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2004 Republican Party presidential primaries

From January 19 to June 8, 2004, voters of the Republican Party chose its nominee for president in the 2004 United States presidential election. Incumbent President George W. Bush was again selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 2004 Republican National Convention held from August 30 to September 2, 2004, in New York City.

2004 Republican Party presidential primaries

← 2000 January 19 to June 8, 2004 2008 →

 
Candidate George W. Bush Uncommitted Bill Wyatt
Home state Texas California[1]
Delegate count 2,590 0[a] 0
Contests won 49 0 0
Popular vote 7,853,863[3] 91,926[4] 10,937[2]
Percentage 98.1% 1.2% 0.1%

Republican presidential primary, 2004
  George W. Bush
  No votes/information available

Previous Republican nominee

George W. Bush

Republican nominee

George W. Bush

Primary race overview edit

Incumbent President George W. Bush announced in mid-2003 that he would campaign for re-election; he faced no major challengers. He then went on, throughout early 2004, to win every nomination contest, including a sweep of Super Tuesday, beating back the vacuum of challengers and maintaining the recent tradition of an easy primary for incumbent Presidents (the last time an incumbent was seriously challenged in a presidential primary contest was when Senator Ted Kennedy challenged Jimmy Carter for the Democratic nomination in 1980). Bush managed to raise US$130 million in 2003 alone, and expected to set a national primary fund-raising record of $200 million by the time of the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City.

Several states and territories canceled their respective Republican primaries altogether, citing Bush being the only candidate to qualify on their respective ballot, including Connecticut,[5] Florida,[6] Mississippi,[7] New York,[8] Puerto Rico,[9] and South Dakota.[10]

Senator Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, an opponent of the war in Iraq, Bush's tax cuts, drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and much of Bush's social agenda, considered challenging Bush in the New Hampshire primary in the fall of 2003. He decided not to run, after the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003.[11] He would later change his party affiliation to Democratic and run in that party's 2016 presidential primaries.[12][13]

Candidates edit

Nominee edit

Candidate Most recent office Home state Campaign

Withdrawal date

Popular

vote

Contests won Running mate
George W. Bush   President of the United States
(2001–2009)
 
Texas
 
(CampaignPositions)
Secured nomination: March 10, 2004
7,853,863
(98.01%)
49 Dick Cheney

Challengers edit

On the ballot in two or more primaries edit

  • William Tsangares[14] ran for president under the pseudonym "Bill Wyatt." The then-43-year-old T-shirt maker left the Democratic Party to become a Republican after Democrats voted for the war in Iraq, an action he saw as a betrayal. Tsangares traveled 12,000 miles and spent an estimated $20,000 on his presidential campaign. He managed to get on the ballot in New Hampshire, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Louisiana, and even the Democratic Primary ballot in Arizona. He finished tenth in the New Hampshire primary with 0.23% of the vote (153 votes), placed second in Missouri, where he received 1,268 votes (1.03%). However, a minor upset occurred on Mini-Tuesday when Tsangares won just over 10% of the vote in Oklahoma and 4% in Louisiana. He also received 233 votes (0.10%) in the Arizona Democratic primary.
  • Blake Ashby, a Republican entrepreneur frustrated with the explosion of debt under President Bush, ran as a protest candidate in the Republican primaries. On the ballot in New Hampshire and Missouri, he spent approximately $20,000 on his campaign, visiting New Hampshire and campaigning in his home state of Missouri and participated in the C-Span Minor Candidates Forum [15] He finished seventh in New Hampshire with 264 votes [16] and third in Missouri with 981 votes.


Candidate home state total votes %
Uncommitted
91,926 1.1%
(others) various 49,281 0.8%
Bill Wyatt California 10,847 0%
Blake Ashby Missouri 1.145 0%

On the ballot in one primary edit

All but one of the following were on the ballot only in the state of New Hampshire.

Declined to be candidates edit

Candidate Home state total votes %
Richard Bosa New Hampshire 841 1.2%
John Buchanan Georgia 836 1.2%
John Rigazio New Hampshire 803 1.2%
Robert Haines New Hampshire 579 0.9%
Michael Callis New Hampshire 388 0.6%
Millie Howard Ohio 239 0.4%
Tom Laughlin California 154 0.2%
Jim Taylor 124 0.2%
Mark "Dick" Harnes 87 0.1%
Cornelius E. O'Connor, 77 0.1%
George Gostigian, 52 0.1%
Jack Fellure West Virginia 14[17] 0

Results edit

There were 2,509 total delegates to the 2004 Republican National Convention, of which 650 were so-called "superdelegates" who were not bound by any particular state's primary or caucus votes and could change their votes at any time. A candidate needs 1,255 delegates to become the nominee. Except for the Northern Mariana Islands and Midway Atoll, all states, territories, and other inhabited areas of the United States offer delegates to the 2004 Republican National Convention.

2004 Republican primaries and caucuses
Blake Ashby Richard Bosa George W. Bush John Buchanan Michael Callis Jack Fellure Robert Haines Millie Howard Tom Laughlin John Rigazio Bill Wyatt
Total Delegates¹ 1608
Superdelegates¹ 168
Jan. 19 Iowa³
(caucus)
100.00%
(32)
Jan. 27 New Hampshire
(primary)
0.39% 1.24% 79.55%
(29)
1.23% 0.57% 0.85% 0.35% 0.23% 1.18% 0.23%
Feb. 3 (Mini Tuesday) Missouri
(primary)
0.80% 95.06%
(57)
1.03%
North Dakota
(caucus)
99.11%
(26)
0.69%
Oklahoma
(primary)
90.00%
(41)
10.00%
South Carolina
(convention)
100.00%
(46)
Feb. 10 District of Columbia
(caucus)
100.00%
(16)
Tennessee
(primary)
95.45%
(39)
Feb. 17 Wisconsin
(primary)
99.25%
(37)
Mar. 2 (Super Tuesday) California
(primary)
100.00%
(170)
Connecticut
(none)
-
(30)
Georgia
(primary)
100.00%
(66)
Maryland
(primary)
100.00%
(36)
Massachusetts
(primary)
91.13%
(41)
Minnesota
(caucus)
100.00%
(38)
New York
(none)
-
(87)
Ohio
(primary)
100.00%
(81)
Rhode Island
(primary)
84.89%
(18)
Vermont
(primary)
100.00%
(15)
Mar. 9 Florida
(primary)
-
(109)
Louisiana
(primary)
96.09%
(41)
3.91%
Mississippi
(primary)
-
(35)
Texas
(primary)
92.49%
(135)
Mar. 16 Illinois
(primary)
100.00%
(60)
Apr. 27 Pennsylvania
(primary)
100.00%
May 4 Indiana
(primary)
100.00%
(27)
May 11 West Virginia
(primary)
100.00%
(26)
May 18 Arkansas
(primary)
97.25%
(32)
Kentucky
(primary)
92.64%
(43)
Oregon
(primary)
94.93%
(28)
May 25 Idaho
(primary)
89.50%
(24)
Jun. 1 Alabama
(primary)
92.83%
(45)
New Mexico
(primary)
100.00%
(21)
South Dakota
(primary)
-
(25)
Jun. 8 New Jersey
(primary)
100.00%
(52)
Color Key: 1st place
  (delegates earned)  
2nd place
  (delegates earned)  
3rd place
  (delegates earned)  
  Withdrawn  

Counties carried edit

 
Republican presidential primary, 2004 results by county (exceptions: Minnesota, Maryland, Nebraska & North Dakota – at-large)
  George W. Bush
  No votes/information available

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Our Campaigns - Candidate - William J. "Bill" Wyatt".
  2. ^ "Our Campaigns - US President - R Primaries Race - Jan 27, 2004".
  3. ^ "State by State Summary 2004 Presidential Primaries, Caucuses, and Conventions".
  4. ^ "Our Campaigns - US President - R Primaries Race - Jan 27, 2004".
  5. ^ "Connecticut Republican Allocation - 2004". The Green Papers. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  6. ^ "Florida Republican Allocation - 2004". The Green Papers. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  7. ^ "Mississippi Republican Allocation - 2004". The Green Papers. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  8. ^ "New York Republican Allocation - 2004". The Green Papers. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  9. ^ "Puerto Rico Republican Allocation - 2004". The Green Papers. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  10. ^ "South Dakota Republican Allocation - 2004". The Green Papers. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  11. ^ Chafee, Lincoln, Against the Tide: How A Compliant Congress Empowered A Reckless President, p.119-120
  12. ^ DelReal, Jose A. (June 3, 2015). "Lincoln Chafee announces long-shot presidential bid". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  13. ^ "Rhode Island's Chafee enters 2016 Democratic contest". Boston Herald. Associated Press. June 3, 2015. Archived from the original on February 8, 2016. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
  14. ^ "Our Campaigns - Candidate - William J. "Bill" Wyatt".
  15. ^ "Blake Ashby | C-SPAN.org". www.c-span.org. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  16. ^ "Republican President of the United States - NHSOS". sos.nh.gov. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  17. ^ "Bush big winner in North Dakota". The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead. February 5, 2004. Retrieved June 30, 2015.

Notes edit

  1. ^ While there were technically 773 delegates that went to the convention unnbound, they presumably cast their support for the president

2004, republican, party, presidential, primaries, from, january, june, 2004, voters, republican, party, chose, nominee, president, 2004, united, states, presidential, election, incumbent, president, george, bush, again, selected, nominee, through, series, prim. From January 19 to June 8 2004 voters of the Republican Party chose its nominee for president in the 2004 United States presidential election Incumbent President George W Bush was again selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 2004 Republican National Convention held from August 30 to September 2 2004 in New York City 2004 Republican Party presidential primaries 2000 January 19 to June 8 2004 2008 2 509 delegates 1 736 pledged and 773 unpledged to the Republican National Convention1 255 delegates needed to win Candidate George W Bush Uncommitted Bill WyattHome state Texas California 1 Delegate count 2 590 0 a 0Contests won 49 0 0Popular vote 7 853 863 3 91 926 4 10 937 2 Percentage 98 1 1 2 0 1 First place by first instance voteFirst place by convention roll callRepublican presidential primary 2004 George W Bush No votes information availablePrevious Republican nomineeGeorge W Bush Republican nominee George W Bush Contents 1 Primary race overview 2 Candidates 2 1 Nominee 2 2 Challengers 2 2 1 On the ballot in two or more primaries 2 2 2 On the ballot in one primary 2 2 3 Declined to be candidates 3 Results 3 1 Counties carried 4 See also 5 References 6 NotesPrimary race overview editIncumbent President George W Bush announced in mid 2003 that he would campaign for re election he faced no major challengers He then went on throughout early 2004 to win every nomination contest including a sweep of Super Tuesday beating back the vacuum of challengers and maintaining the recent tradition of an easy primary for incumbent Presidents the last time an incumbent was seriously challenged in a presidential primary contest was when Senator Ted Kennedy challenged Jimmy Carter for the Democratic nomination in 1980 Bush managed to raise US 130 million in 2003 alone and expected to set a national primary fund raising record of 200 million by the time of the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City Several states and territories canceled their respective Republican primaries altogether citing Bush being the only candidate to qualify on their respective ballot including Connecticut 5 Florida 6 Mississippi 7 New York 8 Puerto Rico 9 and South Dakota 10 Senator Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island an opponent of the war in Iraq Bush s tax cuts drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and much of Bush s social agenda considered challenging Bush in the New Hampshire primary in the fall of 2003 He decided not to run after the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003 11 He would later change his party affiliation to Democratic and run in that party s 2016 presidential primaries 12 13 Candidates editNominee edit Candidate Most recent office Home state CampaignWithdrawal date Popular vote Contests won Running mateGeorge W Bush nbsp President of the United States 2001 2009 nbsp Texas nbsp Campaign Positions Secured nomination March 10 2004 7 853 863 98 01 49 Dick CheneyChallengers edit On the ballot in two or more primaries edit William Tsangares 14 ran for president under the pseudonym Bill Wyatt The then 43 year old T shirt maker left the Democratic Party to become a Republican after Democrats voted for the war in Iraq an action he saw as a betrayal Tsangares traveled 12 000 miles and spent an estimated 20 000 on his presidential campaign He managed to get on the ballot in New Hampshire Missouri Oklahoma and Louisiana and even the Democratic Primary ballot in Arizona He finished tenth in the New Hampshire primary with 0 23 of the vote 153 votes placed second in Missouri where he received 1 268 votes 1 03 However a minor upset occurred on Mini Tuesday when Tsangares won just over 10 of the vote in Oklahoma and 4 in Louisiana He also received 233 votes 0 10 in the Arizona Democratic primary Blake Ashby a Republican entrepreneur frustrated with the explosion of debt under President Bush ran as a protest candidate in the Republican primaries On the ballot in New Hampshire and Missouri he spent approximately 20 000 on his campaign visiting New Hampshire and campaigning in his home state of Missouri and participated in the C Span Minor Candidates Forum 15 He finished seventh in New Hampshire with 264 votes 16 and third in Missouri with 981 votes Candidate home state total votes Uncommitted 91 926 1 1 others various 49 281 0 8 Bill Wyatt California 10 847 0 Blake Ashby Missouri 1 145 0 On the ballot in one primary edit All but one of the following were on the ballot only in the state of New Hampshire nbsp Retired engineer Jack Fellure of West Virginia got 14 votes in the North Dakota Caucases nbsp Actor Tom Laughlin of CaliforniaDeclined to be candidates edit nbsp BusinessmanDonald Trumpfrom New York nbsp GovernorJesse Venturafrom Minnesota nbsp U S SenatorLincoln Chafeefrom Rhode Island nbsp U S RepresentativeRon Paulfrom Texas nbsp State Chief JusticeRoy Moorefrom AlabamaCandidate Home state total votes Richard Bosa New Hampshire 841 1 2 John Buchanan Georgia 836 1 2 John Rigazio New Hampshire 803 1 2 Robert Haines New Hampshire 579 0 9 Michael Callis New Hampshire 388 0 6 Millie Howard Ohio 239 0 4 Tom Laughlin California 154 0 2 Jim Taylor 124 0 2 Mark Dick Harnes 87 0 1 Cornelius E O Connor 77 0 1 George Gostigian 52 0 1 Jack Fellure West Virginia 14 17 0Results editThere were 2 509 total delegates to the 2004 Republican National Convention of which 650 were so called superdelegates who were not bound by any particular state s primary or caucus votes and could change their votes at any time A candidate needs 1 255 delegates to become the nominee Except for the Northern Mariana Islands and Midway Atoll all states territories and other inhabited areas of the United States offer delegates to the 2004 Republican National Convention 2004 Republican primaries and caucuses Blake Ashby Richard Bosa George W Bush John Buchanan Michael Callis Jack Fellure Robert Haines Millie Howard Tom Laughlin John Rigazio Bill WyattTotal Delegates 1608 Superdelegates 168 Jan 19 Iowa caucus 100 00 32 Jan 27 New Hampshire primary 0 39 1 24 79 55 29 1 23 0 57 0 85 0 35 0 23 1 18 0 23 Feb 3 Mini Tuesday Missouri primary 0 80 95 06 57 1 03 North Dakota caucus 99 11 26 0 69 Oklahoma primary 90 00 41 10 00 South Carolina convention 100 00 46 Feb 10 District of Columbia caucus 100 00 16 Tennessee primary 95 45 39 Feb 17 Wisconsin primary 99 25 37 Mar 2 Super Tuesday California primary 100 00 170 Connecticut none 30 Georgia primary 100 00 66 Maryland primary 100 00 36 Massachusetts primary 91 13 41 Minnesota caucus 100 00 38 New York none 87 Ohio primary 100 00 81 Rhode Island primary 84 89 18 Vermont primary 100 00 15 Mar 9 Florida primary 109 Louisiana primary 96 09 41 3 91 Mississippi primary 35 Texas primary 92 49 135 Mar 16 Illinois primary 100 00 60 Apr 27 Pennsylvania primary 100 00 May 4 Indiana primary 100 00 27 May 11 West Virginia primary 100 00 26 May 18 Arkansas primary 97 25 32 Kentucky primary 92 64 43 Oregon primary 94 93 28 May 25 Idaho primary 89 50 24 Jun 1 Alabama primary 92 83 45 New Mexico primary 100 00 21 South Dakota primary 25 Jun 8 New Jersey primary 100 00 52 Color Key 1st place delegates earned 2nd place delegates earned 3rd place delegates earned Withdrawn Counties carried edit nbsp Republican presidential primary 2004 results by county exceptions Minnesota Maryland Nebraska amp North Dakota at large George W Bush No votes information availableSee also edit2004 Democratic Party presidential primariesReferences edit Our Campaigns Candidate William J Bill Wyatt Our Campaigns US President R Primaries Race Jan 27 2004 State by State Summary 2004 Presidential Primaries Caucuses and Conventions Our Campaigns US President R Primaries Race Jan 27 2004 Connecticut Republican Allocation 2004 The Green Papers Retrieved September 7 2019 Florida Republican Allocation 2004 The Green Papers Retrieved September 7 2019 Mississippi Republican Allocation 2004 The Green Papers Retrieved September 7 2019 New York Republican Allocation 2004 The Green Papers Retrieved September 7 2019 Puerto Rico Republican Allocation 2004 The Green Papers Retrieved September 7 2019 South Dakota Republican Allocation 2004 The Green Papers Retrieved September 7 2019 Chafee Lincoln Against the Tide How A Compliant Congress Empowered A Reckless President p 119 120 DelReal Jose A June 3 2015 Lincoln Chafee announces long shot presidential bid The Washington Post Retrieved June 3 2015 Rhode Island s Chafee enters 2016 Democratic contest Boston Herald Associated Press June 3 2015 Archived from the original on February 8 2016 Retrieved June 3 2015 Our Campaigns Candidate William J Bill Wyatt Blake Ashby C SPAN org www c span org Retrieved December 20 2019 Republican President of the United States NHSOS sos nh gov Retrieved December 20 2019 Bush big winner in North Dakota The Forum of Fargo Moorhead February 5 2004 Retrieved June 30 2015 Notes edit While there were technically 773 delegates that went to the convention unnbound they presumably cast their support for the president Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2004 Republican Party presidential primaries amp oldid 1187400760 Candidates, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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