2004 United States presidential election in Vermont

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2004 United States presidential election in Vermont
Flag of Vermont.svg
  2000 November 2, 2004 2008  
  John F. Kerry.jpg George-W-Bush.jpeg
Nominee John Kerry George W. Bush
Party Democratic Republican
Home state Massachusetts Texas
Running mate John Edwards Dick Cheney
Electoral vote30
Popular vote184,067121,180
Percentage58.94%38.80%

Vermont Presidential Election Results 2004.svg
Vermont Presidential Election Results 2004 by Municipality.svg

President before election

George W. Bush
Republican

Elected President

George W. Bush
Republican

The 2004 United States presidential election in Vermont took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Contents

Vermont is the home state of United States presidential candidate and anti-war advocate Howard Dean, its former governor. Vermont voted overwhelmingly for the Democratic candidate, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, over incumbent Republican President George W. Bush of Texas. Kerry received 58.94% of the vote to Bush's 38.80%, a Democratic victory margin of 20.14%. [1]

Kerry also swept 13 of the state's 14 counties, breaking 60% in 6 of them. Kerry's strongest county was Windham County, which he won with 66.43% of the vote to Bush's 31.22%. Only one county voted for Bush, sparsely populated bellwether Essex County in the far northeast of the state, which Bush won with 54.17% of the vote. A state with strong liberal and anti-war tendencies, Vermont registered as the third most Democratic state in the nation in the 2004 election, its results making the state about 23% more Democratic than the nation. It also had the strongest Democratic swing of any state in the nation against Bush compared to the 2000 result. Even as Bush increased his nationwide popular vote support from a 0.52% loss to Al Gore in 2000 to a 2.46% nationwide victory in 2004, Vermont swung 10.20% against Bush, making the state trend 13.18% Democratic relative to the nation. This portended the future trend of the state toward dominance by the Democratic Party, as Democrat Barack Obama would carry the state in a 67-30 landslide four years later in 2008 and again in 2012.

Kerry, from neighboring Massachusetts, was the first Northern Democrat ever to carry Vermont. The previous three Democratic presidential candidates to carry the state were all from the South (Lyndon B. Johnson was from Texas, Bill Clinton from Arkansas and Al Gore from Tennessee), even though Vermont is a northern state. This remains the first time a Republican has won the national popular vote without carrying Vermont. Bush thus became the first-ever Republican to win the White House without carrying Caledonia, Orange, or Orleans Counties. Bush became the first Republican to ever win two terms without ever carrying the state.

Democratic primary

Primary date: March 2, 2004

2004 Vermont Democratic presidential primary [2]
CandidateVotesPercentageDelegates
Howard Dean 44,39353.6%9
John Kerry 26,17131.6%6
Dennis Kucinich 3,3964.1%0
Wesley Clark 2,7493.3%0
Others1,0591.3%0
Total-100.00%28

Campaign

Predictions

There were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day. [3]

SourceRanking
D.C. Political ReportSolid D
Cook Political ReportSolid D
Research 2000Solid D
Zogby InternationalLikely D
Washington PostSolid D
Washington DispatchLikely D
Washington TimesSolid D
The New York TimesSolid D
CNNSolid D
NewsweekSolid D
Associated PressSolid D
Rasmussen ReportsSolid D

Results

Presidential candidatePartyPopular votePercentageElectoral vote
John Kerry Democratic 184,06758.94%3
George W. Bush (incumbent) Republican 121,18038.80%0
Ralph Nader Independent 4,4941.44%0
Michael Badnarik Libertarian 1,1020.35%0
Write ins9570.31%0
John Parker Liberty Union 2650.09%0
Róger Calero Socialist Workers 2440.08%0

Source [4]

By county

CountyJohn Kerry
Democratic
George W. Bush
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
# %# %# %# %
Addison 11,14760.00%7,07738.09%3551.91%4,07021.91%18,579
Bennington 11,06958.06%7,61639.95%3801.99%3,45318.11%19,065
Caledonia 7,10650.00%6,76547.60%3402.39%3412.40%14,211
Chittenden 49,36963.54%26,42234.01%1,9052.45%22,94729.53%77,696
Essex 1,27643.45%1,59154.17%702.38%-315-10.72%2,937
Franklin 10,59853.20%8,93644.86%3861.95%1,6628.34%19,920
Grand Isle 2,24655.09%1,75443.02%771.89%49212.07%4,077
Lamoille 7,63662.69%4,26034.97%2852.34%3,37627.72%12,181
Orange 8,15954.78%6,42143.11%3152.12%1,73811.67%14,895
Orleans 6,33051.71%5,66646.28%2462.01%6645.43%12,242
Rutland 15,90451.34%14,44046.62%6312.03%1,4644.72%30,975
Washington 19,17760.98%11,46136.44%8102.58%7,71624.54%31,448
Windham 15,48966.43%7,28031.22%5472.35%8,20935.21%23,316
Windsor 18,56160.33%11,49137.35%7152.33%7,07022.98%30,767
Totals184,06758.94%121,18038.80%7,0622.26%62,88720.14%312,309
County Flips:
Democratic
Hold
Gain from Republican
Republican
Hold Vermont County Flips 2004.svg
County Flips:

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

Due to the state's low population, only one congressional district is allocated. This district, called the at-large district because it covers the entire state, is thus equivalent to the statewide election results.

DistrictBushKerryRepresentative
At-large 30.94%58.8% Bernie Sanders

See also

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References

  1. 2004 Presidential General Election Results – Vermont
  2. "Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections".
  3. http://www.dcpoliticalreport.com/members/2004/Pred2.htm#NW [ permanent dead link ]
  4. "Our Campaigns - VT US President Race - Nov 02, 2004". ourcampaigns.com. 2008. Retrieved August 25, 2015.