PENNSYLVANIA 21 Electoral Votes
Population 
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Pennsylvania Department of State)
Total Population, July 1, 2007 est. 12,432,792
Total Registration, Nov. 6, 2007   8,112,998
Dem. 3,883,378 (47.87%)   Rep. 3,245,271 (40.00%)   Other Parties 984,349 (12.13%)
Pennsylvania has: 67 counties.
Largest counties: Philadelphia, Allegheny, Montgomery, Bucks, Delaware. >
Largest cities: Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Allentown, Erie. >

Government
Governor: Ed Rendell (D) elected in 2002, re-elected in 2006.
State Legislature: Pennsylvania General Assembly   House: 203 seats   Senate: 50 seats
Local: Counties, Cities, Townships...   NACO Counties
U.S. House: 11D, 8R - 1. B.Brady (D) | 2. C.Fattah (D) | 3. P.English (R) | 4. J.Altimire (D) | 5. J.Peterson (R) | 6. J.Gerlach (R) | 7. J.Sestak (D) | 8. P.Murphy (D)  | 9. B.Shuster (R) | 10. C.Carney (D) | 11. P.Kanjorski (D) | 12. J.Murtha (D) | 13. A.Schwartz (D) | 14. M.Doyle (D) | 15. C.Dent (R) | 16. J.Pitts (R) | 17. T.Holden (D)  | 18. T.Murphy (R)  |  19. T.Platts (R)
U.S. Senate: Bob Casey Jr. (D) elected in 2006, Arlen Specter (R) re-elected in 2004. 
 

 State of Pennsylvania
Department of State

Constitution Party of PA
Libertarian Party of PA
PA Democratic Party
PA Green Party
Republican State Comm. of PA

Inquirer/Daily News
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Newspapers
TV, Radio
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Politics1-PA
Keystone Politics
PoliticsPA.com


The Keystone State
Primary Election -- Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Democrats
188 Delegates (158 Pledged, 30 Unpledged) and 26 Alternates.
4.64% of the 4,049 Delegate Votes.

Clinton  |  Obama

Debate
Apr. 16, 2008 - ABC News and WPVI-TV Democratic debate at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. > +

pre-vote memos: Clinton, Obama
reactions: Clinton, Obama, McCain

photos
voter registration
 

Republicans
74 Delegates: 3 RNC; 14 at-large; 57 by CD (3 x 19). 
3.11% of the 2,380 Delegates.

McCain  |  Paul
former
Giuliani - endorsed by U.S. Reps. Charlie Dent (PA-15), Phil English (PA-3) and Jim Gerlach (PA-6) 
Romney - endorsed by former U.S. Sen. Rick Santorum on Feb. 1, 2008
 

Setting the Primary Date
On Dec. 13, 2004 Gov. Ed Rendell (D) established a 13-person Election Reform Task Force charged with examining six aspects of the state's elections, including the date of the presidential primary.  Rendell stated he wanted "to move the Pennsylvania primary as early as feasibly possible so that Pennsylvania voters may have a say in the selection of the Democratic and Republican nominees for President in 2008 and beyond."  In its final report, issued on May 12, 2005, the Task Force recommended moving presidential and state primary elections to the first Tuesday in March (for 2008 and 2012).  However the General Assembly must act for changes to be implemented.  Several bills to move the primary forward were introduced in 2005 (HB627, HB1661, SB40), but none of them has made any headway.
 
General Election -- Tuesday, November 2, 2004
Last Day to Register: October 4, 2004.
+Kerry/Edwards (Dem.)
2,938,095
(50.92)
Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
2,793,847
(48.42)
Badnarik/Campagna (Lib.) 21,185 (0.37)
Cobb/LaMarche (Grn.) 6,319
(0.11)
Peroutka/Baldwin (Const.)
6,318
(0.11)
Ralph Nader (write-in)
2,656
(0.05)
Scattered (write-in)
1,170
(0.02)
Total........5,769,570
 
2004 Overview
854,451 more votes were cast in the presidential race in 2004 compared to 2000.  The Kerry-Edwards ticket carried the state, but Bush trimmed the Democratic plurality to 144,248 votes (2.50 percentage points) and the Republican ticket also carried five more counties than it had in 2000, or 54 counties to 13 for Kerry.
General Election Details  |  Photos
Kerry/Allies  |  Bush/Cheney '04

 
Past Results
1996
Clinton (Dem.).....2,215,819
(49.17)
Dole (Rep.)..........1,801,169
(39.97)
Perot (Ref.)............430,984
(9.56)
Others (3+w/ins).......58,146
(1.29)
Total........4,506,118

1992
Clinton (Dem.).....2,239,164
(45.15)
Bush (Rep.).........1,791,841
(36.13)
Perot (PfP).............902,667
(18.20)
Others (2)................26,138
(0.52)
Total........4,959,810

2000
Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
2,281,127
(46.43)
+Gore/Lieberman (Dem.)
2,485,967
(50.60)
Phillips/Frazier (Const.)
   14,428
(0.29)
Browne/Olivier (Lib.)
11,248
(0.23)
Nader/LaDuke (Grn.)
103,392
(2.10)
Buchanan/Foster (Ref.)
   16,023
(0.33)
Write-ins
934
(0.02)
Total........4,913,119
2000 Overview
Pennsylvania, with 23 electoral votes, was a battleground state from beginning to end, drawing much attention and resources from both campaigns.  Before the race even got underway, both parties considered holding their nominating conventions in Philadelphia.  On Election Night itself, when networks prematurely called Florida for Bush, Pennsylvania was for a time seen as a must-win for Bush.  As it was, Gore-Lieberman carried the state with a plurality of 204,840 votes (4.17 percentage points).  Bush carried 49 counties to 18 for Gore, but Gore won in the five most populous counties, including a plurality of 348,223 votes in Philadelphia County.
General Election Activity
Notes: In Pennsylvania the Republicans and Democrats are major parties, while the Constitution Party and the Libertarian Party qualify as minor parties.  Others are referred to as "political bodies."  Minor party and other presidential candidates wishing to appear on the ballot in the general election needed to obtain signatures from 21,739 registered electors (2% of the highest showing by a candidate in the last statewide election) in the period from Jan. 26-Aug. 1, 2000. 
Last day to register before the November election: Oct. 10, 2000.
Other races: Incumbents won several closely fought House races.  10th District. Don Sherwood (R) defeated Pat Casey (D) 52.1% to 47.9% (124,830 to 112,580).  13th District. Joe Hoeffel (D) defeated Stewart Greenleaf (R) 52.8% to 45.7% (146,026 to 126,501 with  4,224 votes going to the Libertarian).  15th District. Pat Toomey (R) fended off a challenge from Ed O'Brien (D) 53.3 to 46.7% (118,307 to 103,864).


General Primary -- Tuesday, April 27, 2004
Democratic 
178 Delegates (Pledged 151, Unpledged 27)
and 28 Alternates.
 
 
 
 
 

Republican

official results
Votes
Percent
Howard Dean
79,799
%
Dennis J. Kucinich
30,110
%
John Edwards
76,762
%
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.
17,528
%
+John F. Kerry
585,683
%
.    
George W. Bush
861,555
%
 
2004 page >
2000 page >
Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action.