| CONNECTICUT | 7 Electoral Votes |
| Population
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Secretary of State)
Connecticut has: 8 counties and 169 towns. Largest counties: Fairfield, Hartford, New Haven. > Largest cities: Bridgeport, Hartford, New Haven, Stamford, Waterbury. > Government
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State
of Connecticut
Secretary of State Concern'd
Citizens Pty (Const)
Hartford
Courant
blogs
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| Democrats
60 Delegates (48 Pledged, 12 Unpledged) and 8 Alternates. 1.48% of the 4,049 Delegate Votes. Clinton
| Obama
Unofficial Results
Turnout: 51.8%. Delegate Allocation: Obama 26, Clinton 22. |
Republicans
30 Delegates: 3 RNC; 12 at-large; 15 by CD (3 x 5). 1.26% of the 2,380 Delegates. Delegate allocation is statewide winner-take-all. McCain
| Romney
Unofficial Results
Turnout: 38.1%. |
Setting the Primary Date
Secretary of State Susan
Bysiewicz and representatives of both parties and several groups joined
together for a press conference on March 27, 2007 to support moving the
primary from March 4 to February 5. According to a press
release, Bysiewicz stated, "In the absence of a rational primary process,
we are seeing an ad-hoc national primary take shape.” "Connecticut
didn’t start this tidal wave but I cannot stand by and allow our voters
to become irrelevant. Ultimately, members of both political parties
must come together and enact real reform,” she said. On June 1 the
House passed SB-1184
by a vote of 118-29, on June 2 the Senate followed by a vote of 29-6, and
on June 25 Gov. M. Jodi Rell (R) signed the measure into law.
See also Mark Pazniokas.
"State May Hold Early 2008 Presidential Primary." The Hartford
Courant. March 27, 2007.
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Number checked as having voted: 1,607,808 (78.65%) Absentee ballots received: 144,582 ...less 2,787 rejected Absentee ballots counted: 141,698 |
2004
Overview
Kerry-Edwards won with a plurality of 163,662 votes (10.36 percentage points). Kerry finished ahead in all counties except Litchfield and in 107 towns to 61 for Bush and 1 tied. General Election Details |
| Past Results |
| 1996
Clinton (Dem.)........735,740 (52.83) Dole (Rep.).............483,109 (34.69) Perot (Ref.).............139,523 (10.02) Nader (Grn.).............24,321 (1.75) Others (3+w/ins)........9,921 (0.71) Total........1,392,614 1992
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2000
Total
Registration: 1,874,245.
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2000
Overview
Sen. Lieberman won twice in his home state. The Gore-Lieberman ticket prevailed with a plurality of 254,921 votes (17.47 percentage points) over Bush-Cheney, and voters handily re-elected him to the U.S. Senate. Ralph Nader, who hails from Winsted, managed just a 4.42% showing. Republicans picked up a U.S. House seat as challenger Rob Simmons narrowly defeated ten-term incumbent Democrat Rep. Sam Gejdenson in the 2nd Congressional District (Groton-New London). General Election Activity |
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On December 19, 2003 Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz announced the names of nine Democrats and one Republican who met the criteria of "generally and seriously advocated or recognized according to reports in the national or state news media." Further, Bysiewicz announced that "there will be no Republican primary unless qualified GOP candidates petition onto the ballot." Subsequently, Democratic candidates Dick Gephardt and Carol Moseley Braun withdrew by the January 26, 2004 deadline, and Lyndon LaRouche qualified as a petitioning candidate by submitting more than the required 6,235 signatures from enrolled Democrats. On January 27 Bysiewicz drew lots in a ceremony in the State Capitol to determine the order in which the Democrats would be listed on the ballot.
Unaffiliated and new voters have until noon March 1, 2004 to register in person or February 26, 2004 by mail to vote in the primary.
Absentee ballots available
beginning February 10, 2004.
| Democrats | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ballot | unofficial results:
167
of 169 towns reporting
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Delegates: 62 Delegates (49 Pledged and 13 Unpledged) and 9 Alternates. |
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Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action. |
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