2012 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary

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2012 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary

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28 pledged delegates to the
2012 Democratic National Convention
 
Candidate Barack Obama Ron Paul
(write-in)
Home state Illinois Texas
Delegate count 28 0
Popular vote 49,080 2,289
Percentage 80.91% 3.77%

Primary results by municipality
Obama:
 50%  55%  60%  65%  70%  75%  80%  85%  90%  95% 
 No votes 

The 2012 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary took place on Tuesday, January 10, 2012, as the second major contest of the primary cycle following the Iowa caucuses the previous week. New Hampshire's 28 pledged delegates to the Democratic National Convention were allocated based on the results of the primary.

Incumbent President Barack Obama won the primary in a landslide facing no major opposition to his candidacy.

Procedure

The presidential primary was

semi-closed, meaning voters registered as Democrats or independents were eligible to vote.[1]

New Hampshire was allocated 35 delegates to the Democratic National Convention: 28 were allocated based on the results of the primary, with the other seven being unpledged superdelegates.[2]

In order to qualify for delegates, a candidate had to receive at least 15% of the vote statewide or in at least one congressional district. 10 of New Hampshire's delegates were allocated based on the statewide popular vote, consisting of six at-large delegates and four pledged PLEOs (party leaders and elected officials). Each of New Hampshire's two congressional districts were allotted nine pledged delegates.[2]

Candidates

The following candidates qualified to appear on the ballot:

  • Randall Terry, West Virginia
  • Aldous Tyler, Wisconsin
  • John Wolfe Jr., Tennessee
  • Ed Cowan, Vermont
  • Bob Ely, Illinois
  • Craig "Tax Freeze" Freis, California
  • Bob Greene, California
  • John D. Haywood, North Carolina
  • Robert B. Jordan, California
  • Barack Obama, Illinois
  • Cornelius Edward O'Connor, Florida
  • Edward T. O'Donnell, Jr., Delaware
  • Darcy Richardson, Florida
  • Vermin Supreme, Massachusetts

Lesser-Known Candidates Forum

Vermin Supreme glitter bombs Randall Terry during the Lesser-Known Candidates Forum

As it has done ahead of every New Hampshire presidential primary since 1972, the New Hampshire Institute of Politics at Saint Anselm College hosted its Lesser-Known Candidates Forum on December 19, 2011. Seven of the invited Democratic candidates participated in the forum: Ed Cowan, Bob Greene, John D. Haywood, Ed O'Donnell, Vermin Supreme, Randall Terry and John Wolfe Jr.

During the forum, satirical perennial candidate Vermin Supreme stood up and glitterbombed fellow candidate Randall Terry, founder of the anti-abortion organization Operation Rescue and vocal opponent of same-sex marriage, saying "Jesus told me to turn Randy Terry gay."[3]

Results

With a lack of major challengers to his renomination, incumbent president

write-ins and placed second to Obama in the primary. Republican candidates Mitt Romney, who won the Republican primary, and Jon Huntsman Jr.
, who finished third, won more votes than Ed Cowan, the Democratic candidate who won the most votes other than Obama.

2012 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary[2]
Candidate Votes % Delegates
Barack Obama (incumbent) 49,080 80.91 28
Ron Paul (write-in) 2,289 3.77
Mitt Romney (write-in) 1,814 2.99
Jon Huntsman Jr. (write-in) 1,238 2.04
Ed Cowan 945 1.56
Vermin Supreme 833 1.37
Randall Terry 442 0.73
John D. Haywood 423 0.70
Craig "Tax Freeze" Freis 400 0.66
Rick Santorum (write-in) 302 0.50
Bob Ely 287 0.47
Newt Gingrich (write-in) 276 0.46
Cornelius O'Connor 266 0.44
Darcy Richardson 264 0.44
John Wolfe Jr. 245 0.40
Ed O'Donnell 222 0.37
Bob Greene 213 0.35
Robert B. Jordan 155 0.26
Aldous Tyler 106 0.17
Buddy Roemer (write-in) 29 0.05
Fred Karger (write-in) 26 0.04
Rick Perry (write-in) 17 0.03
Stewart Greenleaf (write-in) 4 0.01
Gary Johnson (write-in) 4 0.01
Michael Meehan (write-in) 2 0.00
Michele Bachmann (write-in) 2 0.00
Herman Cain (write-in) 1 0.00
Other write-ins 772 1.27
Total 60,659 100% 28

See also

References

  1. ^ "Section 659:14 Special Provisions for State and Presidential Primary Elections". The General Court of New Hampshire. Archived from the original on May 21, 2022. Retrieved June 3, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "New Hampshire Democratic Delegation 2012". The Green Papers. Archived from the original on April 22, 2023. Retrieved June 3, 2023.
  3. ^ "Video: Randall Terry Glitter-Bombed". The Advocate. December 21, 2011. Archived from the original on October 25, 2012. Retrieved July 12, 2023.