Showing posts with label delegate totals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label delegate totals. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

GOP, DEM Delegate Totals, Upcoming Primaries

Delegates, Up for Grabs, Primary/caucus Schedule



Next Week's Primaries/caucuses, Delegate totals, Delegates up for grabs next Tuesday

Yesterday's primaries:

DEMOCRAT

Maryland - 99 delegates -Won by Obama

Virginia -101 delegates - Won by Obama

Washington, D.C. - 38 delegates - Won by Obama

REPUBLICAN

Maryland - 37 delegates - Won by McCain

Virginia - 63 delegates - Won by McCain

Washington, D.C. - 19 delegates - Won by McCain

NEXT:

DEMOCRATS

Wisconsin primary [92 delegates]- February 19
Washington primary [97 delegates]-February 19
Hawaii caucuses [20 delegates]- February 19

REPUBLICANS

Wisconsin primary [40 delegates]- February 19
Washington primary [40 delegates] -February 19
Guam primary [9 delegates] -February 19

Delegates Up for Grabs Next Tuesday (Feb. 19) (including Super Delegates)

DEMOCRATS - 209

REPUBLICANS - 89

DELEGATE TOTALS

DEMOCRATS

Obama 1253

Clinton 1211

Edwards 26

[Needed to Win: 2025]

REPUBLICANS

McCain 827

Romney 286

Huckabee 214

Paul 19

[Needed to win: 1191]


compiled by Mondoreb
image: istock
Sources:
* DEM, GOP Delegate Totals, Upcoming contests
* CNN

Digg!

Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Delegate Totals, Upcoming Contests: Republican and Democrat

Updated Super Tuesday Results
Upcoming Primaries and Caucuses


DEMOCRAT DELEGATE TOTALS

Hillary Clinton - 823

Barack Obama - 741

John Edwards - 26

REPUBLICAN DELEGATE TOTALS

John McCain - 680

Mitt Romney - 270

Mike Huckabee - 176

Ron Paul - 19

Updated to include all the Super Tuesday events of February 5.

UPCOMING Contests in the next 7 days:

Democrat

- February 9 (Saturday)

Louisiana Primary
Washington Caucus
Nebraska Caucus

- February 10 (Sunday)

Maine Caucuses

- February 12 (Tuesday)

District of Columbia primary
Maryland primary
Virginia primary

Republican

- February 9 (Saturday)

Kansas Caucus

- February 12 (Tuesday)

District of Columbia primary
Maryland primary
Virginia primary

by Mondoreb
image: seniors
Source: CNN

Digg!

Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.

Super Tuesday FINALE



10:12 am Wednesday February 6, 2008

California is still close, although some are calling it for McCain a few minutes ago.


States Won - Democrats

Alabama - Obama 20
Alaska - Obama 9
Arizona - Clinton 26
Arkansas- Clinton 23
Californ- Clinton
Colorado- Obama 13
Connecti- Obama 26
Delaware- Obama 9
Georgia - Obama 27
Idaho - Obama 15
Illinois- Obama 62
Kansas - Obama 23
Massach - Clinton 54
Minnesot- Obama 48
Missouri Obama 30
New Jersy Clinton 51
New York Clinton 127
North Dak Obama 9
Oklahoma Clinton 24
Tennessee Clinton 34
Utah - Obama 14


States Won - Republicans

McCain -Arizona-50, Connecticut-27, Delaware-18, Illinois-54, Missouri-58, New Jersey-52, New York-101, Oklahoma-32

Romney - Alaska-12, Colorado-22, Massachusetts-21, Minnesota-36, Montana-25, North Dakota-8, Utah-36

Huckabee -Alabama-14, Arkansas-25, Georgia-45, Tennessee-21, WV-15




Delegate Totals (after Super Tuesday)



REPUBLICANS

McCain
559

Romney
265

Huckabee
169

Paul
16

TOTAL NEEDED TO WIN REPUBLICAN NOMINATION
- 1191

DEMOCRATS

Clinton
783

Obama
709

Edwards
26

TOTAL NEEDED TO WIN DEMOCRAT NOMINATION - 2025

We will UPDATE within 90 minutes - by noon.

After Super Tuesday, nothing was decided and the 24 remaining contests become even MORE important than ever. So for the next 3 1/2 months, those 22 states will bathe in attention from the media and candidates.

The states who jumped their primaries to the early February date in order to become "relevant", "to have a say", or "to mean something"--they'll be long forgotten by the time the nominees of both parties are chosen.

And that's fitting.

by Mondoreb
image: seniors
Source: CNN

Digg!

Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Live-Blogging Super Tuesday V - 10:18 pm

DBKP Live Blogging




10:18 pm



DELEGATE TOTALS

Clinton - 299
Obama - 219
Edwards - 26
Kucinich -1


DELEGATE TOTALS

McCain - 332
Romney - 135
Huckabee - 51
Paul - 9

States won so far:

McCain - New Hampshire, South Carolina, Florida, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois,
New Jersey, New York [8]

Romney - Wyoming, Michigan, Nevada, Maine, Massachusetts, Utah [6]

Huckabee - Iowa, Arkansas, West Virginia [3]

Totals at 10:18 pm




by Mondoreb
image: seniors


Digg!

Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.

Election 2008: Live-Blogging Super Tuesday - 8:10 pm

DBKP Live Blogging




7:50 pm

Obama declared winner in Illinois.

DELEGATE TOTALS

Clinton - 245
Obama - 199
Edwards - 26
Kucinich -1

7:55 pm

Romney declared winner in Massachusetts.

McCain declared winner in Connecticut.

DELEGATE TOTALS

McCain - 138
Romney - 99
Huckabee - 44
Paul - 9

Nothing out of the ordinary, so far.

Totals at 8:10 pm


by Mondoreb
image: seniors


Digg!

Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Convention Updates: Delegate Totals; Maine Results

Republican, Democrat National Convention
UPDATED Delegate Totals
The latest figures from the Maine Caucuses.



68% of towns in Maine reporting results:
Mitt Romney -- 52% of the vote.
John McCain--- 21% of the vote.
Ron Paul ----- 19% of the vote.
Mike Huckabee- 6% of the vote.
Fred Thompson - 4% of the vote. [Thompson dropped out last month]

CNN projected that Romney will win all 18 of Maine's delegates to the Republican National Convention.


Although much of Maine saw bad weather during the voting, it wasn't a factor in suppressing voter turnout.
Despite a sleet storm the night before, which left much of the state coated with slush and ice, cars jammed the car park outside an Augusta elementary school where Kennebec County municipalities were caucusing.

Kim Pettengill, who has been a party activist for more than three decades, said it was the largest Kennebec County caucus turnout since 1980, the year Ronald Reagan won his first Republican nomination for president.

The "unstoppable" John McCain, anointed press darling of the MSM, struggled to keep his vote totals in Maine above 20%.

It seems that when presented with a choice between the MSM's (including Robert Novak on this particular issue) "unstoppable" McCain and anyone else, Republican voters are choosing "anyone else"--as 80% of Maine Republicans did.
[Romney] told CNN's "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer" on Sunday that conservative Republicans were rallying to his banner to block McCain, whose stances on tax cuts, immigration and campaign finance reform have incurred the wrath of much of the party's activist base.

"Conservative voices, both from radio and from publications, are saying, 'You know what, we've got to get behind Mitt Romney. We really can't afford John McCain as the nominee of our party,' " Romney said. "And that kind of groundswell is what led me to win in Maine yesterday."



DELEGATE TOTALS (at the moment)
[delegates OFFICIALLY pledged to each candidate] - Republicans

John McCain -- 97 delegates
Mitt Romney -- 92 delegates
Mike Huckabee- 29 delegates
Ron Paul ----- 6 delegates

Delegates Needed to Win - 1191
Amount of Delegates up for grabs on Super Tuesday - 1027

[delegates OFFICIALLY pledged to each candidate] - Democrats

Hillary Clinton -- 232
Barack Obama ----- 158
John Edwards ----- 26

Needed to Win - 2025



So tomorrow's voting might clear the picture a bit.

OR, it might not.

It may put off the day of decision in both parties until the later primaries, in which case it would be ironic that all the states that jumped to the front of the line in order to "make a bigger impact", will not.

It may very well be that the states that refused to bolt to the beginning of the year and kept their tradidional primary dates will be the ones which garner the MOST attention--both by the candidates and the media.

It would be fitting that the the states which didn't participate in goofy moving of their primaries will be the ones which will hold the keys to selecting the presidential nominees.

The ones that fought, like grade school kids to be first in the primary line, will be--fittingly--long forgotten by the time the national choices are made.

by Mondoreb
image:
Sources:
* Romney Wins Maine GOP Caucuses, CNN Projects
* Romney Wins Maine Caucus Vote

Digg!

Death by 1000 Papercuts Front Page.