US Presidential Election 2008: Primary West Virginia '08

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US Presidential Election, 2008

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6. Candidates for President and Vice-President

6.1 The Democratic Party
6.1.2 Democratic Party Candidates
6.1.2.3 Senator Barack Obama
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6.2 The GOP
6.2.1 Republican Party Candidates
6.2.1.1 Senator John McCain
6.2.1.2 Alaska Governor Sarah Palin
6.3 Speeches
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I have corrected these answers to improve clarity as well as to correct vocabulary and grammar errors. In general I was very impressed with the quality of your writing. However, I was not impressed with some students' tendency to plagiarize from internet sources (STEALING IS A CRIME!!!).Seriously, folks, you need to practice putting what you read into your own words, no matter how much more brilliant you think the original is. And trust me - I can spot plagiarism a mile away (ok, maybe not a mile..).

If you're having trouble paraphrasing, then bring a sentence to class and we can do it together. The point is to learn how to do it, not learn how to cover up the fact that you can't!

See you next week!

Deidre

P.S. You can find the same document with the corrections under "documents" on StudIP. Most of the errors were not serious, and all the people who contributed here would have passed the written test, so no need to panic.... Mostly, I did the corrections to show you how to improve clarity and cohesion in your writing, not to depress you and make you feel hopeless...



1. What was the overall Obama/Clinton percentage breakdown in the North Carolina / Indiana primaries?


2. How many delegates to the national convention are at stake in the Republican and in the Democratic parties? How are the delegates chosen in both states?

Barack Obama was able to win the closed primary in North Carolina on May 6th with 56, 2% over Hillary Clinton. Obama gained 32 delegates and 6 superdelegates whereas Clinton received 24 delegates and 2 superdelegates. For the Republican party John McCain(?) won with 73, 5% over Huckabee (12, 1%) and Paul (7, 8%). In the open primary in Indiana, which also took place on May 6th, Clinton was able to claim a 50, 7% - 49, 3% win over Obama. Clinton gained 36 delegates and 5 superdelegates while Obama collected 32 delegates and 4 superdelegates. McCain(?) won with 77, 6% for the Republicans against Huckabee (10%) and Paul (7, 7%).

In total, Obama gained 1859 delegates (91, 8%) of the 2025 needed for the national convention. Clinton, on the other hand, collected 1689 delegates (83, 4%) of the 2025 needed. For the first time since the beginning of the campaign, Obama has taken the lead among the superdelegates. He has now 281 superdelegates, including 23 since the primaries in Indiana and North Carolina and 3 who switched their support from Clinton to Obama.

In the upcoming primaries in West Virginia (May 13th), Kentucky and Oregon (May 20th), South Dakota and Montana (June 3rd) and Puerto Rico (June 7th), the last 216 delegates will be distributed.


3. In what areas (rural vs urban) did Obama do better than Clinton, and in what areas did Clinton do better than Obama?

Hillary Clinton won the Indiana primary by 1,4 percent, a state where the majority of people can be described as white middle class workers . She received 50,7% and 37 delegates whereas Barack Obama received 49,3 percent and 35 delegates.

There are 6.313.520 people living in Indiana, 88,3 % of whom are White, whereas 8,9 percent are Black and 1,3 percent are Asian. In November 2006 the state of Indiana had an unemployment rate of 4,8 percent and a median household income of $ 43.217. If you compare statistics on the outcome of former presidential elections, you will see that the majority of voters chose a Republican candidate. Bush received 60 percent in 2004 whereas Kerry received only 39,3 percent.

Obama did better in North Carolina. He won 56,2 percent and 64 of the 115 delegates. Hillary Clinton received only 41,5 percent of the votes. One fifth of the population of North Carolina is African American, 91 percent of whom voted for Barack Obama whereas only 36 percent of the white citizens voted for the senator of Illinois. 74 percent of the population of North Carolina is White and 1,9 percent are Asians. An unemployment rate of 4,9 percent is nearly similar to the one of Indiana and the median household income is about $ 40.863 per year.

Both democratic candidate recognize the importance of rural voters in the USA . However, Barack Obama seems to be having more trouble than Clinton in mobilizing voters in the rural areas of the USA. He stated publicly that, having been left behind, American farmer families feel excluded from the political process. The senator states that : “The dreams of rural Americans are familiar to all Americans – to make good living, to raise a healthy and secure family, and to leave our children a future of opportunity.” His agenda, he promises, will be to fight for those farmer families in the rural parts of the USA to give them the access to the same opportunities Obama himself has always fought for, in order to achieve the American Dream.

Obama shares these visions with Hillary Clinton. She also wants to rebuild rural areas of the USA but there are more details, how she wants to achieve it, to find on her website than on the website of Barack Obama. Clinton has the intention to create new jobs for the younger generation in rural areas by encouraging the production of biofuels and wind energy. She believes that a good education is the key to a booming economy, which should be ensured by recruiting teachers to work in rural areas. The goal to be able to live the American Dream should be achieved with the creation of “a Strategic Energy Fund that would inject $50 billion into research, development and deployment of renewable energy, energy efficiency, ethanol, and other homegrown biofuels.”

Compare:

http://uswahl2008.de 
http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/states/indiana.html
http://www.faz.net
http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/states/north.carolina.html
http://www.barackobama.com/issues/rural/
http://www.hillaryclinton.com/issues/rural/

(Hannah Stadie)

4. What is the breakdown in terms of ethnicity? (You’ll have to figure out where the majority of African Americans live in these states)


5. What is the breakdown in terms of age?


6. What is the breakdown in terms of income?

In Indiana, there were 72 pledged delegates at stake in an “open-“primary, one in which registered voters are able to vote in either party’s election, whether Republican or Democrat. The 6.3 (2006) million residents of Indiana are demographically 86 percent white, 8 percent black and 4 percent Hispanic, which makes it less ethnically diverse than the nationwide average. In the primaries so far, Clinton has been winning decisively among white Democratic voters. Obama has won even more overwhelmingly among black voters, who, in Indiana, are concentrated in the urban parts of the state, primarily in the cities of Gary and East Chicago. According to Census Bureau estimates, the average household income in Indiana was about $44,000 in 2005, which puts it in the national mid-range. Obama did well among upper-income voters ($75,000 +) as well as low-income voters (less than $15,000) in the southern and eastern parts of the state, while Clinton appealed mostly to middle-income, blue-collar and elderly voters. Also, Indiana is said to be a very conservative region which has traditionally voted Republican in presidential elections. On the whole, the electorate is conservative, mostly white and relatively poor. That’s why Indiana, demographically similar to Ohio and Pennsylvania, was thought to be solid ground for Clinton beforehand. Still, it came down to a very close call between the two candidates. In North Carolina, Obama won overwhelmingly by 14 percent. Again, he could rely on the African-American vote (nearly a quarter of the state’s population in black, 34 percent of Democratic voters are black and of those, 9 out of 10 voted for Obamaa). As in other states, he did well among young and well-educated voters that tend to live in the state’s urban and suburban areas (especially in the cities of Charlotte and Raleigh); in NC he did even better with female voters than Clinton. Clinton again did better among white voters, especially those who said they were less educated and had a lower income. However, statistics show that voters of all income-groups favoured Obama (the lead is at least 5 percent; in the group of voters earning “under $15,000 Obama even leads by 35 percent, 66 to 31 percent). ( http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/epolls/#NCDEM)

In NC, incomes are higher in urban than in rural areas and white people earn more than black people (Whites:earn around $26,000 in urban areas and $20,000 in rural areas, while African Americans: earn around $15,000 in urban and $11,000 in rural areas on average)


Sources:

Indiana:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/cq/20080506/pl_cq_politics/politics2717052 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana#Demographics 
http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/epolls/#INDEM 

North Carolina:

http://www.usnews.com/articles/news/campaign-2008/2008/05/07/indiana-and-north-carolina-reinforce-demographic-patterns-for-clinton-and-obama.html?PageNr=2 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Carolina#Demographics 
http://www.ncruralcenter.org/databank/trendpage_Income.asp

(Kjell Böttjer)

7. What do these results mean in terms of the number of delegates each candidate has won for the Democratic National Convention?

A candidate has to win a simple majority of the 2,025 pledged delegate votes out of a total of 4049 to win the 2008 nomination. At the moment Sen. Obama is leading with 1,881 delegates; 282 of whom are superdelegates. But Mrs.Clinton dogs his footsteps with 1,713 delegates and 273 superdelegates. Regarding the results especially in Indiana and North Carolina, Obama scored a 14-point win in North Carolina on May 6th , while Clinton barely took Indiana, winning by 2 points. Only 217 pledged delegates are up for grabs in the remaining six contests: West Virginia, Kentucky, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Montana and South Dakota.

Tuesday, the 6 th of May was Clinton's last major opportunity to significantly cut into Obama's lead in the delegate count. The 187 delegates at stake were awarded proportionally, meaning Obama padded his lead while Clinton slipped further behind.

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/01/02/delegate.explainer/
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/05/07/democrats.race/index.html

(Yuliya Luk’yanenko)


8. What is a closed vs open primary? Are Indiana and North Carolina open or closed primaries? How could this affect the results as well as their significance for predicting what will happen at the DNC or in the general election in November? "Open primaries (or pick-a-party) are those in which voters of any affiliation may vote for the slate of any party. Closed primaries are those in which only the voters affiliated with a party may vote in its primary." North Carolina: "If registered with a party, you must vote in that party´s primary. If unaffiliated, you may choose a party on the day of the primary election." Indiana: Open primary Source: FairVote(?) / Voting and Democracy Research Center ( http://www.fairvote.org/?page=1801) The results of open primaries are harder to predict so you cannot really foresee what is going to happen at the DNC or in the general election in November. The results are harder to predict because the proportion of people who can hardly be rated is bigger. (Bettina Klewer)

In a closed primary voters can only vote for candidates in the party they are registered in. In an open primary voters can vote for either party, regardless of which party they are registered with. Indiana is an open primary state but the voters may be asked to declare in whose primary they intend to vote. North Carolina is a semi-open primary state. This means that registered voters may only vote in their own party’s primary. Independents may vote in either primary. In an open primary, like Indiana, “raiding” may occur. This means that voters of one party plan a strategic move to force a weaker candidate of the other party (“crossing over”) in order to elect the opposition’ candidate who is easier to challenge in the general election. A closed or semi-open primary (like North Carolina) prevents members of other parties from “crossing over” to influence the nomination of an opposing party’s candidate. In the current election then, in an open primary, voters usually registered for the Republican Party, might vote for Clinton since she is assumed to be the weaker candidate. This might lead to the situation that Clinton receives a majority of the available pledged delegates and superdelegates in the DNC and becomes the Democratic candidate for the general election – the weaker candidate against McCain(?).

http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/state/#IN
http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/state/#NC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_election

(Anke Herbers)

9. How many of the people participating in the Indiana primary voted across party lines? (What percentage of the people who voted in the Democratic primary were Republicans? Why would Republicans want to do this?)


10. What is the significance of the North Carolina and Indiana primaries, considering the proportional distribution of delegates to the Democratic National Convention in August?


11. Which of these candidates has a better chance against McCain(?)?


12. What has the effect of the Jeremiah Wright controversy been on the primaries? Did it effect Democratic voters’ decisions as to who to support in the primary (look at exit polls for this info)


13. What is the gas tax the candidates keep referring to? What is the proposal two of the three candidates have come up with regarding the gas tax? What are the pros and cons of the proposal?


14. Which states have not yet held a primary or a caucus? How are the two Democratic candidates doing there? Answer: In the following weeks primaries will be held in Kentucky, Oregon and Puerto Rico. On May 20, Kentucky Democratic voters will have to choose between Obama and Clinton. Kentucky’s governor, Steve Beshear, a Democratic superdelegate, has not endorsed either candidate, although he was once cited as a Clinton "admirer." Obama is supported by two Democratic Representatives, John Yarmuth and Ben Chandler.

It is estimated that the high poverty rates in Kentucky might highlight economic issues in the campaign. The latest polls show that Kentucky voters will likely choose Clinton over Obama, with Clinton winning 58% of the vote to Obama’s 31%; 11% of voters say they are still undecided. . Oregon will also vote on May, 20th in their unique mail-in primary. Voters had two weeks time to mail back their vote. The two Democratic candidates mentioned very similar plans for Oregon. Clinton wants to bring "green jobs" to the region. Addressing another controversial issue, Clinton supports Oregon's law allowing terminally ill patients to end their lives.

Obama also supports “green“ policies. He wants to realise federal payments to counties dependent on the timber industry and to restore depleted salmon areas along the Pacific coast. Up to now Democrats have been doing well in Oregon and both candidates can count on Representatives who support them. On June, 01st primaries will be held in Puerto Rico. So far Clinton has done well among Latino voters. Puerto Rico voters are particularly interested in the candidates’ points of view as to whether the island should be granted statehood or remain a commonwealth. Both Clinton and Obama endorse allowing Puerto Ricans to choose for themselves between statehood and remaining a commonwealth. It is expected that voter turnout will be very high. Source:

http://edition.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/states/kentucky.html

• Nina -