland
2 Withdrew:
April 15, 2008
(Campaign)
0
 
Hunter, DuncanDuncan Hunter
U.S. Representative
for California's 52nd

(1993–2009)
 
California
1
Withdrew:
January 19, 2008
(Campaign)
0
 
Giuliani, RudyRudy Giuliani
Mayor of New York City
(1994–2001)
 
New York
0
 
Withdrew:
January 30, 2008
(Campaign)
0

Withdrew before primaries edit

Candidate Most recent office Home state Estimated delegate count (RCP) Candidacy Delegations with plurality
 
Brownback, SamSam Brownback
U.S. Senator from Kansas
(1996–2011)
 
Kansas
0
 
Withdrew:
October 19, 2007
(Campaign)
0
 
H. Cox, JohnJohn H. Cox
Founder of
Cox Financial Group Ltd.

 
Illinois
0
Withdrew:
December 2007
(Campaign)
0
 
Gilmore, JimJim Gilmore
Governor of Virginia
(1998–2002)
 
Virginia
0
 
Withdrew:
July 14, 2007
(Campaign)
0
 
Tancredo, TomTom Tancredo
U.S. Representative
for Colorado's 6th

(1999–2009)
 
Colorado
0
 
Withdrew:
December 20, 2007
(Campaign)
0
 
Thompson, TommyTommy Thompson
United States Secretary of Health and Human Services
(2001–2005)
 
Wisconsin
0
 
Withdrew:
August 12, 2007
(Campaign)
0

Calendar edit

Primary key[6]
Primary type Explanation
Closed Voters may only select candidates of the party for which they are registered
Open Anyone is allowed to vote for candidates from either party
Modified open Voters registered to a party may only select candidates of that party, but independents may choose candidates from either party
Caucus Party members meet among themselves to select candidates. Rules may be very complicated, including members having to choose publicly by standing in groups by preference, instead of secret ballot
Primary An election-type selection process, with general voters going to polling places for a secret ballot
Convention Delegates chosen locally by each party meet in a central location and select a candidate
Presidential preference Those polled get to list candidates in the order of whom they like most. As candidates are eliminated, the highest remaining on their list becomes their vote
WTA Winner-Take-All – whoever wins the most votes in the state, even if not a majority, gets all of the delegates
Proportional The state's delegates are divided up among the candidates, in proportion to their percentage of the vote

Republican candidates in the 2008 U.S. presidential election campaigned for the nomination of their party in a series of primary elections and caucus events.[7]

Unlike the Democratic Party, which mandates a proportional representation for delegate selection, the Republican Party has no such limitation. For states with primaries, some states choose to use the "winner-take-all" method to allocate delegates within a state, while others do winner-take-all within a specific congressional district, and still others use the proportional process. Unlike the Democratic Party, state party by-laws determine whether each delegate is pledged and for how long the delegate is pledged.

In caucus states, most state parties use a two pronged process. A straw poll, often called a presidential preference poll, is conducted of the attendees at the caucus. The results are released to the media and published on the state party website. Delegates are then elected to the county conventions. It is at the county conventions that delegates are elected to state conventions, and from the state convention to the national convention. At each level, delegates may be bound or unbound to a candidate. If unbound, delegates are not obligated to follow the results of the presidential preference poll. Thus, all estimates of delegates from caucus states are dependent on state party by-laws.

Campaign edit

2007 edit

With Vice President Dick Cheney choosing not to seek the nomination, making this election the first time since 1928 that neither the current President or Vice President was a candidate, and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice ruling herself out, the race for the 2008 presidential nomination was wide open. It officially began in March 2006 when John H. Cox became the first candidate to enter the 2008 race. The Democratic takeover of both houses of Congress and President Bush's unpopularity were strong issues for the GOP field. At the beginning of 2007, the announced Republican field was former Governor of Wisconsin and Cabinet member Tommy Thompson, former Governor of Virginia Jim Gilmore, and Senator of Kansas Sam Brownback. Former senator of Virginia George Allen was considered a top contender until his loss in the midterm elections. He announced on December 10, 2006, that he would not seek the 2008 nomination. In early January former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney announced he was forming an exploratory committee. Afterwards several others announced they were running, including U.S. Congressman Ron Paul, Mike Huckabee of Arkansas, Rudy Giuliani of New York City, U.S. Senator John McCain, U.S. Congressman Duncan Hunter, and U.S. Congressman Tom Tancredo. A poll released in early February had Giuliani leading with 32% and John McCain second with 18%. By early March, Giuliani had become the frontrunner. Alan Keyes and former Senator and actor Fred Thompson entered the race later in September.

The first to drop out of the race was former Virginia Governor Jim Gilmore in July. After that Tommy Thompson also dropped out in August after finishing sixth in the Ames Iowa straw poll. Then pro-life advocate Sam Brownback dropped out of the race in October. In December, staunch illegal-immigration opponent Tom Tancredo and businessman John H. Cox also left the race.

Iowa and New Hampshire edit

 
2008 Iowa Republican Caucus county map

On January 3, 2008, the Iowa caucuses began. The final averaged polling results from Real Clear Politics showed Mike Huckabee at 30%, Romney at 27%, McCain and Thompson tied at 12%, Paul at 7%, and Giuliani at 6%.[8] Among those surveyed in Exit Polling data, 45% cited themselves as very conservative and voted for Huckabee 35% to Romney's 23% and Thompson's 22%. Among those who called themselves "somewhat conservative" (43%), Huckabee won 34% to Romney's 27% and McCain's 18%.[9]

Final Results showed Huckabee swept much of the state with the exception of the western and eastern portions of the state which included Davenport, Cedar Rapids, as well as Sioux City. Romney swept the eastern and western portions of the state and Paul took one southern county. The final results in Iowa were Huckabee with 34%, Romney with 25%, Thompson and McCain each with 13%, Paul with 10% and Giuliani with 4%.

 
2008 New Hampshire Primary results by municipality.
  Tie
  No votes

In the New Hampshire Primary, both McCain and Romney had gambled much on the state. McCain had staked much on his grassroots efforts in the state he won in 2000, as well as the state with one of the most independent voting blocks which was McCain's strong suit. Romney, coming from neighboring Massachusetts was known by many in New Hampshire and even owned a home in the state of New Hampshire. Pre-Primary polling showed McCain with a slight edge (32–28%) with Huckabee leading Giuliani for third (12–9%).

On Primary night, McCain won 37–32% and Huckabee beat Giuliani for third 11–9%. After the results, Huckabee decided to focus on the South Carolina primary, while both McCain and Romney went to Michigan where polls showed a competitive race between the two.

Michigan edit

With different winners in Iowa and New Hampshire – and Mitt Romney taking the lower-profile Wyoming caucus – the January 15 Michigan primary loomed as an important battle. Polls after New Hampshire showed a tight race between McCain and Romney, with Huckabee a close third.[10][11] Many saw Michigan as Romney's last chance for a campaign-saving win after disappointments in the first two races.[12][13] Others said that a win in Michigan could cement McCain's status as the "front-runner" for the nomination.[14] McCain's campaign garnered about $1 million in newly contributed funds immediately after the New Hampshire win,[15] but still had $3.5 million in bank debt.[16]

Nevertheless, some polls showed McCain getting a significant national bounce from his New Hampshire win; the January 11 CNN nationwide poll had him at 34 percent support, a 21-point increase from where he had been just a month before, and a significant lead over Huckabee (21 percent) and Giuliani (18 percent).[17] As the Michigan race entered its final days, McCain gained some notoriety by sending out mailers there and in South Carolina attacking Romney's tax record and touting his own. A Romney campaign spokesman called the ad "as sloppy as it is factually incorrect", and FactCheck.org called the piece "misleading." McCain responded by saying, "It's not negative campaigning. I think it's what his record is." "It's a tough business," he added.[18][19]

The dominant issue in Michigan was the state of the economy. Michigan had by far the nation's largest unemployment rate, at 7.4 percent, and was continuing to lose jobs from its historical manufacturing base.[20] McCain offered a bit of his "straight talk", saying that "There are some jobs that aren't coming back to Michigan," and proposing federal job training plans and other remedies to compensate.[20] Romney seized on McCain's statement as overly pessimistic and promoted instead his family heritage – "[I've] got the automobile industry in my blood veins" – as well as his being a Washington outsider who would go there and "turn Washington inside out."[20]

In the end, McCain finished second in the primary behind Romney, gaining 30 percent of the vote to Romney's 39 percent.[21]

Nevada and South Carolina edit

Mitt Romney was heavily favored to win Nevada, leading 34% to 19% in polls. He exceeded expectations, earning 51% of the vote with Ron Paul beating out John McCain for second. Romney campaigned hard in Nevada and did not campaign in South Carolina, while the other leading Republican candidates, John McCain and Mike Huckabee, kept their focus on South Carolina. Nevada was not subject to the Republican party cutting in half the number of delegates the state can send to the national convention, and neither was South Carolina. However, Nevada had more delegates at stake than South Carolina. A win in Nevada extended Romney's lead in total delegates. Nevada's large Mormon population helped Romney win the state.[22]

After coming last in this caucus, Duncan Hunter withdrew his bid for the nomination.

Mike Huckabee needed to win South Carolina for his campaign to remain viable. RealClearPolitics reported that the average support from polls placed McCain in the lead with 27%, followed by Huckabee with 25%, Romney with 15%, Thompson with 15%, Paul with 4%, and Giuliani with 3%. Thompson started attacking Mike Huckabee heavily, questioning his conservative credentials. But in the end McCain narrowly won by 14,743 or 3%, putting McCain as the frontrunner in Florida.

 
Mike Huckabee giving his concession speech after the 2008 South Carolina Presidential Primary in Columbia, SC.

Fred Thompson only placed third, even though he had started to campaign in South Carolina immediately after Iowa and before the other candidates had started campaigning there. He withdrew the next day.

Florida edit

Rudy Giuliani campaigned heavily in Florida, which he expected to use as his "launch pad" for a "strong showing" on Super Tuesday.[23] He campaigned almost entirely in Florida, and largely ignored South Carolina and other states voting before February 5. Polls taken before the primary showed that John McCain was the slight front runner over Mitt Romney.[24] Giuliani had been campaigning with virtually no opposition;[25] however, following the South Carolina Republican primary, 2008, several candidates flew down to Florida to begin campaigning up to January 29 when the primary occurred.[26] RealClearPolitics reported that the average support from polls taken in the days immediately prior to primary day placed McCain slightly in the lead with 31%, followed by Romney with 30%, Giuliani with 15%, Huckabee with 13%, and Paul with 4%.[27] Former Senator Fred Thompson and Rep. Duncan Hunter, though already out of the race, still remained on the ballot in the Florida primary.

McCain was able to ride a last-minute endorsement by then-Republican Governor Charlie Crist[28] to a five-point victory on January 29.[29] He took all 57 delegates in Florida's winner-take-all contest.[30] (The state's delegate total had been reduced by half due to RNC rules about primaries held before February 5.)[31] Giuliani, having banked heavily on Florida, ended his campaign the following day.[32]

Super Tuesday edit

Super Tuesday
 
Former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney
 
Former Arkansas Governor
Mike Huckabee
February 5, 2008, called Super Tuesday, 2008, saw 21 contests held from Massachusetts to California.

Nominating Contests Held – 21

  • Won by John McCain – 9
  • Won by Mitt Romney – 7
  • Won by Mike Huckabee – 5

Pledged Delegates at Stake – 901[33]

  • Won by John McCain – 568
  • Won by Mitt Romney – 176
  • Won by Mike Huckabee – 147

Delegate Standing on February 7

  • McCain – 680
  • Romney (out) – 270
  • Huckabee – 176
Information from CNN
 
McCain reacts to his Super Tuesday victories during a celebration that night at the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in Phoenix.

On January 31 McCain received the endorsement of California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger[34] and began campaigning with him.[35] This was a key endorsement, as California was one of the Super Tuesday states and had more delegates than any other state. The same day, Governor Rick Perry of Texas threw his support behind McCain.[36] Perry had previously been a Giuliani supporter, while Schwarzenegger had refrained from endorsing either McCain or Giuliani because he counted both men as friends.[36][37] Meanwhile, Romney, still burning about McCain's Iraq withdrawal timetable charge, compared McCain to disgraced former President Richard Nixon, saying that McCain's claim was "reminiscent of the Nixon era" and that "I don't think I want to see our party go back to that kind of campaigning."[35]

McCain won his home state of Arizona, taking all 53 of the state's delegates and the largest of the Super Tuesday prizes, winning nearly all of California's 173 delegates. McCain also scored wins in Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Missouri, New Jersey, New York and Oklahoma. Huckabee also made surprise wins in states he had polled behind in previously like Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee. Huckabee also won the first contest of Super Tuesday in West Virginia. Romney won his home state of Massachusetts. He also won Utah, Colorado, and Minnesota.[38]

The next day, McCain appeared confident that he would be the Republican nominee. Estimates showed him with 707 delegates – nearly 60% of the total needed to win the nomination. He began to appeal to disaffected conservatives, saying: "We share the common principles and values and ideas for the future of this country based on a fundamental conservative political philosophy, which has been my record."[39] He also suggested that the right wing of the party "calm down a little bit" and begin to look for areas of agreement. Meanwhile, Romney advisers privately expressed doubts about whether their candidate could realistically hope to defeat McCain, and it was unclear if Romney would spend significant money on key February 12 contests in Virginia and Maryland.

Later February contests edit

Both McCain and Romney addressed the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, DC on February 7, while Mike Huckabee spoke on February 9. Romney used his speech to announce the end of his campaign, saying, "Now if I fight on in my campaign, all the way to the convention – (cheers, applause). I want you to know I've given this a lot of thought. I'd forestall the launch of a national campaign and, frankly, I'd be making it easier for Senator Clinton or Obama to win. Frankly, in this time of war, I simply cannot let my campaign be a part of aiding a surrender to terror."[40] McCain spoke about an hour later, again appealing to right-wing uncertainty about his ideology.

He focused on his opposition to abortion and gun control, as well as his support for lower taxes and free-market health care solutions.[41][42] He told the CPAC audience that he arrived in Washington as "a foot soldier in the Reagan Revolution", and addressed the issue of illegal immigration – one of the major issues where conservatives have attacked McCain. He said that "it would be among my highest priorities to secure our borders first", before addressing other immigration laws.[43] Mike Huckabee spoke to CPAC two days later and said, "I know that there was some speculation that I might come here today to announce that I would be getting out of the race. But I want to make sure you understand. Am I quitting? Well, let's get that settled right now. No, I'm not. And the reason is simple – I never learned arithmetic. You see folks, while I didn't get a college degree in mathematics and writing, I majored in miracles. Mathematically impossible miracles. It is because I go back to that which helped crystallize in me a conservative viewpoint as a teenager when it wasn't easy or popular to be a Republican or a conservative in my hometown, because I do believe that America is about making choices, not simply echoing that of others. Let others join the "Me, too" crowd. But I didn't get where I am today and I didn't fight the battles in a state that, when I became its governor, was 90 percent Democrat, by simply echoing the voices of others. I did it by staking out a choice, stating that choice, making that choice and fighting for that choice, to believe that some things were right, some things were wrong, and it's better to be right and even to not win than it is to be wrong and to be a part of the crowd."[44]

February 9 saw voting in Louisiana, Kansas and Washington state. Huckabee won an easy victory in Kansas, claiming all 36 of the state's delegates to the national convention. Only 14,016 votes were cast, and the McCain campaign expressed no concern over the lightly attended caucus. However, social conservatives had a strong presence in the Kansas Republican party, and the results served to highlight conservative dissatisfaction with the Senator.[45][46][47] Louisiana was much closer, but Huckabee won there as well, beating McCain by less than one percentage point.[48] McCain was declared the winner of the Washington caucuses, where 18 delegates were at stake. The February 19 primary would determine the other 19 delegates from the state. When McCain was declared the winner of the caucuses, with a lead of only 242 (3,468 to 3,226) over Huckabee and counting stopped with only 87% of the precincts reporting,[49] Huckabee's campaign indicated that they would challenge the results.[50][51]

Next up was the Potomac primary on February 12, with voting in Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia. McCain swept the three races and took all 113 delegates which were at stake.[52][53]

The next day, the McCain camp released a memo calling a Huckabee win "mathematically impossible." In truth, however, it was not impossible. In fact, if Huckabee failed to reach 1191 delegates but succeeded in keeping McCain from reaching 1191, then the result would have been a brokered convention.

With the media declaring McCain the "presumptive nominee", McCain began to focus on the Democrats, particularly leading candidate Barack Obama, in anticipation of the general election.[54]

The day after McCain's Potomac sweep, the Kansas City Star published a list of people who have been mentioned as possible McCain running mates, if he secured the nomination.[55]

On February 14, Mitt Romney officially endorsed McCain and asked his approximately 280 delegates to support him at the national convention. If all or most of Romney's delegates backed McCain, it would give him nearly enough to win the nomination, with several large states still yet to vote. Despite these developments, Huckabee vowed to stay in the race. "I may get beat, but I'm not going to quit," he said.[56][57] A few days later, McCain was endorsed by former President George H. W. Bush, in a move intended to shore up his support among base party elements.[58]

On February 19, McCain continued his winning ways, picking up wins over Huckabee in the Wisconsin primary and the Washington state primary.[59] McCain and Barack Obama engaged in a pointed exchange over Al-Qaeda in Iraq on February 27.[60]

March contests edit

Super Tuesday 2
 
Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee
Contests held on March 4, 2008 in Texas, Ohio, Vermont and Rhode Island effectively ended the 2008 Republican Primaries by forcing Mike Huckabee to withdraw after poor showings and giving John McCain enough delegates to win the Republican nomination.

Nominating Contests Held – 4

  • Won by McCain – 4
  • Won by Huckabee – 0

Pledged Delegates at Stake – 261[61]

  • Won by McCain – 241
  • Won by Huckabee – 20

Delegate Standing on March 5

  • McCain – 1289
  • Huckabee (out) – 267
Information from CNN

CNN had cancelled a debate originally scheduled for February 28, saying that McCain was the "presumptive nominee." Mike Huckabee challenged John McCain to a debate before the March 4 primaries, and the Values Voter coalition stepped in, arranging for a debate hall and inviting both McCain and Huckabee, as well as Rep. Ron Paul to participate in a March 3 debate event.[62] After Governor Huckabee had accepted the invitation, Senator McCain said that he had a prior commitment and begged off. Huckabee had previous success with rural and Evangelical Christian voters. Huckabee was endorsed by Dr. James Dobson. McCain received an endorsement from Pastor John Hagee (which he later renounced on May 22). On March 4, Super Tuesday 2, McCain managed to win a large number of Evangelical voters along with his usual independent and veteran supporters. John McCain officially clinched the Republican presidential nomination on March 4, 2008, sweeping the primaries in Ohio, Texas, Rhode Island, and Vermont.[63] That night, Mike Huckabee withdrew from the race and endorsed McCain.[63] President George W. Bush invited Senator McCain to the White House for Bush's endorsement.

2008 Republican presidential primaries delegate count
As of June 10, 2008
Candidates Actual
pledged delegates1
(1,780 of 1,917)
Estimated total delegates2
(2,159 of 2,380;
1,191 needed to win)
John McCain 1,378 1,575
Mike Huckabee 240 278
Mitt Romney 148 271
Ron Paul 14 35
Color key: 1st place Candidate has
withdrawn
Sources:
1 . The New York Times. September 16, 2008. Archived from the original on September 16, 2008.
2 "Election Center 2008 – Republican Delegate Scorecard". CNN. June 4, 2008. Retrieved December 26, 2013.

Endorsements edit

Unlike in the Democratic Party, Republican members of Congress (including Senate members, House members, and non-voting delegates), and state governors are not automatically made delegates to the party's national convention, however their endorsements can hold sway on voters in caucuses and primaries.

Each state's two members of the Republican National Committee, and the party chairs of each U.S. state and the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Northern Mariana Islands are the only automatic delegates to the party's national convention. These superdelegates while officially uncommitted, may also publicly endorse a candidate.

Polling edit

Statewide results edit

Early primaries and caucuses edit

Date State Type District level delegates At-large delegates State party delegates Bonus delegates Total size of delegation Delegate selection process
January 3, 2008 Iowa caucus 15 10 3 12 40 County/state convention[64]
January 5, 2008 Wyoming convention[65] 3 10 3 12 12/28 [12/14] Note County/state convention[66]
January 8, 2008 New Hampshire primary 6 10 3 5 24 [12] Note Statewide proportional[67]
January 15, 2008 Michigan primary 45 10 3 2 60 [30] Note District-level winner-take-all (WTA) + at-large/bonus proportional[68]
January 19, 2008 Nevada caucus 9 10 3 12 34 County/state convention[69]
South Carolina[70] primary, open 18 10 3 16 47 [24] Note District-level WTA + at-large/bonus WTA[71]
January 22, 2008 Louisiana caucus, closed
non-binding, just selection of district delegates
21 0 0 0 21/57[72][73] District by state convention + at-large/bonus by state convention unless 50%+ threshold met. Non-binding caucus to avoid stripping.
January 25-February 5, 2008[74] Hawaii caucus, closed 6 10 3 1 20 state convention[75]
January 29, 2008 Florida primary, closed 75 10 3 26 114 [57] Note Statewide WTA[76]
February 1-February 3, 2008[77] Maine caucus, closed 6 10 3 2 21[78] District/state convention[79]

GOP February 5 rule Under Republican National Committee rules, no state was allowed to hold its 2008 primary before February 5. Five states – Wyoming, New Hampshire, Michigan, South Carolina, and Florida – moved their primaries ahead and were subsequently stripped of one-half of their apportioned delegates by the RNC.[80] This punishment was eventually the same as Democratic procedures though that party originally decided to strip all delegates from offending states Michigan and Florida before seating half. The Republican rules did not affect Iowa, Maine, Nevada and Louisiana, because those states did not technically choose their delegates until district or state conventions that occurred after February 5. The Iowa county and state conventions were held on March 15 and June 14, 2008, respectively. The Nevada state convention was held on April 26, 2008, but was suspended by party officials before delegates were elected. The executive board of the Nevada Republican Party met on July 25, 2008, and appointed all 34 delegates and 31 alternates. The Louisiana caucuses selected 105 state delegates to the state convention on February 16 in Baton Rouge.

Super Tuesday edit

Many states moved the dates of their primaries or caucuses up to February 5 (Super Tuesday). With almost half the nation voting on that date it acted as a quasi-"national primary". This has also been dubbed "Super Duper Tuesday,"[81] and "Tsunami Tuesday".[82]

State Type District-level delegates At-large delegates State party delegates Bonus delegates Total size of delegation Delegate selection process
Alabama primary, open 21 10 3 14 48 modified WTA district + proportional at-large/bonus[83]
Alaska caucus, closed 3 10 3 13 29 District/state convention[84]
Arizona presidential preference election[85] 24 10 3 16 53 Statewide WTA[86]
Arkansas primary, open 12 10 3 9 34 modified WTA district + proportional at-large/bonus (WTA if 50%+)
California primary, closed 159 10 3 1 173 WTA district + WTA at-large/bonus[87]
Colorado caucus, closed 21 10 3 12 46 district/state convention
Connecticut primary, closed 15 10 3 2 30 Statewide WTA
Delaware primary, closed 3 10 3 2 18 Statewide WTA[88]
Georgia primary, open 39 10 3 20 72 WTA district + WTA at-large/bonus[89]
Illinois presidential preference primary+delegate election, open[90] 57 10 3 0 70 District delegate election + unpledged state delegates
Massachusetts primary, modified open 30 10 3 0 43 statewide proportional[91]
Minnesota caucus, open 24 10 3 4 41 BPOU[92]/district/state convention[93]
Missouri primary, open 27 10 3 18 58 statewide WTA[94]
Montana invited caucus[95] 3 10 3 9 25[96] Statewide WTA
New Jersey primary, modified open 39 10 3 0 52 Statewide WTA[97]
New York primary, closed 87 10 3 1 101 Statewide WTA[88]
North Dakota caucus, closed 3 10 3 10 26 Statewide Proportional[98]
Oklahoma primary, closed 15 10 3 13 41 district WTA + at-large/bonus WTA
Tennessee primary, open 27 10 3 15 55 District proportional (WTA 50%+) + At-large/bonus proportional (WTA 50%+)[99]
Utah primary, modified open 9 10 3 14 36 Statewide WTA[100]
West Virginia convention, modified open 9 10 3 8 18/30[101] multiple ballot WTA[102]
Totals 627 210 63 181 1,069/1,081

After Super Tuesday edit

Date State Type District-Level Delegates At-Large Delegates State Party Delegates Bonus Delegates Total Size of Delegation Delegate Selection Process
February 9, 2008 Kansas caucus, closed 12 10 3 14 39 district WTA + at-large/state party/bonus WTA[103]
Washington caucus 27 10 3 0 18 of 40[104] county/state convention[105]
Louisiana primary 0 20 3 13 20 of 57[72] WTA if 50%+ threshold met, otherwise uncommitted
February 12, 2008 District of Columbia primary 0 16 3 0 19 DC-wide WTA[106]
Maryland primary 24 10 3 0 37 District WTA + at-large WTA[107]
Virginia primary 33 10 3 17 63 Statewide WTA[108]
February 19, 2008 Wisconsin primary 24 10 3 3 40 district WTA + at-large/bonus/party WTA[109]
Washington primary 27 10 3 0 19 of 40[104] district WTA + proportional at-large[105]
February 23, 2008 American Samoa caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county/state convention[110]
Northern Mariana Islands caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county/state convention[111]
February 24, 2008 Puerto Rico caucus 0 20 3 0 23 Puerto Rico-wide WTA[112]
March 4, 2008 Ohio primary 54 10 3 21 88 District WTA + at-large WTA
Rhode Island primary 6 10 3 1 20 Delegate names on ballot[113]
Texas open primary 96 10 3 31 140 district modified WTA + statewide WTA if 50%+[114]
Vermont primary 3 10 3 1 17 Statewide WTA[115]
March 8, 2008 Guam caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county/state convention
March 11, 2008 Mississippi primary 12 10 3 14 39 District WTA + at-large/bonus WTA[116]
April 5, 2008 U.S. Virgin Islands caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county/state convention
April 22, 2008 Pennsylvania primary 57 10 3 4 74 district delegate selection + unpledged at-large/party delegates
May 6, 2008 Indiana primary 27 10 3 17 57
North Carolina primary 39 10 3 17 69
May 13, 2008 Nebraska primary 9 10 3 11 33
May 13, 2008 West Virginia primary 9 10 3 8 12 of 30
May 20, 2008 Kentucky primary 18 10 3 14 45
Oregon primary 15 10 3 2 30
May 27, 2008 Idaho primary 6 10 3 13 32
June 3, 2008 South Dakota primary 3 10 3 11 27
New Mexico primary 9 10 3 10 32
1,029

See also edit

References edit

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2008, republican, party, presidential, primaries, also, 2008, democratic, party, presidential, primaries, from, january, june, 2008, voters, republican, party, chose, their, nominee, president, 2008, united, states, presidential, election, senator, john, mccai. See also 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries From January 3 to June 3 2008 voters of the Republican Party chose their nominee for president in the 2008 United States presidential election Senator John McCain of Arizona was selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 2008 Republican National Convention held from Monday September 1 through Thursday September 4 2008 in Saint Paul Minnesota President George W Bush was ineligible to be elected to a third term due to the term limits established by the 22nd Amendment 2008 Republican Party presidential primaries 2004 January 3 to June 3 2008 2012 2 173 delegates to the Republican National Convention1 087 delegates votes needed to win Candidate John McCain Mitt RomneyHome state Arizona MassachusettsDelegate count 1 575 271Contests won 37 11Popular vote 9 902 797 1 4 699 788Percentage 46 7 22 2 Candidate Mike Huckabee Ron PaulHome state Arkansas TexasDelegate count 278 35Contests won 8 0Popular vote 4 276 046 1 160 403Percentage 20 1 5 6 First place by popular vote and plurality of delegates John McCain 37 Mitt Romney 11 Mike Huckabee 8 Previous Republican nomineeGeorge W Bush Republican nominee John McCainIn a crowded primary of several prominent Republicans eyeing the nomination former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani was the early frontrunner 2 However former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee won the Iowa Caucuses as he gained momentum just two months prior to the primary Moderate U S Senator and former presidential candidate John McCain won the New Hampshire and Florida primaries After failing to win in Florida Giuliani ended his campaign McCain ultimately won the nomination after winning most of the primaries on Super Tuesday He was officially nominated at the 2008 Republican National Convention on September 4 2008 but went on to lose the general election to Barack Obama Contents 1 Candidates 1 1 Nominee 1 2 Withdrew during primaries 1 3 Withdrew before primaries 2 Calendar 3 Campaign 3 1 2007 3 2 Iowa and New Hampshire 3 3 Michigan 3 4 Nevada and South Carolina 3 5 Florida 3 6 Super Tuesday 3 7 Later February contests 3 8 March contests 4 Endorsements 5 Polling 6 Statewide results 6 1 Early primaries and caucuses 6 2 Super Tuesday 6 3 After Super Tuesday 7 See also 8 ReferencesCandidates editMain article 2008 Republican Party presidential candidates Notes for the following table Delegate counts is the final estimated delegate count 3 Nominee edit The vast majority of primaries were of the winner take all variety and convention rules meant that no one with less than five states in their pockets would be allowed to have their names placed in nomination This guaranteed that the primary season would be very short McCain won New Hampshire South Carolina and Florida and thus became nearly unstoppable After decisive victories on super Tuesday and the potomac primary McCain became the presumptive nominee Candidates are listed by delegate counts Candidate Most recent office Home state Estimated delegate count RCP Candidacy Delegations with plurality Running mate nbsp McCain John John McCain U S Senator from Arizona 1987 2018 nbsp Arizona 1 57572 5 4 nbsp Secured nomination March 4 2008 Campaign 31 NH SC FL NY CA IL MO OK CT AR NJ DE WA VA MD WI VT RI OH TX MS PA IN NC NE HI KY OR ID SD NMNon states DC PR MP AS VI GU Sarah PalinWithdrew during primaries edit Candidate Most recent office Home state Estimated delegate count RCP Candidacy Delegations with plurality nbsp Huckabee Mike Mike Huckabee Governor of Arkansas 1996 2007 nbsp Arkansas 27812 8 nbsp Withdrew March 4 2008 Campaign 5 8AL AR GA IA WV TN KS LA nbsp Romney Mitt Mitt Romney Governor of Massachusetts 2003 2007 nbsp Massachusetts 27112 5 nbsp Withdrew February 7 2008 Campaign 11MI NV WY ME MA MT UT MN CO ND AK nbsp Paul Ron Ron Paul U S Representative from Texas 1976 1977 1979 1985 1997 2013 nbsp Texas 351 6 nbsp Lost nomination June 12 2008 Campaign 0 nbsp Thompson Fred Fred Thompson U S Senator from Tennessee 1994 2003 nbsp Tennessee 110 5 nbsp Withdrew January 22 2008 Campaign 0 nbsp Keyes Alan Alan Keyes Asst Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs 1985 1987 nbsp Maryland 2 Withdrew April 15 2008 Campaign 0 nbsp Hunter Duncan Duncan Hunter U S Representative for California s 52nd 1993 2009 nbsp California 1 Withdrew January 19 2008 Campaign 0 nbsp Giuliani Rudy Rudy Giuliani Mayor of New York City 1994 2001 nbsp New York 0 nbsp Withdrew January 30 2008 Campaign 0Withdrew before primaries edit Candidate Most recent office Home state Estimated delegate count RCP Candidacy Delegations with plurality nbsp Brownback Sam Sam Brownback U S Senator from Kansas 1996 2011 nbsp Kansas 0 nbsp Withdrew October 19 2007 Campaign 0 nbsp H Cox John John H Cox Founder ofCox Financial Group Ltd nbsp Illinois 0 Withdrew December 2007 Campaign 0 nbsp Gilmore Jim Jim Gilmore Governor of Virginia 1998 2002 nbsp Virginia 0 nbsp Withdrew July 14 2007 Campaign 0 nbsp Tancredo Tom Tom Tancredo U S Representative for Colorado s 6th 1999 2009 nbsp Colorado 0 nbsp Withdrew December 20 2007 Campaign 0 nbsp Thompson Tommy Tommy Thompson United States Secretary of Health and Human Services 2001 2005 nbsp Wisconsin 0 nbsp Withdrew August 12 2007 Campaign 0Calendar editPrimary key 6 Primary type ExplanationClosed Voters may only select candidates of the party for which they are registeredOpen Anyone is allowed to vote for candidates from either partyModified open Voters registered to a party may only select candidates of that party but independents may choose candidates from either partyCaucus Party members meet among themselves to select candidates Rules may be very complicated including members having to choose publicly by standing in groups by preference instead of secret ballotPrimary An election type selection process with general voters going to polling places for a secret ballotConvention Delegates chosen locally by each party meet in a central location and select a candidatePresidential preference Those polled get to list candidates in the order of whom they like most As candidates are eliminated the highest remaining on their list becomes their voteWTA Winner Take All whoever wins the most votes in the state even if not a majority gets all of the delegatesProportional The state s delegates are divided up among the candidates in proportion to their percentage of the voteRepublican candidates in the 2008 U S presidential election campaigned for the nomination of their party in a series of primary elections and caucus events 7 Unlike the Democratic Party which mandates a proportional representation for delegate selection the Republican Party has no such limitation For states with primaries some states choose to use the winner take all method to allocate delegates within a state while others do winner take all within a specific congressional district and still others use the proportional process Unlike the Democratic Party state party by laws determine whether each delegate is pledged and for how long the delegate is pledged In caucus states most state parties use a two pronged process A straw poll often called a presidential preference poll is conducted of the attendees at the caucus The results are released to the media and published on the state party website Delegates are then elected to the county conventions It is at the county conventions that delegates are elected to state conventions and from the state convention to the national convention At each level delegates may be bound or unbound to a candidate If unbound delegates are not obligated to follow the results of the presidential preference poll Thus all estimates of delegates from caucus states are dependent on state party by laws Campaign editFurther information Republican Party United States presidential debates 2008 2007 edit With Vice President Dick Cheney choosing not to seek the nomination making this election the first time since 1928 that neither the current President or Vice President was a candidate and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice ruling herself out the race for the 2008 presidential nomination was wide open It officially began in March 2006 when John H Cox became the first candidate to enter the 2008 race The Democratic takeover of both houses of Congress and President Bush s unpopularity were strong issues for the GOP field At the beginning of 2007 the announced Republican field was former Governor of Wisconsin and Cabinet member Tommy Thompson former Governor of Virginia Jim Gilmore and Senator of Kansas Sam Brownback Former senator of Virginia George Allen was considered a top contender until his loss in the midterm elections He announced on December 10 2006 that he would not seek the 2008 nomination In early January former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney announced he was forming an exploratory committee Afterwards several others announced they were running including U S Congressman Ron Paul Mike Huckabee of Arkansas Rudy Giuliani of New York City U S Senator John McCain U S Congressman Duncan Hunter and U S Congressman Tom Tancredo A poll released in early February had Giuliani leading with 32 and John McCain second with 18 By early March Giuliani had become the frontrunner Alan Keyes and former Senator and actor Fred Thompson entered the race later in September The first to drop out of the race was former Virginia Governor Jim Gilmore in July After that Tommy Thompson also dropped out in August after finishing sixth in the Ames Iowa straw poll Then pro life advocate Sam Brownback dropped out of the race in October In December staunch illegal immigration opponent Tom Tancredo and businessman John H Cox also left the race Iowa and New Hampshire edit nbsp 2008 Iowa Republican Caucus county map Mike Huckabee Mitt Romney Ron PaulOn January 3 2008 the Iowa caucuses began The final averaged polling results from Real Clear Politics showed Mike Huckabee at 30 Romney at 27 McCain and Thompson tied at 12 Paul at 7 and Giuliani at 6 8 Among those surveyed in Exit Polling data 45 cited themselves as very conservative and voted for Huckabee 35 to Romney s 23 and Thompson s 22 Among those who called themselves somewhat conservative 43 Huckabee won 34 to Romney s 27 and McCain s 18 9 Final Results showed Huckabee swept much of the state with the exception of the western and eastern portions of the state which included Davenport Cedar Rapids as well as Sioux City Romney swept the eastern and western portions of the state and Paul took one southern county The final results in Iowa were Huckabee with 34 Romney with 25 Thompson and McCain each with 13 Paul with 10 and Giuliani with 4 nbsp 2008 New Hampshire Primary results by municipality John McCain Mitt Romney Mike Huckabee Rudy Giuliani Ron Paul Tie No votesIn the New Hampshire Primary both McCain and Romney had gambled much on the state McCain had staked much on his grassroots efforts in the state he won in 2000 as well as the state with one of the most independent voting blocks which was McCain s strong suit Romney coming from neighboring Massachusetts was known by many in New Hampshire and even owned a home in the state of New Hampshire Pre Primary polling showed McCain with a slight edge 32 28 with Huckabee leading Giuliani for third 12 9 On Primary night McCain won 37 32 and Huckabee beat Giuliani for third 11 9 After the results Huckabee decided to focus on the South Carolina primary while both McCain and Romney went to Michigan where polls showed a competitive race between the two Michigan edit With different winners in Iowa and New Hampshire and Mitt Romney taking the lower profile Wyoming caucus the January 15 Michigan primary loomed as an important battle Polls after New Hampshire showed a tight race between McCain and Romney with Huckabee a close third 10 11 Many saw Michigan as Romney s last chance for a campaign saving win after disappointments in the first two races 12 13 Others said that a win in Michigan could cement McCain s status as the front runner for the nomination 14 McCain s campaign garnered about 1 million in newly contributed funds immediately after the New Hampshire win 15 but still had 3 5 million in bank debt 16 Nevertheless some polls showed McCain getting a significant national bounce from his New Hampshire win the January 11 CNN nationwide poll had him at 34 percent support a 21 point increase from where he had been just a month before and a significant lead over Huckabee 21 percent and Giuliani 18 percent 17 As the Michigan race entered its final days McCain gained some notoriety by sending out mailers there and in South Carolina attacking Romney s tax record and touting his own A Romney campaign spokesman called the ad as sloppy as it is factually incorrect and FactCheck org called the piece misleading McCain responded by saying It s not negative campaigning I think it s what his record is It s a tough business he added 18 19 The dominant issue in Michigan was the state of the economy Michigan had by far the nation s largest unemployment rate at 7 4 percent and was continuing to lose jobs from its historical manufacturing base 20 McCain offered a bit of his straight talk saying that There are some jobs that aren t coming back to Michigan and proposing federal job training plans and other remedies to compensate 20 Romney seized on McCain s statement as overly pessimistic and promoted instead his family heritage I ve got the automobile industry in my blood veins as well as his being a Washington outsider who would go there and turn Washington inside out 20 In the end McCain finished second in the primary behind Romney gaining 30 percent of the vote to Romney s 39 percent 21 Nevada and South Carolina edit Mitt Romney was heavily favored to win Nevada leading 34 to 19 in polls He exceeded expectations earning 51 of the vote with Ron Paul beating out John McCain for second Romney campaigned hard in Nevada and did not campaign in South Carolina while the other leading Republican candidates John McCain and Mike Huckabee kept their focus on South Carolina Nevada was not subject to the Republican party cutting in half the number of delegates the state can send to the national convention and neither was South Carolina However Nevada had more delegates at stake than South Carolina A win in Nevada extended Romney s lead in total delegates Nevada s large Mormon population helped Romney win the state 22 After coming last in this caucus Duncan Hunter withdrew his bid for the nomination Mike Huckabee needed to win South Carolina for his campaign to remain viable RealClearPolitics reported that the average support from polls placed McCain in the lead with 27 followed by Huckabee with 25 Romney with 15 Thompson with 15 Paul with 4 and Giuliani with 3 Thompson started attacking Mike Huckabee heavily questioning his conservative credentials But in the end McCain narrowly won by 14 743 or 3 putting McCain as the frontrunner in Florida nbsp Mike Huckabee giving his concession speech after the 2008 South Carolina Presidential Primary in Columbia SC Fred Thompson only placed third even though he had started to campaign in South Carolina immediately after Iowa and before the other candidates had started campaigning there He withdrew the next day Florida edit Rudy Giuliani campaigned heavily in Florida which he expected to use as his launch pad for a strong showing on Super Tuesday 23 He campaigned almost entirely in Florida and largely ignored South Carolina and other states voting before February 5 Polls taken before the primary showed that John McCain was the slight front runner over Mitt Romney 24 Giuliani had been campaigning with virtually no opposition 25 however following the South Carolina Republican primary 2008 several candidates flew down to Florida to begin campaigning up to January 29 when the primary occurred 26 RealClearPolitics reported that the average support from polls taken in the days immediately prior to primary day placed McCain slightly in the lead with 31 followed by Romney with 30 Giuliani with 15 Huckabee with 13 and Paul with 4 27 Former Senator Fred Thompson and Rep Duncan Hunter though already out of the race still remained on the ballot in the Florida primary McCain was able to ride a last minute endorsement by then Republican Governor Charlie Crist 28 to a five point victory on January 29 29 He took all 57 delegates in Florida s winner take all contest 30 The state s delegate total had been reduced by half due to RNC rules about primaries held before February 5 31 Giuliani having banked heavily on Florida ended his campaign the following day 32 Super Tuesday edit Super Tuesday nbsp Arizona Senator John McCain nbsp Former Massachusetts GovernorMitt Romney nbsp Former Arkansas GovernorMike HuckabeeFebruary 5 2008 called Super Tuesday 2008 saw 21 contests held from Massachusetts to California Nominating Contests Held 21 Won by John McCain 9 Won by Mitt Romney 7 Won by Mike Huckabee 5Pledged Delegates at Stake 901 33 Won by John McCain 568 Won by Mitt Romney 176 Won by Mike Huckabee 147Delegate Standing on February 7 McCain 680 Romney out 270 Huckabee 176Information from CNN nbsp McCain reacts to his Super Tuesday victories during a celebration that night at the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in Phoenix On January 31 McCain received the endorsement of California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger 34 and began campaigning with him 35 This was a key endorsement as California was one of the Super Tuesday states and had more delegates than any other state The same day Governor Rick Perry of Texas threw his support behind McCain 36 Perry had previously been a Giuliani supporter while Schwarzenegger had refrained from endorsing either McCain or Giuliani because he counted both men as friends 36 37 Meanwhile Romney still burning about McCain s Iraq withdrawal timetable charge compared McCain to disgraced former President Richard Nixon saying that McCain s claim was reminiscent of the Nixon era and that I don t think I want to see our party go back to that kind of campaigning 35 McCain won his home state of Arizona taking all 53 of the state s delegates and the largest of the Super Tuesday prizes winning nearly all of California s 173 delegates McCain also scored wins in Connecticut Delaware Illinois Missouri New Jersey New York and Oklahoma Huckabee also made surprise wins in states he had polled behind in previously like Georgia Alabama and Tennessee Huckabee also won the first contest of Super Tuesday in West Virginia Romney won his home state of Massachusetts He also won Utah Colorado and Minnesota 38 The next day McCain appeared confident that he would be the Republican nominee Estimates showed him with 707 delegates nearly 60 of the total needed to win the nomination He began to appeal to disaffected conservatives saying We share the common principles and values and ideas for the future of this country based on a fundamental conservative political philosophy which has been my record 39 He also suggested that the right wing of the party calm down a little bit and begin to look for areas of agreement Meanwhile Romney advisers privately expressed doubts about whether their candidate could realistically hope to defeat McCain and it was unclear if Romney would spend significant money on key February 12 contests in Virginia and Maryland Later February contests edit Both McCain and Romney addressed the Conservative Political Action Conference CPAC in Washington DC on February 7 while Mike Huckabee spoke on February 9 Romney used his speech to announce the end of his campaign saying Now if I fight on in my campaign all the way to the convention cheers applause I want you to know I ve given this a lot of thought I d forestall the launch of a national campaign and frankly I d be making it easier for Senator Clinton or Obama to win Frankly in this time of war I simply cannot let my campaign be a part of aiding a surrender to terror 40 McCain spoke about an hour later again appealing to right wing uncertainty about his ideology He focused on his opposition to abortion and gun control as well as his support for lower taxes and free market health care solutions 41 42 He told the CPAC audience that he arrived in Washington as a foot soldier in the Reagan Revolution and addressed the issue of illegal immigration one of the major issues where conservatives have attacked McCain He said that it would be among my highest priorities to secure our borders first before addressing other immigration laws 43 Mike Huckabee spoke to CPAC two days later and said I know that there was some speculation that I might come here today to announce that I would be getting out of the race But I want to make sure you understand Am I quitting Well let s get that settled right now No I m not And the reason is simple I never learned arithmetic You see folks while I didn t get a college degree in mathematics and writing I majored in miracles Mathematically impossible miracles It is because I go back to that which helped crystallize in me a conservative viewpoint as a teenager when it wasn t easy or popular to be a Republican or a conservative in my hometown because I do believe that America is about making choices not simply echoing that of others Let others join the Me too crowd But I didn t get where I am today and I didn t fight the battles in a state that when I became its governor was 90 percent Democrat by simply echoing the voices of others I did it by staking out a choice stating that choice making that choice and fighting for that choice to believe that some things were right some things were wrong and it s better to be right and even to not win than it is to be wrong and to be a part of the crowd 44 February 9 saw voting in Louisiana Kansas and Washington state Huckabee won an easy victory in Kansas claiming all 36 of the state s delegates to the national convention Only 14 016 votes were cast and the McCain campaign expressed no concern over the lightly attended caucus However social conservatives had a strong presence in the Kansas Republican party and the results served to highlight conservative dissatisfaction with the Senator 45 46 47 Louisiana was much closer but Huckabee won there as well beating McCain by less than one percentage point 48 McCain was declared the winner of the Washington caucuses where 18 delegates were at stake The February 19 primary would determine the other 19 delegates from the state When McCain was declared the winner of the caucuses with a lead of only 242 3 468 to 3 226 over Huckabee and counting stopped with only 87 of the precincts reporting 49 Huckabee s campaign indicated that they would challenge the results 50 51 Next up was the Potomac primary on February 12 with voting in Virginia Maryland and the District of Columbia McCain swept the three races and took all 113 delegates which were at stake 52 53 The next day the McCain camp released a memo calling a Huckabee win mathematically impossible In truth however it was not impossible In fact if Huckabee failed to reach 1191 delegates but succeeded in keeping McCain from reaching 1191 then the result would have been a brokered convention With the media declaring McCain the presumptive nominee McCain began to focus on the Democrats particularly leading candidate Barack Obama in anticipation of the general election 54 The day after McCain s Potomac sweep the Kansas City Star published a list of people who have been mentioned as possible McCain running mates if he secured the nomination 55 nbsp Wikinews has related news Former president Bush Romney back McCain On February 14 Mitt Romney officially endorsed McCain and asked his approximately 280 delegates to support him at the national convention If all or most of Romney s delegates backed McCain it would give him nearly enough to win the nomination with several large states still yet to vote Despite these developments Huckabee vowed to stay in the race I may get beat but I m not going to quit he said 56 57 A few days later McCain was endorsed by former President George H W Bush in a move intended to shore up his support among base party elements 58 On February 19 McCain continued his winning ways picking up wins over Huckabee in the Wisconsin primary and the Washington state primary 59 McCain and Barack Obama engaged in a pointed exchange over Al Qaeda in Iraq on February 27 60 March contests edit Super Tuesday 2 nbsp Arizona SenatorJohn McCain nbsp Former Arkansas Governor Mike HuckabeeContests held on March 4 2008 in Texas Ohio Vermont and Rhode Island effectively ended the 2008 Republican Primaries by forcing Mike Huckabee to withdraw after poor showings and giving John McCain enough delegates to win the Republican nomination Nominating Contests Held 4 Won by McCain 4 Won by Huckabee 0Pledged Delegates at Stake 261 61 Won by McCain 241 Won by Huckabee 20Delegate Standing on March 5 McCain 1289 Huckabee out 267Information from CNN CNN had cancelled a debate originally scheduled for February 28 saying that McCain was the presumptive nominee Mike Huckabee challenged John McCain to a debate before the March 4 primaries and the Values Voter coalition stepped in arranging for a debate hall and inviting both McCain and Huckabee as well as Rep Ron Paul to participate in a March 3 debate event 62 After Governor Huckabee had accepted the invitation Senator McCain said that he had a prior commitment and begged off Huckabee had previous success with rural and Evangelical Christian voters Huckabee was endorsed by Dr James Dobson McCain received an endorsement from Pastor John Hagee which he later renounced on May 22 On March 4 Super Tuesday 2 McCain managed to win a large number of Evangelical voters along with his usual independent and veteran supporters John McCain officially clinched the Republican presidential nomination on March 4 2008 sweeping the primaries in Ohio Texas Rhode Island and Vermont 63 That night Mike Huckabee withdrew from the race and endorsed McCain 63 President George W Bush invited Senator McCain to the White House for Bush s endorsement 2008 Republican presidential primaries delegate countAs of June 10 2008 Candidates Actualpledged delegates1 1 780 of 1 917 Estimated total delegates2 2 159 of 2 380 1 191 needed to win John McCain 1 378 1 575Mike Huckabee 240 278Mitt Romney 148 271Ron Paul 14 35Color key 1st place Candidate haswithdrawnSources 1 Primary Season Election Results The New York Times September 16 2008 Archived from the original on September 16 2008 2 Election Center 2008 Republican Delegate Scorecard CNN June 4 2008 Retrieved December 26 2013 Endorsements editMain article Congressional endorsements for the 2008 United States presidential election Unlike in the Democratic Party Republican members of Congress including Senate members House members and non voting delegates and state governors are not automatically made delegates to the party s national convention however their endorsements can hold sway on voters in caucuses and primaries Each state s two members of the Republican National Committee and the party chairs of each U S state and the District of Columbia Puerto Rico American Samoa Guam the U S Virgin Islands and Northern Mariana Islands are the only automatic delegates to the party s national convention These superdelegates while officially uncommitted may also publicly endorse a candidate Polling editMain articles Statewide opinion polling for the Republican Party presidential primaries 2008 and Nationwide opinion polling for the Republican Party 2008 presidential candidatesStatewide results editMain article Results of the 2008 Republican Party presidential primaries Early primaries and caucuses edit Date State Type District level delegates At large delegates State party delegates Bonus delegates Total size of delegation Delegate selection processJanuary 3 2008 Iowa caucus 15 10 3 12 40 County state convention 64 January 5 2008 Wyoming convention 65 3 10 3 12 12 28 12 14 Note County state convention 66 January 8 2008 New Hampshire primary 6 10 3 5 24 12 Note Statewide proportional 67 January 15 2008 Michigan primary 45 10 3 2 60 30 Note District level winner take all WTA at large bonus proportional 68 January 19 2008 Nevada caucus 9 10 3 12 34 County state convention 69 South Carolina 70 primary open 18 10 3 16 47 24 Note District level WTA at large bonus WTA 71 January 22 2008 Louisiana caucus closed non binding just selection of district delegates 21 0 0 0 21 57 72 73 District by state convention at large bonus by state convention unless 50 threshold met Non binding caucus to avoid stripping January 25 February 5 2008 74 Hawaii caucus closed 6 10 3 1 20 state convention 75 January 29 2008 Florida primary closed 75 10 3 26 114 57 Note Statewide WTA 76 February 1 February 3 2008 77 Maine caucus closed 6 10 3 2 21 78 District state convention 79 GOP February 5 rule Under Republican National Committee rules no state was allowed to hold its 2008 primary before February 5 Five states Wyoming New Hampshire Michigan South Carolina and Florida moved their primaries ahead and were subsequently stripped of one half of their apportioned delegates by the RNC 80 This punishment was eventually the same as Democratic procedures though that party originally decided to strip all delegates from offending states Michigan and Florida before seating half The Republican rules did not affect Iowa Maine Nevada and Louisiana because those states did not technically choose their delegates until district or state conventions that occurred after February 5 The Iowa county and state conventions were held on March 15 and June 14 2008 respectively The Nevada state convention was held on April 26 2008 but was suspended by party officials before delegates were elected The executive board of the Nevada Republican Party met on July 25 2008 and appointed all 34 delegates and 31 alternates The Louisiana caucuses selected 105 state delegates to the state convention on February 16 in Baton Rouge Super Tuesday edit Many states moved the dates of their primaries or caucuses up to February 5 Super Tuesday With almost half the nation voting on that date it acted as a quasi national primary This has also been dubbed Super Duper Tuesday 81 and Tsunami Tuesday 82 State Type District level delegates At large delegates State party delegates Bonus delegates Total size of delegation Delegate selection processAlabama primary open 21 10 3 14 48 modified WTA district proportional at large bonus 83 Alaska caucus closed 3 10 3 13 29 District state convention 84 Arizona presidential preference election 85 24 10 3 16 53 Statewide WTA 86 Arkansas primary open 12 10 3 9 34 modified WTA district proportional at large bonus WTA if 50 California primary closed 159 10 3 1 173 WTA district WTA at large bonus 87 Colorado caucus closed 21 10 3 12 46 district state conventionConnecticut primary closed 15 10 3 2 30 Statewide WTADelaware primary closed 3 10 3 2 18 Statewide WTA 88 Georgia primary open 39 10 3 20 72 WTA district WTA at large bonus 89 Illinois presidential preference primary delegate election open 90 57 10 3 0 70 District delegate election unpledged state delegatesMassachusetts primary modified open 30 10 3 0 43 statewide proportional 91 Minnesota caucus open 24 10 3 4 41 BPOU 92 district state convention 93 Missouri primary open 27 10 3 18 58 statewide WTA 94 Montana invited caucus 95 3 10 3 9 25 96 Statewide WTANew Jersey primary modified open 39 10 3 0 52 Statewide WTA 97 New York primary closed 87 10 3 1 101 Statewide WTA 88 North Dakota caucus closed 3 10 3 10 26 Statewide Proportional 98 Oklahoma primary closed 15 10 3 13 41 district WTA at large bonus WTATennessee primary open 27 10 3 15 55 District proportional WTA 50 At large bonus proportional WTA 50 99 Utah primary modified open 9 10 3 14 36 Statewide WTA 100 West Virginia convention modified open 9 10 3 8 18 30 101 multiple ballot WTA 102 Totals 627 210 63 181 1 069 1 081After Super Tuesday edit Date State Type District Level Delegates At Large Delegates State Party Delegates Bonus Delegates Total Size of Delegation Delegate Selection ProcessFebruary 9 2008 Kansas caucus closed 12 10 3 14 39 district WTA at large state party bonus WTA 103 Washington caucus 27 10 3 0 18 of 40 104 county state convention 105 Louisiana primary 0 20 3 13 20 of 57 72 WTA if 50 threshold met otherwise uncommittedFebruary 12 2008 District of Columbia primary 0 16 3 0 19 DC wide WTA 106 Maryland primary 24 10 3 0 37 District WTA at large WTA 107 Virginia primary 33 10 3 17 63 Statewide WTA 108 February 19 2008 Wisconsin primary 24 10 3 3 40 district WTA at large bonus party WTA 109 Washington primary 27 10 3 0 19 of 40 104 district WTA proportional at large 105 February 23 2008 American Samoa caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county state convention 110 Northern Mariana Islands caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county state convention 111 February 24 2008 Puerto Rico caucus 0 20 3 0 23 Puerto Rico wide WTA 112 March 4 2008 Ohio primary 54 10 3 21 88 District WTA at large WTARhode Island primary 6 10 3 1 20 Delegate names on ballot 113 Texas open primary 96 10 3 31 140 district modified WTA statewide WTA if 50 114 Vermont primary 3 10 3 1 17 Statewide WTA 115 March 8 2008 Guam caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county state conventionMarch 11 2008 Mississippi primary 12 10 3 14 39 District WTA at large bonus WTA 116 April 5 2008 U S Virgin Islands caucus 0 6 3 0 9 county state conventionApril 22 2008 Pennsylvania primary 57 10 3 4 74 district delegate selection unpledged at large party delegatesMay 6 2008 Indiana primary 27 10 3 17 57North Carolina primary 39 10 3 17 69May 13 2008 Nebraska primary 9 10 3 11 33May 13 2008 West Virginia primary 9 10 3 8 12 of 30May 20 2008 Kentucky primary 18 10 3 14 45Oregon primary 15 10 3 2 30May 27 2008 Idaho primary 6 10 3 13 32June 3 2008 South Dakota primary 3 10 3 11 27New Mexico primary 9 10 3 10 321 029See also editDemocratic Party presidential primaries 2008References edit 2008 Republican Popular Vote Cohen et al The Party Decides Presidential Nominations Before and After Reform Chicago 2008 p 338 Final GOP delegate count Last Updated August 28 2008 Cnn com Retrieved January 9 2012 Election Center 2008 Delegate Scorecard Elections amp Politics news from CNN com CNN Retrieved May 22 2010 McCain clinches GOP nomination CNN projects CNN March 5 2008 Retrieved March 4 2008 Caucus Convention The Green Papers Election 2000 2004 2008 Glossary Thegreenpapers com Retrieved September 5 2008 Dougherty Danny October 17 2007 Presidential primary and caucus dates PDF Stateline org Archived from the original PDF on September 11 2008 Retrieved October 18 2007 RCP Election 2008 Iowa Caucus CNN Election Center 2008 Primary Exit Polling Retrieved May 22 2010 McCain Romney in tight Michigan race Reuters Jan 12 2008 Keith Naughton Who Does Detroit Like in 08 Newsweek com Jan 11 2008 Michigan could be key to Republican Presidential nomination Archived 2008 01 15 at the Wayback Machine AFP Jan 9 2008 Dick Polman Republican presidential race is no clearer after New Hampshire Archived 2008 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Salt Lake Tribune Jan 9 2008 Ryan Mauro The New Hampshire Surprise Edwards Makes Clinton the Front Runner Archived 2016 06 17 at the Wayback Machine Global Politician Jan 10 2008 Janet Hook January 13 2008 Belt tightening times for GOP campaigns Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 22 2015 Leslie Wayne Michael Cooper January 12 2008 Top Giuliani Aides Forgo Salaries to Help Big Push The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2008 Paul Steinhauser January 11 2008 Poll New Hampshire win rockets McCain to front runner status CNN com Retrieved January 13 2008 McCain s Misleading Mailer Factcheck org January 15 2008 Archived from the original on January 18 2008 Retrieved January 15 2008 McCain on that new mailer v Romney MSNBC com Jan 14 2008 a b c Jonathan Weisman January 16 2008 Romney Took McCain s Words for a Spin The Washington Post Retrieved January 16 2008 Romney claims victory in Michigan CNN com Jan 15 2008 South Carolina Nevada could crown new front runners cnn com January 18 2008 Retrieved January 18 2008 Knowlton Brian January 20 2008 Candidates Head for Next Battlegrounds The New York Times Retrieved January 20 2008 With South Carolina win McCain is front runner again Christian Science Monitor January 20 2008 Retrieved January 20 2008 Wheaton Sarah January 19 2008 Giuliani and the G O P s 11th Commandment The New York Times Retrieved January 20 2008 Holmes Elizabeth January 20 2008 With a Crowded Republican Field Candidates Set Sights on Florida The Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 20 2008 Florida Republican Primary Polling Retrieved January 29 2008 FOXNews com Fla Governor Endorses McCain Politics Republican Party Democratic Party Political Spectrum www foxnews com January 29 2008 Presidential Preference July 18 2011 Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved May 20 2020 Cooper Michael January 30 2008 McCain Defeats Romney in Florida Vote The New York Times Election Guide 2008 Presidential Election Politics Republicans The New York Times www nytimes com Republican Giuliani ends presidential campaign Reuters January 30 2008 via www reuters com Election Center 2008 Republican Delegate Scorecard CNN Retrieved May 22 2010 McCain gains Schwarzenegger endorsement Jan 31 2008 a b Elisabeth Bumiller Michael Luo February 1 2008 McCain Wins Schwarzenegger Endorsement and Romney Delivers Barb The New York Times Retrieved February 1 2008 a b Perry Picks McCain Day Today Giuliani s Withdrawal Dallas Morning News Jan 31 2008 Schwarzenegger Endorses John McCain dead link Forbes com Jan 21 2008 February 5 Super Tuesday CNN com McCain s Problem on the Right ABC News February 6 2008 Retrieved January 22 2015 Former Governor Mitt Romney Addresses CPAC 2008 Conservative org Archived from the original on June 9 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 Romney s exit hands McCain the nomination LA Times Feb 8 2008 Into the lion s den Arizona Republic Feb 8 2008 Text of Sen John McCain s Remarks to CPAC LA Times Feb 7 2008 Former Governor Mike Huckabee Addresses CPAC 2008 Conservative org Archived from the original on May 1 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 Kansas Republican Delegation 2008 TheGreenPapers com Kansas highlights McCain s difficulty with conservatives USAToday com Feb 9 2008 For McCain Losses Signal Challenges NY Times Feb 11 2008 Results Louisiana CNN com Washington Caucus Washington Primary Results America s Election HQ Elections foxnews com Retrieved September 15 2008 Results Washington CNN February 19 2008 Retrieved August 19 2022 Huckabee Challenges Washington Caucus Results Archived 2008 02 13 at the Wayback Machine FoxNews com Feb 10 2008 Obama McCain sweep Potomac primaries CNN com Feb 12 2008 February 12 Multi State Events CNN com McCain rolls on takes aim at Obama Politico com Feb 13 2008 Who should be McCain s running mate Kansas City Star February 13 2008 Archived from the original on February 16 2008 Retrieved February 14 2008 Romney Endorses McCain for Republican Nomination Bloomberg com Feb 14 2008 Romney Endorses McCain for President Huckabee Vows to Stay in the Race FoxNews com Feb 14 2008 Former President Bush to endorse McCain Associated Press for NBC News February 15 2008 Retrieved February 22 2008 Obama McCain extend winning streaks CNN February 20 2008 Retrieved February 20 2008 McCain Obama in heated exchange over Iraq CNN February 27 2008 Retrieved February 28 2008 Republican Delegates Score Card CNN Retrieved May 22 2010 Huckabee agrees to a values voters debate Soundpolitics com February 27 2008 Archived from the original on December 3 2008 Retrieved January 9 2012 a b McCain wins GOP nomination CNN March 4 2008 Retrieved March 4 2008 Election Guide 2008 Presidential Election Politics Politics nytimes com Retrieved September 15 2008 Precinct caucuses were held in December to elect delegates to the county conventions and precinct captains one man and one woman are automatic delegates to the county convention where the delegates will be selected Wyoming GOP begins choosing delegates Decision 08 NBC News NBC News December 12 2007 Retrieved September 15 2008 Election Guide 2008 Presidential Election Politics Politics nytimes com Retrieved September 15 2008 Election Guide 2008 Presidential Election Politics Politics nytimes com Retrieved September 15 2008 Election Guide 2008 Presidential Election Nevada Caucus Results The New York Times February 6 2008 The South Carolina Republican Party has moved their primary to January 19 before Florida s January 29 primary in order to retain their status as the first in the south primary Because of this NH WY and IA are all expected to move their primaries earlier as well Source Preston Mark August 9 2007 South Carolina GOP moves up primary adds to 2008 scramble CNN South Carolina Republican Party About Us December 16 2007 Archived from the original on December 16 2007 a b District level delegates are elected through the caucus convention process on January 22 while at large delegates are selected on February 9 if a majority is selected by the primary voters or on February 16 by the state convention delegates if no candidate wins a majority Instructions for Becoming a Delegate to the 2008 Republican National Convention PDF February 8 2008 Archived from the original PDF on February 8 2008 Retrieved January 5 2022 Caucuses are spread out based on Hawaii State House of Representatives district number GOP Hawai i Events Archived from the original on February 5 2008 Retrieved January 23 2008 Berg Andersson Richard E Hawaii Republican Delegation 2008 The Green Papers Ambinder Marc October 22 2007 Florida Two Men 57 Delegates The Atlantic Caucuses are scheduled around the state for one of the three days http www mainegop com FlexPage aspx area caucus2008 Archived 2008 01 31 at the Wayback Machine In Maine the state parties set the date of their Presidential preference caucuses and the Maine GOP moved its caucuses to this date see Official Maine GOP Schedule Archived 2007 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Maine Republican Party About Us November 14 2007 Archived from the original on November 14 2007 Ohlemacher Stephen October 22 2007 GOP considers delegate cut for 5 states Yahoo News Archived from the original on October 24 2007 Retrieved October 22 2007 Schneider Bill February 7 2007 It could all be over after Super Duper Tuesday CNN Retrieved June 3 2007 Chuck Todd May 10 2007 Will Tsunami Tuesday be an Afterthought Alabama Republican Delegation 2008 Thegreenpapers com Retrieved September 15 2008 Republican Party of Alaska Alaskarepublicans com Archived from the original on May 25 2008 Retrieved January 9 2012 AG Opinions December 3 1999 Azag gov Archived from the original on September 14 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 LIBBY QUAID Associated Press Writer November 12 2007 Giuliani May Not Need Early States Foxnews com Archived from the original on November 13 2007 Retrieved September 15 2008 Votes contributors make California a key player in 2008 CNN com Cnn com Retrieved September 15 2008 a b Newhouse News Service Giuliani Eyes Winner Take All Primaries Newhouse com Archived from the original on January 19 2008 Retrieved January 9 2012 Rules of the Georgia Republican Party PDF January 8 2008 Archived from the original PDF on January 8 2008 Retrieved January 5 2022 DELEGATE AND ALTERNATE DELEGATE to National Presidential Nominating Conventions Party office elected at the General Primary PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 6 2008 Retrieved December 27 2007 Stephanie Ebbert July 13 2007 State Republican Committee dumps winner take all policy The Boston Globe Boston com Retrieved September 15 2008 Basic Political Organizational Unit the second level hierarchy above precinct of the Minnesota Republican Party Republican Party of Minnesota Gop mn org Archived from the original on June 12 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 wcbstv com Rudy Giuliani Might Not Need Early States For Republican Nomination Wcbstv com Archived from the original on June 20 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 Approximately 3 000 party leaders and grassroots activists and other pre credentialed persons will be permitted to vote Bureau MIKE DENNISON of the Missoulian State Montana GOP approves caucus missoulian com Giuliani campaign scores big victory in N J procedural vote Politicker NJ Politickernj com Retrieved September 15 2008 North Dakota Republican Caucus 2008 Dakotapolitics com Archived from the original on September 18 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 Tennessee Republican Delegation 2008 Thegreenpapers com Retrieved September 15 2008 Giuliani s Nomination Strategy Real Clear Politics Mid Term Elections Elections 2008 TIME Time blog com Retrieved September 15 2008 West Virginia will select its eighteen at large Delegates on February 5 at a state party convention but then select its nine district delegates and three unpledged delegates during the party primary on Tuesday May 13 A runoff is held amongst the top three candidates and if no candidate receives a majority a runoff is held amongst the top two remaining candidates with the winner receiving all 18 at large delegates Kansas Gop Caucus Summary Of Delegate Selection Ksgopcaucus org Archived from the original on February 11 2012 Retrieved January 9 2012 a b The Washington State Republican Party selected eighteen of its delegates based on party caucuses on February 9 nineteen based on the state primary on February 19 and three party officers as automatic delegates a b CD Washington Republican Delegation 2008 Thegreenpapers com Retrieved September 15 2008 Election rules and plan for the 2008 Presidential preference primary PDF January 10 2008 Archived from the original PDF on January 10 2008 Instructive materials relating to the delegate selection procedures for the 2008 Republican National Convention PDF January 8 2008 Archived from the original PDF on January 8 2008 Retrieved January 5 2022 Virginia Republican Delegation 2008 Thegreenpapers com Retrieved September 15 2008 Constitution Wisgop org Archived from the original on September 13 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 American Samoa NY Times Retrieved January 22 2015 Saipan GOP delegates pick McCain USA Today February 23 2008 Retrieved January 22 2015 The Republican Party of Puerto Rico Goppr org Archived from the original on July 30 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 Rhode Island Republican Delegation 2008 www thegreenpapers com March presidential primaries in Texas set stage for selection of national party convention delegates PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 22 2008 Retrieved September 15 2008 Vermont Republican Party About Us July 21 2007 Archived from the original on July 21 2007 Mississippi Republican Delegation 2008 Thegreenpapers com Retrieved September 15 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 Republican Party presidential primaries amp oldid 1195244973, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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