2004 Oklahoma Democratic presidential primary

The 2004 Oklahoma Democratic presidential primary, part of the process of selecting that party's nominee for President of the United States, took place on February 3, one of the seven nominating contests of 2004's "Mini-Tuesday". The primary election chose 40 pledged delegates to represent Oklahoma at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. The remainder of Oklahoma's 47 delegates consisted of unpledged superdelegates not bound by the results of the primary. The election was a closed primary, meaning that only registered Democrats could vote in this election. Wesley Clark won the primary by a razor-thin margin over John Edwards.

2004 Oklahoma Democratic presidential primary

February 3, 2004 (2004-02-03)

47 Democratic National Convention delegates (40 pledged, 7 unpledged)
The number of pledged delegates received is determined by the popular vote
 
Candidate Wesley Clark John Edwards
Home state Arkansas North Carolina
Delegate count 15 13
Popular vote 90,526 89,310
Percentage 29.94% 29.54%

 
Candidate John Kerry Joe Lieberman
Home state Massachusetts Connecticut
Delegate count 12 0
Popular vote 81,073 19,680
Percentage 26.81% 6.51%

Election results by county. Green denotes counties won by Clark, Red denotes those won by Edwards, and Blue denotes those won by Kerry.

Candidates

Withdrawn

Results

Key:Withdrew
prior to contest
Oklahoma Democratic presidential primary, 2004[1]
Candidate Votes Percentage National delegates[2]
Wesley Clark 90,526 29.94% 15
John Edwards 89,310 29.54% 13
John Kerry 81,073 26.81% 12
Joe Lieberman 19,680 6.51% 0
Howard Dean 12,734 4.21% 0
Al Sharpton 3,939 1.30% 0
Dennis Kucinich 2,544 0.84% 0
Dick Gephardt 1,890 0.63% 0
Lyndon LaRouche 689 0.23% 0
Totals 302,385 100.00% 40

See also

References

  1. "Presidential Preferential Primary Election Results -- February 3, 2004". Oklahoma State Election Board. Archived from the original on February 13, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-01.
  2. "2004 Presidential Democratic Primary Election Results - South Carolina". U.S. Election Atlas. Retrieved 2009-03-01.
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