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The 2004 United States presidential election in California took place on November 2, 2004 throughout all 50 states and D.C., which was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 55 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President.
California was won by Democrat nominee John Kerry by a 10.0% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. Republicans have not taken California's electoral votes since George H.W. Bush's victory in 1988 against Michael Dukakis.
Contents |
There were 12 news organizations who made state by state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.[1]
Kerry won every single pre-election poll. The final 3 polls average Kerry leading at 52% to Bush at 43% to Nader at 2%.[2]
Bush raised $20,296,645, the second most money raised state for him. It accounted for 10.7% of all the money he raised in 2004.[3] Kerry raised $36,378,063, which is by far the most money raised for Kerry by any state. The money raised in California accounted for almost 20% of all money he raised in 2004. [4]
Neither Kerry nor Bush advertised or campaigned in the state during the fall election.[5] [6]
California was once a Republican stronghold, supporting Republican candidates in every election from 1952 through 1988, except in 1964. However, since the 1990s, California has become a reliably Democratic state with a highly diverse ethnic population (mostly Latino) and liberal bastions such as the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles County. The last time the state was won by a Republican candidate was in 1988 by George H. W. Bush. In 2004, the state did swing slightly Republican by a 1.9% margin from 2000.
| United States presidential election in California, 2004[7][8] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | Electoral votes | |
| Democratic | John Kerry | 6,745,485 | 54.30% | 55 | |
| Republican | George W. Bush (incumbent) | 5,509,826 | 44.36% | 0 | |
| Libertarian | Michael Badnarik | 50,165 | 0.40% | 0 | |
| Green | David Cobb | 40,771 | 0.33% | 0 | |
| Peace and Freedom | Leonard Peltier | 27,607 | 0.22% | 0 | |
| American Independent | Michael Peroutka | 26,645 | 0.21% | 0 | |
| Independent | Ralph Nader (write-in) | 21,213 | 0.17% | 0 | |
| Independent | John Joseph Kennedy (write-in) | 82 | 0.00% | 0 | |
| Independent | John Parker (write-in) | 49 | 0.00% | 0 | |
| Independent | James Alexander-Pace (write-in) | 8 | 0.00% | 0 | |
| Independent | Anthony Jabin (write-in) | 1 | 0.00% | 0 | |
| Invalid or blank votes | 169,510 | 1.35% | |||
| Totals | 12,590,863 | 100.00% | 55 | ||
| Voter turnout (Voting Age voters) | 47.7% | ||||
| County | Kerry | Votes | Bush | Votes | Others | Votes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| San Francisco | 83.02% | 296,772 | 15.21% | 54,355 | 1.77% | 6,338 |
| Alameda | 75.18% | 422,585 | 23.29% | 130,911 | 1.53% | 8,590 |
| Marin | 73.21% | 99,070 | 25.40% | 34,378 | 1.39% | 1,877 |
| Santa Cruz | 72.98% | 89,102 | 24.86% | 30,354 | 2.15% | 2,628 |
| San Mateo | 69.48% | 197,922 | 29.25% | 83,315 | 1.27% | 3,620 |
| Sonoma | 67.18% | 148,261 | 30.90% | 68,204 | 1.91% | 4,225 |
| Santa Clara | 63.94% | 386,100 | 34.63% | 209,094 | 1.43% | 8,622 |
| Mendocino | 63.45% | 24,385 | 33.71% | 12,955 | 2.83% | 1,089 |
| Los Angeles | 63.10% | 1,907,736 | 35.60% | 1,076,225 | 1.30% | 39,319 |
| Contra Costa | 62.28% | 257,254 | 36.46% | 150,608 | 1.25% | 5,166 |
| Monterey | 60.36% | 75,241 | 38.38% | 47,838 | 1.26% | 1,574 |
| Napa | 59.48% | 33,666 | 38.97% | 22,059 | 1.54% | 874 |
| Yolo | 59.34% | 42,885 | 38.75% | 28,005 | 1.91% | 1,379 |
| Humboldt | 57.66% | 37,988 | 39.03% | 25,714 | 3.31% | 2,184 |
| Solano | 57.17% | 85,096 | 41.86% | 62,301 | 0.97% | 1,440 |
| Alpine | 53.21% | 373 | 44.37% | 311 | 2.43% | 17 |
| Santa Barbara | 53.17% | 90,314 | 45.22% | 76,806 | 1.61% | 2,741 |
| Lake | 53.16% | 13,141 | 44.88% | 11,093 | 1.96% | 485 |
| San Benito | 52.61% | 9,851 | 46.45% | 8,698 | 0.94% | 176 |
| Imperial | 52.41% | 17,964 | 46.36% | 15,890 | 1.23% | 420 |
| Sacramento | 49.52% | 236,657 | 49.29% | 235,539 | 1.19% | 5,670 |
| Mono | 49.23% | 2,628 | 49.10% | 2,621 | 1.67% | 89 |
| Ventura | 47.53% | 148,859 | 51.19% | 160,314 | 1.28% | 4,020 |
| San Diego | 46.39% | 526,437 | 52.52% | 596,033 | 1.09% | 12,378 |
| San Joaquin | 45.83% | 87,012 | 53.18% | 100,978 | 0.99% | 1,874 |
| San Luis Obispo | 45.52% | 58,742 | 52.69% | 67,995 | 1.79% | 2,313 |
| Nevada | 44.92% | 24,220 | 53.39% | 28,790 | 1.69% | 910 |
| Butte | 44.14% | 42,448 | 53.73% | 51,662 | 2.13% | 2,047 |
| San Bernardino | 43.57% | 227,789 | 55.34% | 289,306 | 1.09% | 5,682 |
| Trinity | 42.71% | 2,782 | 54.66% | 3,560 | 2.63% | 171 |
| Merced | 42.26% | 24,491 | 56.54% | 32,773 | 1.20% | 696 |
| Fresno | 41.68% | 103,154 | 57.38% | 141,988 | 0.94% | 2,321 |
| Del Norte | 41.31% | 3,892 | 56.85% | 5,356 | 1.84% | 173 |
| Riverside | 41.04% | 228,806 | 57.83% | 322,473 | 1.13% | 6,300 |
| Stanislaus | 40.40% | 58,829 | 58.65% | 85,407 | 0.95% | 1,388 |
| Orange | 38.98% | 419,239 | 59.68% | 641,832 | 1.33% | 14,328 |
| Inyo | 38.88% | 3,350 | 59.09% | 5,091 | 2.03% | 175 |
| Tuolumne | 38.51% | 10,104 | 60.02% | 15,745 | 1.47% | 386 |
| Siskiyou | 37.71% | 7,880 | 60.64% | 12,673 | 1.66% | 346 |
| Mariposa | 37.55% | 3,251 | 60.23% | 5,215 | 2.22% | 192 |
| El Dorado | 37.33% | 32,242 | 61.23% | 52,878 | 1.44% | 1,244 |
| Calaveras | 37.09% | 8,286 | 60.87% | 13,601 | 2.04% | 456 |
| Plumas | 36.90% | 4,129 | 61.71% | 6,905 | 1.39% | 156 |
| Amador | 36.56% | 6,541 | 62.08% | 11,107 | 1.36% | 243 |
| Placer | 36.26% | 55,573 | 62.61% | 95,969 | 1.13% | 1,736 |
| Madera | 34.70% | 13,481 | 64.02% | 24,871 | 1.28% | 498 |
| Kings | 33.74% | 10,833 | 65.41% | 21,003 | 0.85% | 274 |
| Sierra | 33.16% | 646 | 64.12% | 1,249 | 2.72% | 53 |
| Tulare | 32.87% | 32,494 | 66.15% | 65,399 | 0.98% | 967 |
| Kern | 32.49% | 68,603 | 66.49% | 140,417 | 1.02% | 2,154 |
| Tehama | 32.01% | 7,504 | 66.42% | 15,572 | 1.57% | 368 |
| Sutter | 31.85% | 9,602 | 67.19% | 20,254 | 0.96% | 289 |
| Glenn | 31.68% | 2,995 | 66.72% | 6,308 | 1.60% | 151 |
| Yuba | 31.55% | 5,687 | 67.00% | 12,076 | 1.45% | 261 |
| Colusa | 31.58% | 1,947 | 67.17% | 4,142 | 1.25% | 77 |
| Shasta | 31.31% | 24,339 | 67.22% | 52,249 | 1.47% | 1,143 |
| Lassen | 27.58% | 3,158 | 70.97% | 8,126 | 1.45% | 166 |
| Modoc | 25.72% | 1,149 | 72.42% | 3,235 | 1.86% | 83 |
Kerry won 31 congressional districts. Bush won 22 congressional districts.[9]
| District | Bush | Kerry | Representative |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 38% | 60% | Mike Thompson |
| 2nd | 62% | 37% | Wally Herger |
| 3rd | 58% | 41% | Doug Ose |
| Dan Lungren | |||
| 4th | 61% | 37% | John Doolittle |
| 5th | 38% | 61% | Bob Matsui |
| Doris Matsui | |||
| 6th | 28% | 70% | Lynn Woolsey |
| 7th | 32% | 67% | George Miller |
| 8th | 14% | 85% | Nancy Pelosi |
| 9th | 13% | 86% | Barbara Lee |
| 10th | 40% | 59% | Ellen Tauscher |
| 11th | 54% | 45% | Richard Pombo |
| 12th | 27% | 72% | Tom Lantos |
| 13th | 28% | 71% | Pete Stark |
| 14th | 30% | 68% | Anna Eshoo |
| 15th | 36% | 63% | Mike Honda |
| 16th | 36% | 63% | Zoe Lofgren |
| 17th | 33% | 66% | Sam Farr |
| 18th | 50% | 49% | Dennis Cardoza |
| 19th | 61% | 38% | George Radanovich |
| 20th | 48% | 51% | Cal Dooley |
| Jim Costa | |||
| 21st | 65% | 34% | Devin Nunes |
| 22nd | 68% | 31% | Kevin McCarthy |
| 23rd | 40% | 58% | Lois Capps |
| 24th | 56% | 43% | Elton Gallegly |
| 25th | 59% | 40% | Howard McKeon |
| 26th | 55% | 44% | David Dreier |
| 27th | 39% | 59% | Brad Sherman |
| 28th | 28% | 71% | Howard Berman |
| 29th | 37% | 61% | Adam Schiff |
| 30th | 33% | 66% | Henry Waxman |
| 31st | 22% | 77% | Xavier Becerra |
| 32nd | 37% | 62% | Hilda Solis |
| 33rd | 16% | 83% | Diane Watson |
| 34th | 30% | 69% | Lucille Roybal-Allard |
| 35th | 20% | 79% | Maxine Waters |
| 36th | 40% | 59% | Jane Harman |
| 37th | 25% | 74% | Juanita Millender-McDonald |
| 38th | 34% | 65% | Grace Napolitano |
| 39th | 40% | 59% | Linda Sánchez |
| 40th | 60% | 39% | Ed Royce |
| 41st | 62% | 37% | Jerry Lewis |
| 42nd | 62% | 37% | Gary Miller |
| 43rd | 41% | 58% | Joe Baca |
| 44th | 59% | 40% | Ken Calvert |
| 45th | 56% | 43% | Mary Bono Mack |
| 46th | 57% | 42% | Dana Rohrabacher |
| 47th | 50% | 49% | Loretta Sanchez |
| 48th | 58% | 40% | Christopher Cox |
| John Campbell | |||
| 49th | 63% | 36% | Darrell Issa |
| 50th | 55% | 44% | Brian Bilbray |
| 51st | 46% | 53% | Bob Filner |
| 52nd | 61% | 38% | Duncan Hunter |
| 53rd | 38% | 61% | Susan Davis |
Technically the voters of California cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. California is allocated 55 electors because it has 53 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 53 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 53 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for President and Vice President. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.
The electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004 to cast their votes for President and Vice President. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.
The following were the members of the Electoral College from California. All were pledged to and voted for John Kerry and John Edwards.[10]
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