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Oregon Democratic primary, 2008

Oregon Democratic Primary, 2008
Oregon
← 2006 May 20, 2008 2010 →

OR-districts-108.JPG
Oregon Democratic Primary, 2008
Oregon
← 2004 May 20, 2008 (2008-05-20) 2016 →
  BarackObamaportrait.jpg Hillary Rodham Clinton-cropped.jpg
Candidate Barack Obama Hillary Clinton
Home state Illinois New York
Delegate count 31 21
Popular vote 375,385 259,825
Percentage 58.52% 40.50%

The 2008 Oregon Democratic primary was a mail-only primary in the U.S. state of Oregon. Ballots were mailed to registered Democratic voters between May 2 and May 6, 2008. To be counted, all ballots had to have been received by county elections offices by 8:00 p.m. PDT on May 20, 2008. It was a closed primary and voters had to have registered as Democrats by April 29, 2008 to be eligible to vote in any of the partisan races.

At the time of the election there were 868,371 registered Democratic voters; 73.56% of them voted in this election.


In the race for the Democratic nominee for President of the United States, there were two candidates on the Oregon ballot: Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.

Oregon had a total of 65 delegates at the 2008 Democratic National Convention. Of these, 52 pledged delegates were allocated proportionally to one of the Democratic Presidential candidates in the primary. (The delegates themselves, along with nine alternates, were elected at a later date.)

The 52 pledged delegates were allocated as follows:

Oregon also had 13 unpledged superdelegates, all of whom endorsed Obama (though Kulongoski and Hooley originally endorsed Clinton in the primaries):

On May 18, 2008, Barack Obama addressed a rally in Tom McCall Waterfront Park in Portland, with a crowd estimated at 72,000 (60,000 inside the gates and another 12,000 outside). This crowd was the largest ever to greet Obama, surpassing his previous record of 35,000 people in Pennsylvania. It was also likely the largest-ever political rally in Oregon, surpassing the John Kerry rally in 2004, which drew 50,000. Large, media-attracting rallies and meetings such as this were noted to make a substantial difference in electorate enthusiasm and volunteer sign-ups for both Democratic Party potential candidates.


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