ARKANSAS 6 Electoral Votes
Population 
(Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Arkansas Secretary of State)
Total Population, July 1, 2007 est. 2,834,797
Total Registration, Feb. 2008 1,570,961
Arkansas has: 75 counties.
Largest counties: Pulaski, Benton, Washington, Sebastian. >
Largest cities: Little Rock, Fort Smith, Fayetteville, North Little Rock. >

Government
Governor: Mike Beebe (D) elected Nov. 2006.
State Legislature: Arkansas General Assembly   House: 100 seats  Senate: 35 seats 
Local: Cities and Towns...   NACO Counties
U.S. House: 3D, 1R - 1. M.Berry (D) | 2. V.Snyder (D) | 3. J. Boozman (R) | 4. M.Ross (D).
U.S. Senate: Mark Pryor (D) up for re-election in 2008, Blanche Lambert Lincoln (D) re-elected in 2004. 

The Natural State
 

 State of Arkansas
Secretary of State

AR Democratic Party
AR Libertarian Party
Constitution Party of AR
Green Party of AR
Republican Party of AR

Ark. Dem.-Gazette
Media (Newsp.)
Media (TV)

Politics1-AR
 

[Primary Election: June 10, 2008]
Presidential Primary Election -- Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Jan. 7, 2008 - Voter Registration Deadline.  Jan. 29, 2008 - Early Voting Begins.
Democrats
47 Delegates (35 Pledged, 12 Unpledged) and 6 Alternates.
1.16% of the 4,049 Delegate Votes.

Clinton  |  Obama

Official Results
Joe Biden
515
0.16%
+Hillary Clinton
220,136
70.05%
Chris Dodd
308
0.10%
John Edwards
5,873
1.87%
Mike Gravel
325
0.10%
Dennis Kucinich
393
0.13%
Barack Obama
82,476
26.25%
Bill Richardson
810
0.26%
Uncommitted
3,398
1.08%
Total
314,234
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D) clearly benefited from her years of service as First Lady of Arkansas. 

Republicans
34 Delegates: 3 RNC; 19 at-large; 12 by CD (3 x 4 CDs).
1.43% of the 2,380 Delegates.

Allocation
At-large - "Each candidate that hits 10% threshold in statewide primary votes gets 1 delegate and 1 alternate.  After that, if a candidate receives 50% of statewide vote, then allocated remaining AL delegates.  If no majority winner, then remaining AL delegates allocated among top 3 vote-getters."
CD - "If candidate receives majority of vote, then gets all 3 delegates; if plurality, then highest vote-getter gets two delegates and next highest gets one delegate."

Huckabee  |  Romney  |  Paul

Official Results
Rudy Giuliani
658
0.29%
+Mike Huckabee
138,557
60.46%
John McCain
46,343
20.22%
Ron Paul
10,983
4.79%
Mitt Romney
30,997
13.53%
Fred Thompson
628
0.27%
Uncommitted
987
0.43%
Total
229,153
As might be expected former Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) did well in his home state.

Greens
Jared A. Ball, 81 votes (10%)   Cynthia McKinney, 157 votes (20%)   Kent Mesplay, 61 votes (8%)   Kat Swift, 46 votes (6%)   Uncom, 438 votes (56%)   Total, 783.

Setting the Primary Date
In early March 2005 then Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) signed into law SB235 "An Act Concerning Presidential Preferential Primary Elections" which moved the state's presidential primary from May to the first Tuesday in February.  The bill, by Sen. Tracy Steele (D-North Little Rock), had easily passed both houses of the General Assembly.

[Also Note.  In the first part of 2006 the Democratic National Committee sought proposals from state parties to hold presidential caucuses or primaries early, in the pre-window period (i.e. before February 5, 2008), in an effort to increase diversity in the early stages of its nominating process.  Arkansas Democrats were among several state parties that applied to the DNC by the April 14, 2006 deadline seeking to hold their primary early.  However the DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee, meeting on July 22, 2006, recommended South Carolina for the new pre-window primary position].
 
General Election -- Tuesday, November 2, 2004
Voter Registration Deadline: Oct. 3, 2004 (30 days before the Election).
Early Voting Begins: Oct. 18, 2004 (15 days before the Election).
Official Results
Badnarik/Campagna (Lib.)
2,352
(0.22)
+Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
572,898
(54.31)
Cobb/LaMarche (Grn.) 1,488 (0.14)
Kerry/Edwards (Dem.) 469,953
(44.55)
Nader/Camejo (Pop.)
6,171
(0.58)
Peroutka/Baldwin (Const.)
2,083
(0.20)
Total........1,054,945
 
Total Over Votes 7,249 
Total Under Votes 8,379
2004 Overview
Arkansas is another Southern state where the  Kerry-Edwards ticket did not go over too well.  The Bush ticket expanded upon its 2000 showing, gaining a plurality of 102,945 votes (9.76 percentage points) and carrying 54 of 75 counties (results by county).
General Election Details
Kerry/Allies  |  Bush-Cheney '04
Past Results
1996
Clinton (Dem.).......475,171
(53.74)
Dole (Rep.)............325,416
(36.80)
Perot (Ref.).............69,884
(7.90)
Others (10)..............13,791
(1.56)
Total........884,262

1992
Clinton (Dem.).......505,823
(53.21)
Bush (Rep.)...........337,324
(35.48)
Perot (Ind.)..............99,132
(10.43)
Others (10)...............8,374
(0.88)
Total........950,653

2000
Buchanan/Foster (Ref.)
7,358
(0.80)
Phillips/Frazier (Const.)
1,415
(0.15)
Hagelin/Goldhaber (NLP)
1,098
(0.12)
Browne/Olivier (Lib.)
2,781
(0.30)
Gore/Lieberman (Dem.)
422,768
(45.86)
Nader/LaDuke (Grn.)
13,421
(1.46)
+Bush/Cheney (Rep.)
472,940
(51.31)
Total........921,781
Arkansas has early voting for 15 days prior to Election Day (starting Oct. 23) at county clerks' offices and in multiple locations in Pulaski Couty.  Statewide about 18% voted early or by absentee ballot.l                                               \\
Total Registration, Oct. 10, 2000 -  1,553,356
Voting Age Population, Nov. 2000 -  1,929,000
Turnout as a percentage of voting age population was 47.79%.  (U.S. avg. 53.76%).
2000 Overview
The Bush ticket prevailed in President Clinton's home state, returning Arkansas' six electors to the Republican column.  Gov. Bush carried 43 of the state's 75 counties and won by a plurality of 50,172 votes.  He kept the race close in Pulaski County (Little Rock), and polled strongly in Northwest Arkansas (for example Benton County).  In U.S. House races, Democrats picked up a seat as State Sen. Mike Ross of Prescott defeated incumbent Republican Rep. Jay Dickey of Pine Bluff by 51% to 49%. 
General Election Activity


Primary Election -- Tuesday, May 18, 2004
Democratic
June 17, 2004  -2216 of 2250 polling locations
Votes
Percent
Lyndon H. LaRouche
14,869
6%
+John F. Kerry
176,534
66%
Dennis J. Kucinich
13,625
5%
Uncommitted
60,821
23%
Total  
47 Delegates (36 District, 11 Unpledged) and 6 Alternates.

Republicans
35 Delegates (12 CD and 23 At Large)
George W. Bush 40,347 (97%)     Uncomm. 1,146 (3%)

2004 page >
2000 page >
 
Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action.