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2008 United States presidential election in Tennessee

The 2008 United States presidential election in Tennessee took place on November 4, 2008, and was part of the 2008 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

2008 United States presidential election in Tennessee

← 2004 November 4, 2008 2012 →
Turnout66.34% [1] 0.02 pp
 
Nominee John McCain Barack Obama
Party Republican Democratic
Home state Arizona Illinois
Running mate Sarah Palin Joe Biden
Electoral vote 11 0
Popular vote 1,479,178 1,087,437
Percentage 56.85% 41.79%


President before election

George W. Bush
Republican

Elected President

Barack Obama
Democratic

Republican John McCain defeated Democrat Barack Obama in the state by 15 percentage points. Prior to the election, 17 news organizations had correctly predicted that McCain would easily carry the state, and virtually all polling indicated the same. Most news organizations called Tennessee for McCain immediately after the polls closed. McCain slightly improved upon George W. Bush's performance in 2004, despite the nation as a whole trending significantly Democratic in 2008. This was the first time since 1960 that Tennessee did not back the overall winning candidate in a presidential election.

As of 2020, this remains the last time that Houston County and Jackson County have voted for a Democratic presidential nominee or that the party has received more than 40% of the vote. It was one of five states to swing Republican from 2004, along with West Virginia, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Arkansas.

Primaries edit

Campaign edit

Predictions edit

There were 16 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day:

Source Ranking
D.C. Political Report[2] Likely R
Cook Political Report[3] Solid R
The Takeaway[4] Solid R
Electoral-vote.com[5] Solid R
Washington Post[6] Solid R
Politico[7] Solid R
RealClearPolitics[8] Solid R
FiveThirtyEight[6] Solid R
CQ Politics[9] Solid R
The New York Times[10] Solid R
CNN[11] Safe R
NPR[6] Solid R
MSNBC[6] Solid R
Fox News[12] Likely R
Associated Press[13] Likely R
Rasmussen Reports[14] Safe R

Polling edit

McCain won every single pre-election poll, and each by a double-digit margin of victory. The final 3 polls averaged McCain leading 55% to 40%.[15]

Fundraising edit

John McCain raised a total of $2,941,065 in the state. Barack Obama raised $3,481,341.[16]

Advertising and visits edit

Obama spent $518,659. The Republican ticket spent just $3,526.[17] Obama visited the state once, going to Nashville. McCain visited the state twice, visiting Nashville and Blountville.[18]

Analysis edit

Despite narrowly voting for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 when former Tennessee Senator Al Gore was on the ticket as Vice President, the state, along with neighboring Arkansas has steadily been trending Republican since then. George W. Bush narrowly carried the state in 2000 over Gore and easily won in 2004 over John Kerry.

A handful of Tennessean counties—including those that hadn't voted Republican since landslide victors Reagan or Nixon were on the ballot, swung dramatically Republican. For example, Grundy County, in southeastern Tennessee, broke 56%-42% for John Kerry in 2004, but wound up being swept by McCain 55%-42% this year. The state was one of five states that swung even more Republican in 2008 with John McCain soundly defeating Barack Obama in Tennessee. 2008 marked the first time since 1960 whereby the state was carried by the losing presidential candidate. A possible factor to Tennessee ironically swinging rightward—despite the national Democratic trend—could be the state favoring Hillary Clinton, former First Lady of neighboring Arkansas, over Barack Obama in the Democratic primary, as was the case in Arkansas itself.

McCain won both East Tennessee and Middle Tennessee by landslide margins. Historically, East Tennessee, which is a part of Appalachia, is one of the few ancestrally Republican areas of the South. Most of its residents strongly opposed secession during the Civil War. They identified with the GOP after the return of peace and have remained in the Republican fold through good times and bad ever since. Some of the region's counties are among the few in the country to have never supported a Democrat for president.

However, Middle Tennessee has Democratic roots based on liberal economic policies, most famously Franklin D. Roosevelt's Tennessee Valley Authority. Middle Tennessee voted strongly for Bill Clinton of neighboring Arkansas, but Middle Tennessee native Al Gore narrowly lost the region in 2000—a loss that ultimately cost him Tennessee, and the election. In contrast, it was one of the few regions in the country which voted more Republican than in 2004.[19] This is largely due to a growing social conservative trend in the region, particularly in the Nashville suburbs; some of the most politically active churches in the state are located there.

On the other hand, Barack Obama did improve relatively well upon John Kerry's performances in the traditionally Democratic cities of Nashville and Memphis. In the former, support amongst progressive whites led to a 3-2 victory for Obama in Davidson County.[19] In Memphis, heavy African American turnout ensured him the largest margin in the state in Shelby County, although far from enough to outweigh his losses everywhere else in the state. McCain, however, carried the third- and fourth- most populated cities of Chattanooga in Hamilton County as well as Knoxville in Knox County.

During the same election, at the state level, Republicans picked up four seats in the Tennessee House of Representatives and three seats in the Tennessee Senate to obtain control of both chambers of the state legislature for the first time since Reconstruction.

Results edit

United States presidential election in Tennessee, 2008[20]
Party Candidate Running mate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Republican John McCain Sarah Palin 1,479,178 56.85% 11
Democratic Barack Obama Joe Biden 1,087,437 41.79% 0
Independent Ralph Nader Matt Gonzalez 11,560 0.44% 0
Libertarian Bob Barr Wayne Allyn Root 8,547 0.33% 0
Constitution Chuck Baldwin Darrell Castle 8,191 0.31% 0
Green Cynthia McKinney Rosa Clemente 2,499 0.10% 0
Write-ins Write-ins Write-ins 2,333 0.09% 0
Socialist Brian Moore Stewart Alexander 1,326 0.05% 0
Boston Tea Charles Jay Thomas Knapp 1,011 0.04% 0
Totals 2,601,982 100.00% 11
Voter turnout (Voting age population) 55.5%

By county edit

County John McCain
Republican
Barack Obama
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
Margin Total
# % # % # % # %
Anderson 19,675 62.32% 11,396 36.10% 499 1.58% 8,279 26.22% 31,570
Bedford 10,217 65.89% 5,027 32.42% 263 1.69% 5,190 33.47% 15,507
Benton 3,696 57.05% 2,645 40.82% 138 2.13% 1,051 16.23% 6,479
Bledsoe 3,166 66.18% 1,517 31.71% 101 2.11% 1,649 34.47% 4,784
Blount 35,571 68.88% 15,253 29.53% 821 1.59% 20,318 39.35% 51,645
Bradley 28,333 74.19% 9,357 24.50% 501 1.31% 18,976 49.69% 38,191
Campbell 8,535 67.59% 3,867 30.62% 226 1.79% 4,668 36.97% 12,628
Cannon 3,322 60.88% 2,011 36.85% 124 2.27% 1,311 24.03% 5,457
Carroll 7,455 64.01% 3,980 34.17% 211 1.82% 3,475 29.84% 11,646
Carter 15,852 72.82% 5,587 25.66% 330 1.52% 10,265 47.16% 21,769
Cheatham 10,702 65.14% 5,498 33.47% 228 1.39% 5,204 31.67% 16,428
Chester 4,587 71.02% 1,797 27.82% 75 1.16% 2,790 43.20% 6,459
Claiborne 7,175 68.86% 3,078 29.54% 167 1.60% 4,097 39.32% 10,420
Clay 1,676 55.98% 1,248 41.68% 70 2.34% 428 14.30% 2,994
Cocke 8,945 71.67% 3,340 26.76% 196 1.57% 5,605 44.91% 12,481
Coffee 13,250 63.73% 7,132 34.30% 408 1.97% 6,118 29.43% 20,790
Crockett 3,994 66.16% 1,967 32.58% 76 1.26% 2,027 33.58% 6,037
Cumberland 17,436 67.81% 7,889 30.68% 387 1.51% 9,547 37.13% 25,712
Davidson 102,915 38.80% 158,423 59.73% 3,885 1.47% -55,508 -20.93% 265,223
Decatur 3,101 65.11% 1,566 32.88% 96 2.01% 1,535 32.23% 4,763
DeKalb 4,085 57.82% 2,832 40.08% 148 2.10% 1,253 17.74% 7,065
Dickson 11,677 59.82% 7,506 38.45% 336 1.73% 4,171 21.37% 19,519
Dyer 9,859 68.23% 4,411 30.53% 180 1.24% 5,448 37.70% 14,450
Fayette 12,173 63.22% 6,892 35.80% 189 0.98% 5,281 27.42% 19,254
Fentress 4,789 71.06% 1,831 27.17% 119 1.77% 2,958 43.89% 6,739
Franklin 10,539 60.46% 6,613 37.94% 280 1.60% 3,926 22.52% 17,432
Gibson 13,516 63.60% 7,406 34.85% 331 1.55% 6,110 28.75% 21,253
Giles 6,902 59.05% 4,614 39.47% 173 1.48% 2,288 19.58% 11,689
Grainger 5,297 70.60% 2,066 27.54% 140 1.86% 3,231 43.06% 7,503
Greene 17,151 69.52% 7,110 28.82% 409 1.66% 10,041 40.70% 24,670
Grundy 2,563 55.33% 1,971 42.55% 98 2.12% 592 12.78% 4,632
Hamblen 15,508 68.41% 6,807 30.03% 354 1.56% 8,701 38.38% 22,669
Hamilton 81,702 55.19% 64,246 43.40% 2,086 1.41% 17,456 11.79% 148,034
Hancock 1,588 70.86% 604 26.95% 49 2.19% 984 43.91% 2,241
Hardeman 5,225 46.50% 5,919 52.67% 93 0.83% -694 -6.17% 11,237
Hardin 7,077 70.52% 2,794 27.84% 164 1.64% 4,283 42.68% 10,035
Hawkins 14,756 70.13% 5,930 28.18% 354 1.69% 8,826 41.95% 21,040
Haywood 3,165 38.97% 4,893 60.25% 63 0.78% -1,728 -21.28% 8,121
Henderson 7,669 70.79% 3,021 27.88% 144 1.33% 4,648 42.91% 10,834
Henry 8,182 60.41% 5,153 38.04% 210 1.55% 3,029 22.37% 13,545
Hickman 4,784 56.30% 3,563 41.93% 151 1.77% 1,221 14.37% 8,498
Houston 1,608 47.94% 1,678 50.03% 68 2.03% -70 -2.09% 3,354
Humphreys 3,818 50.37% 3,600 47.49% 162 2.14% 218 2.88% 7,580
Jackson 2,185 48.54% 2,224 49.41% 92 2.05% -39 -0.87% 4,501
Jefferson 13,092 70.65% 5,178 27.94% 262 1.41% 7,914 42.71% 18,532
Johnson 4,621 70.11% 1,837 27.87% 133 2.02% 2,784 42.24% 6,591
Knox 113,015 60.73% 70,215 37.73% 2,856 1.53% 42,800 23.00% 186,086
Lake 1,175 52.50% 1,024 45.76% 39 1.74% 151 6.74% 2,238
Lauderdale 4,933 52.83% 4,322 46.28% 83 0.89% 611 6.55% 9,338
Lawrence 10,566 65.96% 5,161 32.22% 293 1.82% 5,405 33.74% 16,020
Lewis 2,951 61.05% 1,804 37.32% 79 1.63% 1,147 23.73% 4,834
Lincoln 9,231 70.30% 3,695 28.14% 204 1.56% 5,536 42.16% 13,130
Loudon 15,815 71.29% 6,058 27.31% 311 1.40% 9,757 43.98% 22,184
Macon 5,145 69.90% 2,060 27.99% 155 2.11% 3,085 41.91% 7,360
Madison 23,290 53.12% 20,209 46.09% 347 0.79% 3,081 7.03% 43,846
Marion 6,746 58.98% 4,506 39.40% 185 1.62% 2,240 19.58% 11,437
Marshall 6,755 59.84% 4,320 38.27% 214 1.89% 2,435 21.57% 11,289
Maury 20,288 60.08% 13,058 38.67% 421 1.25% 7,230 21.41% 33,767
McMinn 12,989 69.13% 5,541 29.49% 259 1.38% 7,448 39.64% 18,789
McNairy 7,135 68.46% 3,131 30.04% 156 1.50% 4,004 38.42% 10,422
Meigs 2,797 66.01% 1,372 32.38% 68 1.61% 1,425 33.63% 4,237
Monroe 11,484 68.45% 5,053 30.12% 240 1.43% 6,431 38.33% 16,777
Montgomery 30,175 53.28% 25,716 45.40% 748 1.32% 4,459 7.88% 56,639
Moore 2,010 68.09% 881 29.84% 61 2.07% 1,129 38.25% 2,952
Morgan 4,717 69.14% 1,969 28.86% 136 2.00% 2,748 40.28% 6,822
Obion 8,873 66.26% 4,308 32.17% 211 1.57% 4,565 34.09% 13,392
Overton 4,497 55.57% 3,419 42.25% 176 2.18% 1,078 13.32% 8,092
Perry 1,596 53.20% 1,329 44.30% 75 2.50% 267 8.90% 3,000
Pickett 1,786 66.87% 854 31.97% 31 1.16% 932 34.90% 2,671
Polk 4,267 65.64% 2,124 32.67% 110 1.69% 2,143 32.97% 6,501
Putnam 17,101 62.60% 9,739 35.65% 476 1.75% 7,362 26.95% 27,316
Rhea 8,042 72.41% 2,907 26.18% 157 1.41% 5,135 46.23% 11,106
Roane 15,658 67.27% 7,224 31.04% 394 1.69% 8,434 36.23% 23,276
Robertson 17,903 64.83% 9,318 33.74% 393 1.43% 8,585 31.09% 27,614
Rutherford 59,892 58.78% 40,460 39.71% 1,547 1.51% 19,432 19.07% 101,899
Scott 4,931 72.70% 1,720 25.36% 132 1.94% 3,211 47.34% 6,783
Sequatchie 3,610 66.40% 1,717 31.58% 110 2.02% 1,893 34.82% 5,437
Sevier 24,922 73.43% 8,604 25.35% 415 1.22% 16,318 48.08% 33,941
Shelby 145,458 35.96% 256,297 63.35% 2,800 0.69% -110,839 -27.39% 404,555
Smith 4,563 58.95% 2,992 38.65% 186 2.40% 1,571 20.30% 7,741
Stewart 2,956 53.68% 2,470 44.85% 81 1.47% 486 8.83% 5,507
Sullivan 44,808 70.02% 18,354 28.68% 835 1.30% 26,454 41.34% 63,997
Sumner 44,949 66.73% 21,487 31.90% 926 1.37% 23,462 34.83% 67,362
Tipton 17,165 67.80% 7,931 31.33% 220 0.87% 9,234 36.47% 25,316
Trousdale 1,688 52.11% 1,475 45.54% 76 2.35% 213 6.57% 3,239
Unicoi 5,011 69.38% 2,107 29.17% 105 1.45% 2,904 40.21% 7,223
Union 4,467 69.81% 1,829 28.58% 103 1.61% 2,638 41.23% 6,399
Van Buren 1,294 58.66% 849 38.49% 63 2.85% 445 20.17% 2,206
Warren 8,562 59.46% 5,515 38.30% 323 2.24% 3,047 21.16% 14,400
Washington 32,341 66.03% 15,941 32.54% 700 1.43% 16,400 33.49% 48,982
Wayne 4,076 73.75% 1,355 24.52% 96 1.73% 2,721 49.23% 5,527
Weakley 8,855 64.68% 4,596 33.57% 239 1.75% 4,259 31.11% 13,690
White 6,103 63.26% 3,372 34.95% 172 1.79% 2,731 28.31% 9,647
Williamson 64,858 69.12% 27,886 29.72% 1,092 1.16% 36,972 39.40% 93,836
Wilson 34,595 67.62% 15,886 31.05% 678 1.33% 18,709 36.57% 51,159
Totals 1,479,178 56.85% 1,087,437 41.79% 35,367 1.36% 391,741 15.06% 2,601,982
 
County Flips:

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit

By congressional district edit

John McCain swept the state and carried 7 of the state's 9 congressional districts, including three districts held by Democrats. Barack Obama carried the state's 2 congressional districts anchored by the two largest cities of Memphis and Nashville.

District McCain Obama Representative
1st 69.77% 28.77% David Davis (110th Congress)
Phil Roe (111th Congress)
2nd 64.21% 34.28% John J. Duncan, Jr.
3rd 61.87% 36.86% Zach Wamp
4th 64.06% 34.25% Lincoln Davis
5th 42.94% 55.85% Jim Cooper
6th 61.87% 36.59% Bart Gordon
7th 64.76% 34.29% Marsha Blackburn
8th 56.01% 42.73% John S. Tanner
9th 22.51% 76.92% Steve Cohen

Electors edit

Technically the voters of Tennessee cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Tennessee is allocated 11 electors because it has 9 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 11 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 11 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them.[21] An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.

The electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 15, 2008, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.

The following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 11 were pledged to John McCain and Sarah Palin:

  1. Sara Sellers
  2. Jim Haslam
  3. Wayne Cropp
  4. Lisa Wheeler
  5. Beth Campbell
  6. Albert McCall
  7. Shirley Curry
  8. Marilucile Counce
  9. Colin Richmond
  10. Winfield Dunn
  11. Chrystal Horn

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Tennessee Voter Turnout in 2008". Tennessee Secretary of State. November 4, 2008. Retrieved February 28, 2023.
  2. ^ . January 1, 2009. Archived from the original on January 1, 2009. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  3. ^ . May 5, 2015. Archived from the original on May 5, 2015. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  4. ^ . April 22, 2009. Archived from the original on April 22, 2009. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  5. ^ "Electoral-vote.com: President, Senate, House Updated Daily". electoral-vote.com. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d Based on Takeaway
  7. ^ "POLITICO's 2008 Swing State Map - POLITICO.com". www.politico.com. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on June 5, 2008.
  9. ^ . CQ Politics. Archived from the original on June 14, 2009. Retrieved December 20, 2009.
  10. ^ Nagourney, Adam; Zeleny, Jeff; Carter, Shan (November 4, 2008). "The Electoral Map: Key States". The New York Times. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  11. ^ . CNN. October 31, 2008. Archived from the original on June 19, 2010. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  12. ^ "Winning The Electoral College". Fox News. April 27, 2010.
  13. ^ "roadto270". hosted.ap.org. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  14. ^ "Election 2008: Electoral College Update - Rasmussen Reports". www.rasmussenreports.com. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  15. ^ [1] November 28, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on January 18, 2009. Retrieved August 18, 2009.
  17. ^ "Map: Campaign Ad Spending - Election Center 2008 from CNN.com". CNN. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  18. ^ "Map: Campaign Candidate Visits - Election Center 2008 from CNN.com". CNN. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  19. ^ a b . New York Times. Archived from the original on November 3, 2004. Retrieved May 17, 2009.
  20. ^ "Official General Election Results". The Green Papers. Retrieved December 12, 2008.
  21. ^ . California Secretary of State. Archived from the original on October 30, 2008. Retrieved November 1, 2008.

2008, united, states, presidential, election, tennessee, main, article, 2008, united, states, presidential, election, took, place, november, 2008, part, 2008, united, states, presidential, election, voters, chose, representatives, electors, electoral, college,. Main article 2008 United States presidential election The 2008 United States presidential election in Tennessee took place on November 4 2008 and was part of the 2008 United States presidential election Voters chose 11 representatives or electors to the Electoral College who voted for president and vice president 2008 United States presidential election in Tennessee 2004 November 4 2008 2012 Turnout66 34 1 0 02 pp Nominee John McCain Barack ObamaParty Republican DemocraticHome state Arizona IllinoisRunning mate Sarah Palin Joe BidenElectoral vote 11 0Popular vote 1 479 178 1 087 437Percentage 56 85 41 79 County ResultsPrecinct Results McCain 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 Obama 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Tie No Data President before electionGeorge W BushRepublican Elected President Barack ObamaDemocraticRepublican John McCain defeated Democrat Barack Obama in the state by 15 percentage points Prior to the election 17 news organizations had correctly predicted that McCain would easily carry the state and virtually all polling indicated the same Most news organizations called Tennessee for McCain immediately after the polls closed McCain slightly improved upon George W Bush s performance in 2004 despite the nation as a whole trending significantly Democratic in 2008 This was the first time since 1960 that Tennessee did not back the overall winning candidate in a presidential election As of 2020 update this remains the last time that Houston County and Jackson County have voted for a Democratic presidential nominee or that the party has received more than 40 of the vote It was one of five states to swing Republican from 2004 along with West Virginia Louisiana Oklahoma and Arkansas Contents 1 Primaries 2 Campaign 2 1 Predictions 2 2 Polling 2 3 Fundraising 2 4 Advertising and visits 3 Analysis 4 Results 4 1 By county 4 1 1 Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican 4 2 By congressional district 5 Electors 6 See also 7 ReferencesPrimaries edit2008 Tennessee Democratic primary 2008 Tennessee Republican primaryCampaign editPredictions edit There were 16 news organizations who made state by state predictions of the election Here are their last predictions before election day Source RankingD C Political Report 2 Likely RCook Political Report 3 Solid RThe Takeaway 4 Solid RElectoral vote com 5 Solid RWashington Post 6 Solid RPolitico 7 Solid RRealClearPolitics 8 Solid RFiveThirtyEight 6 Solid RCQ Politics 9 Solid RThe New York Times 10 Solid RCNN 11 Safe RNPR 6 Solid RMSNBC 6 Solid RFox News 12 Likely RAssociated Press 13 Likely RRasmussen Reports 14 Safe RPolling edit Main article Statewide opinion polling for the United States presidential election 2008 Tennessee McCain won every single pre election poll and each by a double digit margin of victory The final 3 polls averaged McCain leading 55 to 40 15 Fundraising edit John McCain raised a total of 2 941 065 in the state Barack Obama raised 3 481 341 16 Advertising and visits edit Obama spent 518 659 The Republican ticket spent just 3 526 17 Obama visited the state once going to Nashville McCain visited the state twice visiting Nashville and Blountville 18 Analysis editDespite narrowly voting for Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 when former Tennessee Senator Al Gore was on the ticket as Vice President the state along with neighboring Arkansas has steadily been trending Republican since then George W Bush narrowly carried the state in 2000 over Gore and easily won in 2004 over John Kerry A handful of Tennessean counties including those that hadn t voted Republican since landslide victors Reagan or Nixon were on the ballot swung dramatically Republican For example Grundy County in southeastern Tennessee broke 56 42 for John Kerry in 2004 but wound up being swept by McCain 55 42 this year The state was one of five states that swung even more Republican in 2008 with John McCain soundly defeating Barack Obama in Tennessee 2008 marked the first time since 1960 whereby the state was carried by the losing presidential candidate A possible factor to Tennessee ironically swinging rightward despite the national Democratic trend could be the state favoring Hillary Clinton former First Lady of neighboring Arkansas over Barack Obama in the Democratic primary as was the case in Arkansas itself McCain won both East Tennessee and Middle Tennessee by landslide margins Historically East Tennessee which is a part of Appalachia is one of the few ancestrally Republican areas of the South Most of its residents strongly opposed secession during the Civil War They identified with the GOP after the return of peace and have remained in the Republican fold through good times and bad ever since Some of the region s counties are among the few in the country to have never supported a Democrat for president However Middle Tennessee has Democratic roots based on liberal economic policies most famously Franklin D Roosevelt s Tennessee Valley Authority Middle Tennessee voted strongly for Bill Clinton of neighboring Arkansas but Middle Tennessee native Al Gore narrowly lost the region in 2000 a loss that ultimately cost him Tennessee and the election In contrast it was one of the few regions in the country which voted more Republican than in 2004 19 This is largely due to a growing social conservative trend in the region particularly in the Nashville suburbs some of the most politically active churches in the state are located there On the other hand Barack Obama did improve relatively well upon John Kerry s performances in the traditionally Democratic cities of Nashville and Memphis In the former support amongst progressive whites led to a 3 2 victory for Obama in Davidson County 19 In Memphis heavy African American turnout ensured him the largest margin in the state in Shelby County although far from enough to outweigh his losses everywhere else in the state McCain however carried the third and fourth most populated cities of Chattanooga in Hamilton County as well as Knoxville in Knox County During the same election at the state level Republicans picked up four seats in the Tennessee House of Representatives and three seats in the Tennessee Senate to obtain control of both chambers of the state legislature for the first time since Reconstruction Results editUnited States presidential election in Tennessee 2008 20 Party Candidate Running mate Votes Percentage Electoral votesRepublican John McCain Sarah Palin 1 479 178 56 85 11Democratic Barack Obama Joe Biden 1 087 437 41 79 0Independent Ralph Nader Matt Gonzalez 11 560 0 44 0Libertarian Bob Barr Wayne Allyn Root 8 547 0 33 0Constitution Chuck Baldwin Darrell Castle 8 191 0 31 0Green Cynthia McKinney Rosa Clemente 2 499 0 10 0Write ins Write ins Write ins 2 333 0 09 0Socialist Brian Moore Stewart Alexander 1 326 0 05 0Boston Tea Charles Jay Thomas Knapp 1 011 0 04 0Totals 2 601 982 100 00 11Voter turnout Voting age population 55 5 By county edit County John McCainRepublican Barack ObamaDemocratic Various candidatesOther parties Margin Total Anderson 19 675 62 32 11 396 36 10 499 1 58 8 279 26 22 31 570Bedford 10 217 65 89 5 027 32 42 263 1 69 5 190 33 47 15 507Benton 3 696 57 05 2 645 40 82 138 2 13 1 051 16 23 6 479Bledsoe 3 166 66 18 1 517 31 71 101 2 11 1 649 34 47 4 784Blount 35 571 68 88 15 253 29 53 821 1 59 20 318 39 35 51 645Bradley 28 333 74 19 9 357 24 50 501 1 31 18 976 49 69 38 191Campbell 8 535 67 59 3 867 30 62 226 1 79 4 668 36 97 12 628Cannon 3 322 60 88 2 011 36 85 124 2 27 1 311 24 03 5 457Carroll 7 455 64 01 3 980 34 17 211 1 82 3 475 29 84 11 646Carter 15 852 72 82 5 587 25 66 330 1 52 10 265 47 16 21 769Cheatham 10 702 65 14 5 498 33 47 228 1 39 5 204 31 67 16 428Chester 4 587 71 02 1 797 27 82 75 1 16 2 790 43 20 6 459Claiborne 7 175 68 86 3 078 29 54 167 1 60 4 097 39 32 10 420Clay 1 676 55 98 1 248 41 68 70 2 34 428 14 30 2 994Cocke 8 945 71 67 3 340 26 76 196 1 57 5 605 44 91 12 481Coffee 13 250 63 73 7 132 34 30 408 1 97 6 118 29 43 20 790Crockett 3 994 66 16 1 967 32 58 76 1 26 2 027 33 58 6 037Cumberland 17 436 67 81 7 889 30 68 387 1 51 9 547 37 13 25 712Davidson 102 915 38 80 158 423 59 73 3 885 1 47 55 508 20 93 265 223Decatur 3 101 65 11 1 566 32 88 96 2 01 1 535 32 23 4 763DeKalb 4 085 57 82 2 832 40 08 148 2 10 1 253 17 74 7 065Dickson 11 677 59 82 7 506 38 45 336 1 73 4 171 21 37 19 519Dyer 9 859 68 23 4 411 30 53 180 1 24 5 448 37 70 14 450Fayette 12 173 63 22 6 892 35 80 189 0 98 5 281 27 42 19 254Fentress 4 789 71 06 1 831 27 17 119 1 77 2 958 43 89 6 739Franklin 10 539 60 46 6 613 37 94 280 1 60 3 926 22 52 17 432Gibson 13 516 63 60 7 406 34 85 331 1 55 6 110 28 75 21 253Giles 6 902 59 05 4 614 39 47 173 1 48 2 288 19 58 11 689Grainger 5 297 70 60 2 066 27 54 140 1 86 3 231 43 06 7 503Greene 17 151 69 52 7 110 28 82 409 1 66 10 041 40 70 24 670Grundy 2 563 55 33 1 971 42 55 98 2 12 592 12 78 4 632Hamblen 15 508 68 41 6 807 30 03 354 1 56 8 701 38 38 22 669Hamilton 81 702 55 19 64 246 43 40 2 086 1 41 17 456 11 79 148 034Hancock 1 588 70 86 604 26 95 49 2 19 984 43 91 2 241Hardeman 5 225 46 50 5 919 52 67 93 0 83 694 6 17 11 237Hardin 7 077 70 52 2 794 27 84 164 1 64 4 283 42 68 10 035Hawkins 14 756 70 13 5 930 28 18 354 1 69 8 826 41 95 21 040Haywood 3 165 38 97 4 893 60 25 63 0 78 1 728 21 28 8 121Henderson 7 669 70 79 3 021 27 88 144 1 33 4 648 42 91 10 834Henry 8 182 60 41 5 153 38 04 210 1 55 3 029 22 37 13 545Hickman 4 784 56 30 3 563 41 93 151 1 77 1 221 14 37 8 498Houston 1 608 47 94 1 678 50 03 68 2 03 70 2 09 3 354Humphreys 3 818 50 37 3 600 47 49 162 2 14 218 2 88 7 580Jackson 2 185 48 54 2 224 49 41 92 2 05 39 0 87 4 501Jefferson 13 092 70 65 5 178 27 94 262 1 41 7 914 42 71 18 532Johnson 4 621 70 11 1 837 27 87 133 2 02 2 784 42 24 6 591Knox 113 015 60 73 70 215 37 73 2 856 1 53 42 800 23 00 186 086Lake 1 175 52 50 1 024 45 76 39 1 74 151 6 74 2 238Lauderdale 4 933 52 83 4 322 46 28 83 0 89 611 6 55 9 338Lawrence 10 566 65 96 5 161 32 22 293 1 82 5 405 33 74 16 020Lewis 2 951 61 05 1 804 37 32 79 1 63 1 147 23 73 4 834Lincoln 9 231 70 30 3 695 28 14 204 1 56 5 536 42 16 13 130Loudon 15 815 71 29 6 058 27 31 311 1 40 9 757 43 98 22 184Macon 5 145 69 90 2 060 27 99 155 2 11 3 085 41 91 7 360Madison 23 290 53 12 20 209 46 09 347 0 79 3 081 7 03 43 846Marion 6 746 58 98 4 506 39 40 185 1 62 2 240 19 58 11 437Marshall 6 755 59 84 4 320 38 27 214 1 89 2 435 21 57 11 289Maury 20 288 60 08 13 058 38 67 421 1 25 7 230 21 41 33 767McMinn 12 989 69 13 5 541 29 49 259 1 38 7 448 39 64 18 789McNairy 7 135 68 46 3 131 30 04 156 1 50 4 004 38 42 10 422Meigs 2 797 66 01 1 372 32 38 68 1 61 1 425 33 63 4 237Monroe 11 484 68 45 5 053 30 12 240 1 43 6 431 38 33 16 777Montgomery 30 175 53 28 25 716 45 40 748 1 32 4 459 7 88 56 639Moore 2 010 68 09 881 29 84 61 2 07 1 129 38 25 2 952Morgan 4 717 69 14 1 969 28 86 136 2 00 2 748 40 28 6 822Obion 8 873 66 26 4 308 32 17 211 1 57 4 565 34 09 13 392Overton 4 497 55 57 3 419 42 25 176 2 18 1 078 13 32 8 092Perry 1 596 53 20 1 329 44 30 75 2 50 267 8 90 3 000Pickett 1 786 66 87 854 31 97 31 1 16 932 34 90 2 671Polk 4 267 65 64 2 124 32 67 110 1 69 2 143 32 97 6 501Putnam 17 101 62 60 9 739 35 65 476 1 75 7 362 26 95 27 316Rhea 8 042 72 41 2 907 26 18 157 1 41 5 135 46 23 11 106Roane 15 658 67 27 7 224 31 04 394 1 69 8 434 36 23 23 276Robertson 17 903 64 83 9 318 33 74 393 1 43 8 585 31 09 27 614Rutherford 59 892 58 78 40 460 39 71 1 547 1 51 19 432 19 07 101 899Scott 4 931 72 70 1 720 25 36 132 1 94 3 211 47 34 6 783Sequatchie 3 610 66 40 1 717 31 58 110 2 02 1 893 34 82 5 437Sevier 24 922 73 43 8 604 25 35 415 1 22 16 318 48 08 33 941Shelby 145 458 35 96 256 297 63 35 2 800 0 69 110 839 27 39 404 555Smith 4 563 58 95 2 992 38 65 186 2 40 1 571 20 30 7 741Stewart 2 956 53 68 2 470 44 85 81 1 47 486 8 83 5 507Sullivan 44 808 70 02 18 354 28 68 835 1 30 26 454 41 34 63 997Sumner 44 949 66 73 21 487 31 90 926 1 37 23 462 34 83 67 362Tipton 17 165 67 80 7 931 31 33 220 0 87 9 234 36 47 25 316Trousdale 1 688 52 11 1 475 45 54 76 2 35 213 6 57 3 239Unicoi 5 011 69 38 2 107 29 17 105 1 45 2 904 40 21 7 223Union 4 467 69 81 1 829 28 58 103 1 61 2 638 41 23 6 399Van Buren 1 294 58 66 849 38 49 63 2 85 445 20 17 2 206Warren 8 562 59 46 5 515 38 30 323 2 24 3 047 21 16 14 400Washington 32 341 66 03 15 941 32 54 700 1 43 16 400 33 49 48 982Wayne 4 076 73 75 1 355 24 52 96 1 73 2 721 49 23 5 527Weakley 8 855 64 68 4 596 33 57 239 1 75 4 259 31 11 13 690White 6 103 63 26 3 372 34 95 172 1 79 2 731 28 31 9 647Williamson 64 858 69 12 27 886 29 72 1 092 1 16 36 972 39 40 93 836Wilson 34 595 67 62 15 886 31 05 678 1 33 18 709 36 57 51 159Totals 1 479 178 56 85 1 087 437 41 79 35 367 1 36 391 741 15 06 2 601 982 nbsp County Flips Democratic Hold Republican Hold Gain from DemocraticCounties that flipped from Democratic to Republican edit Benton largest municipality Camden Clay largest municipality Celina Grundy largest municipality Altamont Humphreys largest municipality Waverly Lake largest municipality Tiptonville Lauderdale largest municipality Ripley Overton largest municipality Livingston Perry largest municipality Linden Smith largest municipality Carthage Stewart largest municipality Dover Trousdale largest municipality Hartsville Van Buren largest municipality Spencer By congressional district edit John McCain swept the state and carried 7 of the state s 9 congressional districts including three districts held by Democrats Barack Obama carried the state s 2 congressional districts anchored by the two largest cities of Memphis and Nashville District McCain Obama Representative1st 69 77 28 77 David Davis 110th Congress Phil Roe 111th Congress 2nd 64 21 34 28 John J Duncan Jr 3rd 61 87 36 86 Zach Wamp4th 64 06 34 25 Lincoln Davis5th 42 94 55 85 Jim Cooper6th 61 87 36 59 Bart Gordon7th 64 76 34 29 Marsha Blackburn8th 56 01 42 73 John S Tanner9th 22 51 76 92 Steve CohenElectors editMain article List of 2008 United States presidential electors Technically the voters of Tennessee cast their ballots for electors representatives to the Electoral College Tennessee is allocated 11 electors because it has 9 congressional districts and 2 senators All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write in votes must submit a list of 11 electors who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 11 electoral votes Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate they are not obligated to vote for them 21 An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector The electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 15 2008 to cast their votes for president and vice president The Electoral College itself never meets as one body Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols The following were the members of the Electoral College from the state All 11 were pledged to John McCain and Sarah Palin Sara Sellers Jim Haslam Wayne Cropp Lisa Wheeler Beth Campbell Albert McCall Shirley Curry Marilucile Counce Colin Richmond Winfield Dunn Chrystal HornSee also editPresidency of Barack Obama 2008 Tennessee elections 2008 United States electionsReferences edit Tennessee Voter Turnout in 2008 Tennessee Secretary of State November 4 2008 Retrieved February 28 2023 D C s Political Report The complete source for campaign summaries January 1 2009 Archived from the original on January 1 2009 Retrieved August 23 2021 Presidential May 5 2015 Archived from the original on May 5 2015 Retrieved August 23 2021 Vote 2008 The Takeaway Track the Electoral College vote predictions April 22 2009 Archived from the original on April 22 2009 Retrieved August 23 2021 Electoral vote com President Senate House Updated Daily electoral vote com Retrieved August 23 2021 a b c d Based on Takeaway POLITICO s 2008 Swing State Map POLITICO com www politico com Retrieved September 22 2016 RealClearPolitics Electoral Map Archived from the original on June 5 2008 CQ Presidential Election Maps 2008 CQ Politics Archived from the original on June 14 2009 Retrieved December 20 2009 Nagourney Adam Zeleny Jeff Carter Shan November 4 2008 The Electoral Map Key States The New York Times Retrieved May 26 2010 October 2008 CNN Political Ticker CNN com Blogs CNN October 31 2008 Archived from the original on June 19 2010 Retrieved May 26 2010 Winning The Electoral College Fox News April 27 2010 roadto270 hosted ap org Retrieved September 22 2016 Election 2008 Electoral College Update Rasmussen Reports www rasmussenreports com Retrieved September 22 2016 1 Archived November 28 2008 at the Wayback Machine Presidential Campaign Finance Archived from the original on January 18 2009 Retrieved August 18 2009 Map Campaign Ad Spending Election Center 2008 from CNN com CNN Retrieved May 26 2010 Map Campaign Candidate Visits Election Center 2008 from CNN com CNN Retrieved May 26 2010 a b Election Results 2008 New York Times Archived from the original on November 3 2004 Retrieved May 17 2009 Official General Election Results The Green Papers Retrieved December 12 2008 Electoral College California Secretary of State Archived from the original on October 30 2008 Retrieved November 1 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2008 United States presidential election in Tennessee amp oldid 1206772153, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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