Democrats: Twenty Years After

Tools

Democrats: Twenty Years After

By Associated Press

More than two decades after a Democratic Presidential candidate last carried South Dakota, Barack Obama and John McCain were splitting support from voters in nearly every category.

According to early results of an Associated Press exit poll, neither McCain nor Obama had much advantage in terms of voters' gender, education, geographical location and most categories of age and incomes.

President Lyndon Johnson was the last Democratic presidential
candidate to win South Dakota in his 1964 landslide.

Both McCain and Obama were doing a good job of holding voters
from their respective parties.

But Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson grabbed crossover votes from Republicans in the heavily GOP state to win a third term in the U.S. Senate.

View comments

The following comments do not necessarily represent the views of KSFY.com. Users have agreed to these terms and in doing so accept full responsibility for their comments. Moderation is limited.

Tuesday, Nov 4 at 9:50 PM Corey wrote ...

2008 minus 1964 is about 44 years by my estimate. That's more than the 2 decades that the story lists...

Add a comment

Name:

Comment: 500 Characters Left

KSFY.com and its affiliated companies are not responsible for the content of comments posted or for anything arising out of use of the above comments or other interaction among the users. We reserve the right to screen, refuse to post, remove or edit user-generated content at any time and for any or no reason in our absolute and sole discretion without prior notice, although we have no duty to do so or to monitor any Public Forum.

I have read and agree to the terms

Hide comments

YouNews

This content requires the latest Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript enabled. Click here for a free download of the latest Adobe Flash Player.

On Demand

Stock Quotes

Flash Poll

Should public schools be allowed to sell lists of student names, phone numbers and addresses to businesses?

  • Absolutely!
  • No Way!
  • I have no idea

AP Video