| ARIZONA | 10 Electoral Votes |
| Population
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Arizona Secretary of State)
Arizona has: 15 counties. Two largest counties: Maricopa, Pima. > Five largest cities: Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Glendale, Chandler. > Note: Arizona was the fastest-growing state from July 1, 2005 to July 1, 2006, as its population grew by 3.6 percent. Government
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State
of Arizona Secretary of State AZ
Democratic Party |
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| Obama/Allies
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McCain/Allies
> |
[Primary Election: Sept. 2, 2008]
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| Registration, Jan. 7, 2008: Rep. 1,042,294 (38.42%) Dem. 904,741 (33.35%) Lib. 17,704 (0.65%) Other 748,331 (27.58%) Total 2,713,070. |
| Democrats 67 Delegates (56 Pledged and 11 Unpledged) and 9 Alternates. 1.65% of the 4,049 Delegate Votes. 1.58% of 4,234 Delegate Votes. Organization: Clinton
| Obama
Official Results
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Republicans 53 Delegates: 3 RNC; 26 at-large; 24 by CD (3 x 8 CDs) and 50 alternates 2.23% of the 2,380 Delegates. At-large and CD delegates allocated winner-take-all in the primary. Organization: Huckabee
| McCain
| Paul
| Romney
Official Results
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Setting the Primary
Date
Statute sets out the date
of the presidential preference election as the fourth Tuesday in
February,
but the Governor can issue a proclamation to move the date forward (as
happened in 2004). On Aug. 21, 2007, Gov. Napolitano took that
step,
setting
the date of the 2008 primary as February 5, 2008.
[Also Note. Arizona Democrats were among the ten state parties along with DC that applied [PDF] to the DNC, at the Rules and Bylaws Committee meeting on April 20, 2006, to go in the pre-window period; however, the DNC selected Nevada to hold an early caucus].
Presidential
Preference
Election (Secretary
of State)
"The filing period for
candidates
in the Presidential Preference Election begins on November 27, 2007,
and
ends December 17, 2007, at 5:00 p.m.."
-Registration closes Jan. 7, 2008 at midnight.
-"In 2007, the Arizona Legislature moved the beginning of the Presidential Preference Election early voting period from 15 days to 26 days before the election. See Ariz. Sess. Laws 2007, Ch. 168."
On Dec. 18, 2007 the
Secretary
of State certified the ballot
order.
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2004
Overview Although Arizona was classified as a battleground state, Bush more than doubled his plurality, winning by 210,770 votes (10.47 percentage points). 480,569 more votes were cast in the presidential race in 2004 than in 2000, a 31.4% increase. As in 2000 Bush carried 11 counties including the largest, Maricopa County, while the Democratic ticket won in four counties (Apache and Coconino in the North and Pima and Santa Cruz in the South) (results by county). General Election Details Kerry/Allies | Bush-Cheney '04 |
| Past Results |
1996
1992
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2000
According to the Committee for the Study of the American Electorate, Arizona had the second lowest turnout as a percentage of voting age population of any state including the District of Columbia: 42.26%. (U.S. avg. 53.76%). |
2000
Overview In the 1992 and 1996 presidential elections, Arizona ended up as one of the closest states; Bush won by about 30,000 votes or less than 3% in 1992 and Clinton won by about 30,000 votes or less than 3% in 1996. This time around the state went a bit more solidly back into the Republican column as Gov. Bush won with a plurality of 96,311 votes (6.29 percentage points). Libertarian Harry Browne was kept off the ballot in the state where he achieved his strongest 1996 showing because of a conflict that split the state party into two factions. In addition to candidate races, Arizona voters faced 14 propositions on the Nov. 7 ballot. General Election Activity |
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Tuesday, February 3, 2004 |
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| Active
Voter
Registration as of the January 5, 2004 PPE cutoff:
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64 Delegates (55 Pledged, 9 Unpledged) and 8 Alternates |
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| County
Conventions: April
3-17, 2004
CD Caucus: May 8, 2004 State Convention: May 8, 2004 |
52 Delegates (24 District level and 28 At-large) and 49 Alternates |
| Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action. |
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