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| Republican Party (United States) presidential candidates, 2008 |
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This article contains lists of official candidates associated with the 2008 Republican Party presidential primaries for the 2008 United States presidential election.
In accordance with the 22nd Amendment, incumbent President George W. Bush was required to leave office in 2009 due to term limits, and Vice President Dick Cheney chose not to run for President.[1]
On March 4, 2008, John McCain became the Republican presumptive presidential nominee when he obtained the 1,191 delegates necessary to receive the party's nomination.[2] Mike Huckabee announced his withdrawal from the race later in the evening.[3] McCain's last remaining competitor in the race, Ron Paul, withdrew on June 12, 2008.[4]
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This chart shows the total number of delegates committed to each candidate from the Primaries/caucuses/state conventions (different state parties use varied methods for electing delegates).
| Candidates | Actual pledged delegates1 (1,780 of 1,917) |
Estimated total delegates2 (2,159 of 2,380; 1,191 needed to win) |
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| John McCain | 1,378 | 1,575 | |||||||
| Mike Huckabee | 240 | 278 | |||||||
| Mitt Romney | 148 | 271 | |||||||
| Ron Paul | 14 | 35 | |||||||
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| Sources: 1 "Primary Season Election Results". The New York Times. (regularly updated). http://politics.nytimes.com/election-guide/2008/results/gopdelegates/index.html. 2 "Election Center 2008 - Republican Delegate Scorecard". CNN. (regularly updated). http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/scorecard/#R. |
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![]() Senator John McCain (Campaign site) |
Main article: John McCain presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of John McCain
John McCain, born August 29, 1936, in the U.S.-controlled Panama Canal Zone, Senator from Arizona. Born into a military family, he became a naval aviator and POW during the Vietnam War. Often characterized as a Republican maverick in the Senate, he is well-known. In 2000, he failed in his attempt against George W. Bush for the Republican nomination: McCain continued his ultimately unsuccessful campaign long after the other Republican candidates had united behind Bush. McCain's bipartisan compromise on judicial nominations and his strong support of campaign finance reform have drawn the ire of many groups,[5] However, his party stands with him on issues concerning foreign policy and government spending. On November 15, 2006, McCain announced he would form an exploratory committee. On the Late Show with David Letterman on February 28, 2007, he announced he would seek the GOP presidential nomination. He made a formal announcement on April 25, 2007. On November 4, McCain was defeated for the presidency by Barack Obama, the Democratic nominee.[6][7] |
| Candidates who withdrew from seeking the nomination. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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![]() Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City |
Main article: Rudy Giuliani presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of Rudy Giuliani
Rudy Giuliani, born May 24, 1944, in New York, former mayor of New York City. Giuliani said on October 2, 2005, that he would look at the possibility of running for President. On November 13, 2006, he announced that he was forming an exploratory committee. He led several state and nationwide polls for the Republican nomination and the general election, and had been mentioned by many media sources as a possible candidate since the 9/11 attacks and a speech to the 2004 Republican Convention.[8] (See polls below) On February 5, 2007, Giuliani unofficially entered the race for the 2008 U.S. presidential election by filing a "statement of candidacy" with the Federal Election Commission, but legally keeping him at the same level as he was while running an exploratory committee.[9] On February 15, Giuliani officially announced that he was running on CNN's Larry King Live show.[10] Giuliani finished third in the Florida primary on January 29, 2008. The next day he withdrew from the race and endorsed John McCain.[11] |
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![]() Representative Duncan Hunter |
Main article: Duncan Hunter presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of Duncan Hunter
Duncan Hunter, born May 31, 1948, in Riverside, California, U.S. Representative from that state and former Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. Hunter formally announced his presidential candidacy in Spartanburg, South Carolina, on January 25, 2007. He withdrew from the race on January 19, 2008 after a poor showing in the Nevada Republican caucuses, and endorsed Mike Huckabee.[12][13] |
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![]() Mike Huckabee, former Governor of Arkansas |
Main article: Mike Huckabee presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of Mike Huckabee
Mike Huckabee, born August 24, 1955, was the governor of the U.S. state of Arkansas from 1996 to 2007. He announced his candidacy on January 28, 2007. After Mitt Romney withdrew from the race, Huckabee chose to continue with his campaign, despite the fact McCain was already the presumptive nominee. Following losses to McCain in the Texas, Ohio, Vermont, and Rhode Island primaries, he ended his presidential campaign on the evening of March 4, 2008, and endorsed McCain the following day.[14] |
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![]() Representative Ron Paul |
Main article: Ron Paul presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of Ron Paul
Ron Paul, born August 20, 1935, in Green Tree, Pennsylvania, is a long time U.S. Representative from Texas with a strong constitutionalist and libertarian voting record. He first ran for President as a Libertarian nearly two decades before the 2008 campaign. On January 11, 2007, Paul filed papers to form an exploratory committee for the 2008 presidential race.[15][16] He formally declared his candidacy 12 March 2007 as a guest on Washington Journal on C-SPAN.[17][18] On February 20, 2007, Paul's exploratory committee posted on YouTube a formal video of him explaining his reason for running.[19] Paul did well in Republican straw polls and broke several fundraising records including raising the most money ever raised in 24 hours, when Paul raised over $6.3 million on December 16, 2007 as a part of a moneybomb celebrating the Boston Tea Party. On June 12, Paul withdrew from the race.[4] He did not endorse John McCain as the presumptive nominee for President, Paul eventually went on to endorse several third party candidates in the general election, including Chuck Baldwin of the Constitution Party, Cynthia McKinney of the Green Party, Bob Barr of the Libertarian Party, and Ralph Nader, who ran as an independent.[20] |
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![]() Mitt Romney, former Governor of Massachusetts |
Main article: Mitt Romney presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of Mitt Romney
Mitt Romney, born March 12, 1947, in Michigan, is former Governor of Massachusetts. He formed a presidential exploratory committee on January 3, 2007, the day he left the governor's office.[21] Romney officially announced his candidacy on February 13, 2007 at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.[22][23] On February 7, 2008, Romney announced that he was withdrawing from the race, and endorsed John McCain.[24] |
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![]() Fred Thompson, former Senator of Tennessee |
Main article: Fred Thompson presidential campaign, 2008
See also: Political positions of Fred Thompson
Fred Dalton Thompson, born August 19, 1942, is a former Senator from Tennessee and a former actor, best known for playing D.A. Arthur Branch on Law & Order. On March 11, 2007 Thompson said "I'm giving some thought to it. Going to leave the door open. A lot of people think it's late already. I don't really think it is, although the rules of the game have changed somewhat. ... I think people are somewhat disillusioned. I think a lot of people are cynical out there. I think they're looking for something different."[25] On June 1, Thompson announced he had established a preliminary campaign committee, thus taking his first formal step toward an official presidential bid.[26] On September 5, he officially entered the presidential race.[27] On January 22, 2008 he ended his campaihn and endorsed John McCain. } Withdrew before primary elections
Other candidatesThe following candidates filed with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC).
See also
References
External links
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