2008 United States presidential election in Florida

The 2008 United States presidential election in Florida took place on November 4, 2008, and was part of the 2008 United States presidential election. Voters chose 27 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

2008 United States presidential election in Florida

← 2004November 4, 20082012 →
TurnoutIncrease75%[1]
 
NomineeBarack ObamaJohn McCain
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Home stateIllinoisArizona
Running mateJoe BidenSarah Palin
Electoral vote270
Popular vote4,282,0744,045,624
Percentage50.91%48.10%


President before election

George W. Bush
Republican

Elected President

Barack Obama
Democratic

Florida was won by Democratic nominee Barack Obama by a 2.8% margin of victory, making it the first time since 1996 the state was won by a Democrat. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered this state a toss-up, or swing state, as it was heavily targeted by both campaigns. Despite the fact that polls showed John McCain in the lead throughout much of 2008, Obama took the momentum in the two months before Election Day. Obama ended up winning the state with 51 percent of the vote, including wins in four counties that George W. Bush won in 2004. Obama became the first Democrat to win a majority of Florida's popular vote since Jimmy Carter in 1976.

As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Flagler County and Volusia County voted for the Democratic candidate. This is also the last election that Florida trended more Democratic than the previous one.

Primary elections

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State-run primaries were held for the Democratic and Republican parties on January 29. The Green Party held its own primary on February 1.

Democratic primary

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Florida Democratic Presidential Primary Results – 2008
CandidateVotesPercentageDelegates*
Hillary Clinton870,98649.77%52.5
Barack Obama576,21432.93%33.5
John Edwards251,56214.38%6.5**
Joe Biden15,7040.90%0
Bill Richardson14,9990.86%0
Dennis Kucinich9,7030.55%0
Christopher Dodd5,4770.31%0
Mike Gravel5,2750.30%0
Totals1,749,920100.00%92.5

*As awarded by the May 31, 2008, meeting of the Rules and Bylaws Committee (RBC).
**Subsequently, some Edwards delegates switched to Obama.

Republican primary

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McCain prevailed in Florida's Republican presidential primary.[2]

CandidateVotesPercentageCountiesDelegates
John McCain701,76136%4557
Mitt Romney604,93231.03%180
Rudy Giuliani286,08914.68%00
Mike Huckabee262,68113.47%40
Ron Paul62,8873.23%00
Fred Thompson*22,6681.16%00
Alan Keyes4,0600.21%00
Duncan Hunter*2,8470.15%00
Tom Tancredo*1,5730.08%00
Totals1,949,498100%6757

* Candidate dropped out of the race prior to primary.

Green primary

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As part of the 2008 Green Party presidential primaries, the Green Party held a mail-in primary in Florida on February 1.[3]

Florida Green Party presidential primary (February 1, 2008)[3]
CandidateVotesPercentageNational delegates
Cynthia McKinney--11
Ralph Nader--2
Kent Mesplay--1
Kat Swift--1
Total-100%16

Campaign

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Republican George W. Bush of Texas carried Florida by a convincing margin of 5% in 2004 against Democrat John Kerry,[4] a much greater margin than in 2000 when Bush controversially won the state's 25 electoral votes against Democrat Al Gore of Tennessee by 537 votes.[5]

Early polls showed Barack Obama faring poorly in Florida. During the primary season, Barack Obama did not campaign there and argued against seating its delegates for the Democratic convention, earning unfavorable media attention. Moreover, Florida's demographics did not favor him. A haven for retirees, Florida lacked many of the younger voters who passionately supported the Democratic nominee. Thus, in early 2008, opinion polling showed Republican John McCain leading most polls, sometimes by double digits.[6]

Near the end of September, however, when the financial crisis of 2007–2008 became a more potent election issue, Obama proceeded to take the lead in most of the polls.[6] Florida was especially hard hit by the economic shock. It was a hotspot of new home building and suffered tremendously from the subprime lending collapse. In addition, the state was full of retirees depending on 401ks; these were badly hurt by the stock market's fall.

Predictions

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

SourceRanking
D.C. Political Report[7]Likely R
Cook Political Report[8]Toss-up
The Takeaway[9]Toss-up
Electoral-vote.com[10]Lean D (flip)
Washington Post[11]Lean D (flip)
Politico[12]Lean D (flip)
RealClearPolitics[13]Toss-up
FiveThirtyEight[11]Lean D (flip)
CQ Politics[14]Toss-up
The New York Times[15]Toss-up
CNN[16]Toss-up
NPR[11]Lean R
MSNBC[11]Toss-up
Fox News[17]Toss-up
Associated Press[18]Toss-up
Rasmussen Reports[19]Toss-up

Polling

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The 3 poll averages showed McCain leading throughout most of the presidential election season, until the last month of October. The final 3 polls had Obama leading 49% to 48% with undecided voters to decide the election.[20]

Fundraising

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McCain raised $14,826,093. Obama raised $19,963,592.[21]

Advertising and visits

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Obama and his interest groups spent $36,990,591 in the state. McCain and his interest groups spent $17,133,501.[22] The Democratic ticket visited the state 12 times to the Republicans' 11 times.[23]

Analysis

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Obama won the state and its 27 electoral votes on Election Day by a margin of about 2.82%.[24] Obama held a consistent lead for most of the night as returns came in, but the networks avoided calling the state for Obama until the conservative northwestern portion, most of which is in the Central Time Zone, began reporting its returns. According to exit polling, Obama's win in the state can be attributed to winning 96% of the African-American vote, 57% of Latino voters, and 52% among Independents.[25]

Upset wins in the Orlando and Tampa Bay areas, where George W. Bush won in 2004, contributed to Obama's victory. In the former, Obama carried Orange County (which includes Orlando) by 19 points - the best margin for a Democratic candidate in 64 years.[26] Before Al Gore and John Kerry narrowly won it, Orange County hadn't supported a Democratic presidential nominee since Franklin D. Roosevelt's last run for president in 1944. He also became the first Democrat to win Orlando in a presidential election since Roosevelt. Obama carried Osceola County, near Orlando, by a 20-point margin (Bush won it in 2004 52%-47%).[26] His strong performance in Central Florida more than likely helped the Democrats flip two U.S. House seats in that region.

In the Tampa Bay region, Obama carried Hillsborough County, home to Tampa, by a 7-point margin.[27] Obama also won Pinellas County, home to St. Petersburg, by a 53%-45% margin.[27] Bush had narrowly carried the county by about 0.1% in 2004.[28] Like most Democratic candidates, Obama dominated South Florida, winning Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties by comfortable margins. The vote from Miami-Dade came in very late in the evening, stopping the major networks from calling the state for Obama earlier in the evening. However, Obama maintained a lead of at least 125,000 votes from the moment polls closed in the state.

On the other hand, John McCain kept the state relatively close, losing by far less than his national average. In northern Florida, a Republican stronghold, McCain won the majority of counties by double-digit landslides. Along the panhandle, McCain routinely took over 70% of the vote.[29] Obama won only a handful of counties - most home to major colleges. Moreover, McCain improved on George Bush's performance in large parts of northern Florida - something he achieved in very few other areas of the country.[29] Obama's sole accomplishment involved Duval County (Jacksonville), where he narrowed George Bush's 61,580-vote victory to a far smaller 7,919 margin.[24][30] In 2008, Duval County had only supported a Democrat for president twice since 1952, when John F. Kennedy carried it in 1960 and when Jimmy Carter carried it in 1976.

In addition, McCain was able to do well along the I-4 corridor in central Florida. This heavily populated, "swingy" region often determines which candidate wins in Florida's statewide elections. In 2008, the Republican candidate won most counties, including heavily populated areas such as Brevard County. However, McCain's unexpectedly poor showing in Orlando, a city that had voted Republican in presidential elections from 1948 to 2004, severely hurt his position in central Florida.

Democrats also picked up two seats from Florida in the U.S. House of Representatives. Democrat Alan Grayson defeated incumbent Republican Ric Keller for Florida's 8th Congressional District seat while Democrat Suzanne Kosmas ousted incumbent Republican Tom Feeney for Florida's 24th Congressional District seat. Republicans, however, were successful at winning back Republican Mark Foley's old congressional seat in Florida's 16th Congressional District seat when Tom Rooney defeated Democratic incumbent Tim Mahoney by a comfortable margin. At the state level, Democrats picked up two seats in the Florida House of Representatives as well.

Obama became the first ever Democrat to win the White House without carrying Dixie, Gilchrist, Hamilton or Sumter Counties, as well as the first to do so without carrying Levy County since James Buchanan in 1856, the first to do so without carrying Pasco County since John F. Kennedy in 1960, and the first to do so without carrying Glades, Madison, Hernando, Okeechobee, or Putnam Counties since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964.

Results

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United States presidential election in Florida, 2008[31]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticBarack Obama4,282,36750.91%27
RepublicanJohn McCain4,046,21948.1%0
EcologyRalph Nader28,1280.33%0
Write-Ins20,4140.24%0
LibertarianBob Barr17,2200.20%0
ConstitutionChuck Baldwin7,9150.09%0
GreenCynthia A. McKinney2,8870.03%0
America's IndependentAlan Keyes2,5500.03%0
Socialism and LiberationGloria LaRiva1,5160.02%0
Boston TeaCharles Jay7970.01%0
Socialist WorkersRoger Calero5330.01%0
ObjectivistThomas R. Stevens4190.00%0
SocialistBrian Moore4050.00%0
ProhibitionGene Amondson2930.00%0
RepublicanRon Paul1740.00%0
IndependentNone of these candidates230.00%0
Totals8,411,861100.00%27
Voter turnout (Voting age population)75.0%

By county

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CountyBarack Obama
Democratic
John McCain
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%#%
Alachua75,56559.99%48,51338.51%1,8891.50%27,05221.48%125,967
Baker2,32720.99%8,67278.22%880.79%-6,345-57.23%11,087
Bay23,65329.07%56,68369.66%1,0301.26%-33,030-40.59%81,366
Bradford3,43029.31%8,13669.52%1371.17%-4,706-40.21%11,703
Brevard127,62044.17%157,58954.54%3,7181.29%-29,969-10.37%288,927
Broward492,64067.02%237,72932.34%4,7220.64%254,91134.68%735,091
Calhoun1,82129.07%4,34569.36%981.56%-2,524-40.29%6,264
Charlotte39,03145.65%45,20552.87%1,2631.48%-6,174-7.22%85,499
Citrus31,46041.12%43,70657.13%1,3431.75%-12,246-16.01%76,509
Clay26,69728.18%67,20370.95%8230.88%-40,506-42.77%94,723
Collier54,45038.35%86,37960.84%1,1590.82%-31,929-22.49%141,988
Columbia9,17132.50%18,67066.17%3741.32%-9,499-33.67%28,215
DeSoto4,38343.12%5,63255.41%1491.46%-1,249-12.29%10,164
Dixie1,92526.40%5,19471.22%1742.39%-3,269-44.82%7,293
Duval202,61848.63%210,53750.53%3,5380.85%-7,919-1.90%416,693
Escambia61,57239.76%91,41159.02%1,8911.22%-29,839-19.26%154,874
Flagler24,72650.24%23,95148.66%5401.10%7751.58%49,217
Franklin2,13435.28%3,81863.12%971.61%-1,684-27.84%6,049
Gadsden15,58269.14%6,81130.22%1450.64%8,77138.92%22,538
Gilchrist1,99625.53%5,65672.34%1672.14%-3,660-46.81%7,819
Glades1,67439.29%2,53359.45%541.27%-859-20.16%4,261
Gulf2,14929.77%4,98068.99%891.23%-2,831-39.22%7,218
Hamilton2,36442.24%3,17956.81%530.95%-815-14.57%5,596
Hardee2,56834.51%4,76364.00%1111.48%-2,195-29.49%7,442
Hendry4,99845.78%5,78052.94%1391.28%-782-7.16%10,917
Hernando41,88647.46%45,02151.01%1,3501.52%-3,135-3.55%88,257
Highlands18,13540.37%26,22158.37%5661.27%-8,086-18.00%44,922
Hillsborough272,96353.05%236,35545.94%5,1831.01%36,6087.11%514,501
Holmes1,44616.78%7,03381.63%1371.59%-5,587-64.85%8,616
Indian River29,71041.96%40,17656.74%9161.30%-10,466-14.78%70,802
Jackson7,67135.49%13,71763.47%2251.04%-6,046-27.98%21,613
Jefferson4,08851.24%3,79747.59%931.16%2913.65%7,978
Lafayette64219.01%2,67979.33%561.66%-2,037-60.32%3,377
Lake62,94842.71%82,80256.19%1,6211.10%-19,854-13.48%147,371
Lee119,70144.34%147,60854.67%2,6880.99%-27,907-10.33%269,977
Leon91,74761.60%55,70537.40%1,4830.99%36,04224.20%148,935
Levy6,71135.72%11,75462.56%3241.73%-5,043-26.84%18,789
Liberty89527.24%2,33971.18%521.58%-1,444-43.94%3,286
Madison4,27047.94%4,54451.02%931.04%-274-3.08%8,907
Manatee70,03445.93%80,72152.94%1,7121.12%-10,687-7.01%152,467
Marion70,83943.58%89,62855.14%2,0751.28%-18,789-11.56%162,542
Martin33,50842.67%44,14356.22%8711.10%-10,635-13.55%78,522
Miami-Dade499,83157.81%360,55141.70%4,2540.49%139,28016.11%864,636
Monroe20,90751.75%18,93346.86%5631.39%1,9744.89%40,403
Nassau10,61827.66%27,40371.38%3710.97%-16,785-43.72%38,392
Okaloosa25,87227.01%68,78971.82%1,1201.17%-42,917-44.81%95,781
Okeechobee5,10839.79%7,56158.89%1701.32%-2,453-19.10%12,839
Orange273,00958.96%186,83240.35%3,1980.69%86,17718.61%463,039
Osceola59,96259.41%40,08639.72%8770.87%19,87619.69%100,925
Palm Beach361,27161.08%226,03738.22%4,1280.70%135,23422.86%591,436
Pasco102,41747.51%110,10451.07%3,0681.42%-7,687-3.56%215,589
Pinellas248,29953.38%210,06645.16%6,7871.46%38,2338.22%465,152
Polk113,86546.34%128,87852.45%2,9611.20%-15,013-6.11%245,704
Putnam13,23639.77%19,63759.01%4061.22%-6,401-19.24%33,279
St. Johns35,79133.74%69,22265.25%1,0681.00%-33,431-31.51%106,081
St. Lucie67,12555.49%52,51243.41%1,3371.11%14,61312.08%120,974
Santa Rosa19,47025.49%55,97273.28%9351.23%-36,502-47.79%76,377
Sarasota102,68649.37%102,89749.47%2,4221.16%-211-0.10%208,005
Seminole99,33548.12%105,07050.90%2,0210.98%-5,735-2.78%206,426
Sumter17,65536.04%30,86663.01%4620.95%-13,211-26.97%48,983
Suwannee4,91627.76%12,53470.77%2611.48%-7,618-43.01%17,711
Taylor2,80329.86%6,45768.79%1271.36%-3,654-38.93%9,387
Union1,30024.48%3,94074.20%701.31%-2,640-49.72%5,310
Volusia127,79552.19%113,93846.53%3,1221.27%13,8575.66%244,855
Wakulla5,31136.94%8,87761.75%1881.31%-3,566-24.81%14,376
Walton7,17426.43%19,56172.08%4041.48%-12,387-45.65%27,139
Washington2,86325.64%8,17873.23%1261.12%-5,315-47.59%11,167
Totals4,282,36750.91%4,046,21948.10%83,6620.99%236,1482.81%8,412,248
County Flips:

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

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By congressional district

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Despite the fact that Barack Obama won the state, John McCain carried 15 congressional districts in Florida, including two district occupied by Democrats. Obama carried 10 congressional districts, including two districts occupied by Republicans.

DistrictMcCainObamaRepresentative
1st66.66%32.10%Jeff Miller
2nd54.27%44.58%Allen Boyd
3rd25.99%73.30%Corrine Brown
4th61.35%37.66%Ander Crenshaw
5th55.57%43.18%Ginny Brown-Waite
6th56.04%42.82%Cliff Stearns
7th53.20%45.68%John Mica
8th46.77%52.47%Ric Keller (110th Congress)
Alan Grayson (111th Congress)
9th52.17%46.57%Gus Bilirakis
10th47.17%51.30%Bill Young
11th33.08%65.93%Kathy Castor
12th50.23%48.84%Adam Putnam
13th52.05%46.76%Vern Buchanan
14th56.76%42.28%Connie Mack IV
15th51.15%47.67%Bill Posey
16th51.80%47.11%Tim Mahoney (110th Congress)
Tom Rooney (111th Congress)
17th12.37%87.25%Kendrick Meek
18th48.55%50.74%Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
19th33.92%65.42%Robert Wexler
20th35.99%63.25%Debbie Wasserman Schultz
21st50.83%48.68%Lincoln Díaz-Balart
22nd47.59%51.63%Ron Klein
23rd16.83%82.68%Alcee Hastings
24th50.47%48.52%Tom Feeney (110th Congress)
Suzanne Kosmas (111th Congress)
25th50.25%49.22%Mario Díaz-Balart

Electors

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Technically the voters of Florida cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Florida is allocated 27 electors because it has 25 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 27 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 27 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.[32] 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 27 were pledged to Barack Obama and Joe Biden[33]

  1. Willis "Chip" Arndt
  2. Wayne Bailey
  3. Fred Balsera
  4. Terrie Brady
  5. Karl Flagg
  6. Joe Gibbons
  7. Janet Goen
  8. James Golden
  9. Chris Hand
  10. Marlon Hill
  11. Tony Hill
  12. Joan Joseph
  13. Allan Katz
  14. Gena Keebler
  15. Joan Lane
  16. Caren Lobo
  17. Rick Minor
  18. Jared Moskowitz
  19. Angela Rodante
  20. Frank Sanchez
  21. Juanita Scott
  22. Geraldine Thompson
  23. Karen Thurman
  24. Carmen Torres
  25. Kirk Wagar
  26. Enoch Williams
  27. Frederica Wilson

References

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