The Transformational Primary
by Todd Beeton, Fri May 09, 2008 at 09:33:51 AM EDT
There sure was a lot of hand-wringing back in March by Obama supporters unable to stomach the fact that Hillary Clinton would {gasp!} stay in the race and deny their candidate something he wasn't actually able to win outright. The most ironic thing about it to me was that the very people who were most vocal about calling for a pre-mature end to the race, concern trolling about the horrible impact such a drawn out primary could have on our chances in November ("for the love of God, think of the party!") were among those that claim to be proponents of Dean's 50-state strategy. Looking back now, could anyone have scripted a better 50-state party building exercise than this primary has been? It's no accident that the only ones still whining about the primary destroying the party are rightwingers on the teevee who think saying it will make it so. But a look at the statistics tells a different story.
From The DNC's "Democratic Surge" memo (h/t Marc Ambinder):
During this election season nearly 35 million people have come out to support our Democratic candidates, and an estimated 3.5 million new voters have been added to the national voter rolls. As the AP reported this week, these figures are up for blacks, women and young people. Rural and city. South and North. In 17 of the first 24 primaries, voter turnout was the largest in four decades.This record turnout during the primaries has been transformational for the Democratic Party as record numbers of new voters are being registered and our candidates are campaigning in all fifty states, running a truly national campaign.
Here are just some of the more dramatic statistics from our 2008 primary season:
- In Ohio, twice as many people participated in the Democratic primary as in the Republican primary2.2 million for Democrats to 1 million for Republicansand thousands of Ohio Republicans switched parties to vote for a Democrat. In fact, in seven counties in OhioPutnam, Brown, Shelby, Belmont, Warren, Delaware, and Clarmontthe vote totals for our two Democratic candidates in the 2008 primary exceeded the votes for John Kerry in the general election in each of those counties.
- For the first time, Pennsylvania now has more than four million registered Democrats and voter registration now nears record levels based on Democratic voter registration. Since the beginning of the year nearly 300,000 Pennsylvanians switched party registration or registered to vote to support Democrats. In contrast, the Republican Party has lost 70,000 voters in the past year.
- Because of new voters, places like Bucks County and Montgomery County, which had trended Republican in the past, now register more Democratic than Republican registered voters, and places like Dauphin County in central Pennsylvania now register almost an even number of Democrats and Republicans.
- New Hampshire, another battleground state, saw 75,000 people register as Democrats on primary day alone more than double the number in 2000.
- In Texas this year, more people voted in the Democratic primary than voted for John Kerry in the 2004 general election in the state.
- In Virginia, a state where Democrats are poised to make great gains in November, more than twice as many Democrats voted than Republicansnearly 1 million for Democrats to half that for Republicansand Democratic votes were two and a half times the number of votes in the 2004 primary.
- In Georgia, a state President Bush won with 58 percent of the vote in 2004, record turnout in the primary drew more than 1 million Democratic voters exceeding the 960,000 Republicans who turned out.
- In Nebraska, the 2008 caucuses brought back thousands of voters from the Republican Party 4,000 voters in Omaha alone registered as Democrats on caucus night.
- The Kansas caucuses saw an overwhelming level of turnout, and caucuses overflowed throughout the state. Turnout increased by 2549 percent from 2004, from 1,400 to over 37,000 this year.
- In Iowa, both parties campaigned fiercely in the run-up to the caucuses. Democratic registration went up 14% in 2004, while the number of Republicans fell by 1%. Caucus attendance for the Democrats went up 93%, while Republican turnout only went up 38%.
Even after locking up the Republican nomination, 27 percent of Republican voters voted for another Republican candidate in North Carolina [Tuesday], and 23 percent of Republican voters voted for another Republican candidate in Indiana.
Meanwhile...
At the same time, Democrats are campaigning in all fifty states this primary season and bringing new voters into the process.
Some of us have been saying it for months but conventional wisdom now seems to be cementing that, as these statistics plainly show, the drawn out primary has been great for the Democratic Party and our chances up and down the ticket in November.
Tags: 2008 Presidential election, Democratic nomination (all tags)










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