West Virginia Primary Facts and Figures

May 9, 2008 RSS Feed Print

The West Virginia primary is May 13, 2008.

Presidential Primary Winners

Democrats

  • 1988: Michael Dukakis
  • 1992: Bill Clinton
  • 1996: Bill Clinton
  • 2000: Al Gore
  • 2004: John Kerry

Republicans

  • 1988: George H.W. Bush
  • 1992: George H.W. Bush
  • 1996: Bob Dole
  • 2000: George W. Bush
  • 2004: George W. Bush

Sources: Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections; West Virginia Secretary of State's Office

Voter Registration Data

(as of April 25, 2008)
Registered voters: 1,183,495
Source: West Virginia Secretary of State's Office

General Election Winners—1988-2004

  • 1988: Michael Dukakis
  • 1992: Bill Clinton
  • 1996: Bill Clinton
  • 2000: George W. Bush
  • 2004: George W. Bush

Sources: Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections; West Virginia Secretary of State's Office

Exit Poll Demographics

2004 General Election

Sex

  • Male: 47%
  • Female: 53%

Race

  • White: 95%
  • African-American:3%
  • Latino: 0%
  • Asian: 1%

Age

  • 18-29: 16%
  • 30-44: 26%
  • 45-59: 31%
  • 60 and older: 26%

White Evangelical/ Born Again

  • Yes: 48%
  • No: 52%

Source: CNN

3 Things You Didn't Know A bout West Virginia Primaries

1. In 1960, John F. Kennedy's victory over Hubert Humphrey in the West Virginia primary proved pivotal to his campaign. Kennedy was far behind in the polls only weeks before the vote, with feedback showing that many West Virginia voters were nervous about his Catholic faith. In the weeks ahead of the election, Kennedy campaigned heavily throughout the state, famously saying, "I refuse to believe that I was denied the right to be president on the day I was baptized." Kennedy was successful in bringing West Virginians to his side— he won the primary decisively, earning 60.8 percent of the vote to Humphrey's 39.2 percent.

2. For this election cycle, West Virginia Republicans made a change to their primary system in an effort to drum up interest in their state's contest— a late-in-the-season contest which is often ignored. Party officials decided to hold a nominating convention in February that would award a portion of the state's delegates. Eighteen of the state's 30 delegates were decided on that Super Tuesday contest (won by Mike Huckabee), with the remainder to be allocated on May 13th. Democrats allocate all of their delegates May 13th.

3. Another first this year: West Virginia is holding an open primary, meaning that independents and unaffiliated voters may vote in either party's primary—but they will need to request the appropriate ballot at the polling place.

Sources: Associated Press, Buffalo News, Charleston Gazette, Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, State Journal

Tags:
West Virginia,
primaries

Reader Comments Read all comments (27)

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Dear West Virginia,

I truly love the "The Clintons" and how they lead the White House, which brought peace and prosperity. Then we took 2 steps backwards with the Bush administration and his economic plan which is now hurting many Americans across our country.Not only is Black people feeling the pain, but Whites, Blacks, Browns. I understand your state is 95% white and can appreciate your culture. However, this primary election race takes our "Country" to the next level; people can unite and work together in bigger and better ways. I am so proud of this young generation who has moved beyond the awful attitudes that lies deep within our soicety. .

West Virginia, you must admit that "Senator Obama" has ran an educational , fair, clean, energized compaign. This country needs to turn the page and grow as a "Country". And those of you with old mentally, ought to be tired.

Darlene Davis of TX 5:34PM May 13, 2008

Funny as this may sound... As a Republican, It will be an easy decision for me to vote, if it is Clinton v. McCain; it is the Obama v. McCain decision that would be the tough one for me. I just shake at the thought of isolating the world any further from us. I think that world unity should be the goal for the future!

H. Willcox of NY 3:18PM May 13, 2008

I know your presidency may not produce all that's been hoped or feared by America, black, white, red, yellow and all but I can think of no alternative presidency to better or even equal your youth, vision and potential as the new unifier.

If you don't make it in November, to all the citizens, not to your shall i send my empathy.

Sani 2:06PM May 13, 2008

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