| MASSACHUSETTS | 12 Electoral Votes |
| Population
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Secretary of the Commonwealth) Total Population, July 1, 2007 est. 6,449,755 Total Registration, Jan. 2008 4,011,551 Dem. 1,476,133 (%) Rep. 486,188 (%) Unenrolled 2,019,368 (%) Grn-Rbw 6,617 WF 2,760 More 20,485 Massachusetts has: 43 cities and 308 towns; 14 counties. Largest counties: Middlesex, Worcester, Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk. > Largest cities: Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Lowell. > Government
|
Commonwealth
of Massachusetts
Secretary of the Commonwealth Constitution
Party of MA
Boston
Globe
|
|
|
| Democrats
121 Delegates (93 Pledged, 28 Unpledged) and 16 Alternates. 2.99% of the 4,049 Delegate Votes. Clinton
| Obama
Sen. John Kerry (D) was seen
as a possible candidate but ruled out a run on
Official Results
|
Republicans
43 Delegates: 3 RNC; 10 at-large; 30 by CD (3 x 10 CDs). 1.81% of the 2,380 Delegates. Delegate allocation: At-large proportional with 15% threshold; CD proportional with 15% threshold. Huckabee
| McCain
| Romney
Official Results
|
Green-Rainbow
Jared Ball 42, Ralph Nader
744, Elaine Brown 38, Kat Swift 60, Cynthia McKinney 474, Kent Mesplay
39, No Preference 194, All Other 273, Blank 77; Total 1,941
Ballot Access
From the Secretary of the
Commonwealth:
There are three ways for the names of presidential candidates to be placed on the presidential primary ballot:
-Candidates may file nomination papers with at least 2,500 certified signatures. For primary ballot placement, signatures of at least 2,500 voters must be certified by local election officials and subsequently filed with the Secretary of the Commonwealth.*Registration: Wednesday, January 16, 2008 is the last day to register to vote or to change party enrollment for the February 5 primary.
-The Secretary of the Commonwealth may place candidates on the ballot who have been generally advocated or recognized in the national news media.
-The chairperson of each party’s state committee may designate names to be listed.
Setting the Primary Date:
Secretary of State William
Galvin led a late push to move the 2008 presidential primary date from
March 4 to February 5 in an effort to increase the Commonwealth's influence
in the elections. The measure made quick progress through the General
Court. On Nov. 14, 2007 the Joint Committee on Election Laws reported
out favorably legislation to change the date in 2008. The bill passed
both Houses the week of Nov. 19, 2007, and Gov. Deval Patrick (D) signed
it into law on Nov. 26, 2007.
|
|
Blanks 15,067 |
2004
Overview
Native son John Kerry carried Massachusetts with a solid plurality of 732,691 votes (25.16 percentage points). |
|
Past Results
|
1996
1992
|
2000
Including 31,022 blanks, 2,734,006 total votes were cast. |
2000
Overview
Solidly Democratic Massachusetts went solidly for Gore as he won the state's 12 electoral votes with a plurality of 737,985 votes (27.30 percentage points). Gore carried all counties. Ralph Nader's 6.42% was his third best showing of any state. Massachusetts came to the fore on Oct. 3 when the first presidential debate was held at UMass in Boston; both sides mobilized their supporters, and Ralph Nader, Pat Buchanan and Harry Browne were also on hand in the city. Gore and Lieberman had also visited the state earlier, holding a rally and a fundraising gala in Boston on Sept. 13. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
| Democratic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
121 Delegates (93 Pledged, 28 Unpledged) and 16 Alternates | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Republican |
|
|
Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action. |
![]() |