Rhode Island Democratic primary, 2008

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2008 Rhode Island Democratic primary took place on March 4, 2008. It was an open primary. 21 delegates were awarded on a proportional basis and 11 "superdelegates", eight of which have announced support for Senator Hillary Clinton and two have committed to Senator Barack Obama, are also part of the RI delegation.[1]

Contents

[edit] Delegate breakdown

The Rhode Island Democratic Party sends 32 total delegates to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. Of those delegates, 21 are pledged and 11 are unpledged. The 21 pledged delegates are allocated (pledged) to vote for a particular candidate at the National Convention according to the results of Rhode Island's Democratic primary on March 4, 2008. The 11 unpledged delegates (popularly called "superdelegates" because their vote represents the decision of a single person rather than the regular delegate's vote representing the collective decision of many voters) are free to vote for any candidate at the National Convention and are selected by the Rhode Island Democratic Party's officials.

The 21 pledged delegates are further divided into 13 district delegates and 8 state-wide delegates. The 13 district delegates are divided among Rhode Island's 2 Congressional Districts and are allocated to the presidential candidates based on the primary results in each District. Congressional District 1 receives 6 delegates and Congressional District 2 receives 7 delegates. The 8 state-wide delegates are divided into 5 at-large delegates and 3 Party Leaders and Elected Officials (abbreviated PLEO). They are allocated to the presidential candidates based on the primary results state-wide.

Of the 11 unpledged delegates, 10 were selected in advance and 1 is selected at the State Executive Committee meeting on June 19, 2008. The delegates selected in advance are 6 Democratic National Committee members, Democratic U.S. Representatives from Rhode Island Patrick J. Kennedy (District 1) and James Langevin (District 2), and Democratic U.S. Senators from Rhode Island Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse.[2][3]

[edit] Polling

As of March 2, 2008, the most recent opinion polling of likely Democratic Primary participants shows Senator Clinton leading Senator Obama 42% to 37%, with 22% undecided.[4]

[edit] Results

See also: Results of the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest
Rhode Island Democratic presidential primary, 2008[5]
Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates[6]
Hillary Clinton 108,949 58.44% 13
Barack Obama 75,316 40.40% 8
John Edwards 1,133 0.61% 0
Uncommitted 1,041 0.56% 0
Totals 186,439 100.00% 21

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Languages