| Share
 

Electoral College Votes by State, 2004 Presidential Elections

(total electoral votes: 538; majority needed to elect: 270)

Alabama 9
Alaska 3
Arizona 10
Arkansas 6
California 55
Colorado 9
Connecticut 7
Delaware 3
District of Columbia 3
Florida 27
Georgia 15
Hawaii 4
Idaho 4
Illinois 21
Indiana 11
Iowa 7
Kansas 6
Kentucky 8
Louisiana 9
Maine 4
Maryland 10
Massachusetts 12
Michigan 17
Minnesota 10
Mississippi 6
Missouri 11
Montana 3
Nebraska 5
Nevada 5
New Hampshire 4
New Jersey 15
New Mexico 5
New York 31
North Carolina 15
North Dakota 3
Ohio 20
Oklahoma 7
Oregon 7
Pennsylvania 21
Rhode Island 4
South Carolina 8
South Dakota 3
Tennessee 11
Texas 34
Utah 5
Vermont 3
Virginia 13
Washington 11
West Virginia 5
Wisconsin 10
Wyoming 3

Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.

Presidential Election of 2004, Electoral and Popular Vote SummaryU.S. Elections Apportionment of U.S. House of Representatives, 1950–2000

More on Electoral College Votes by State 2004 Presidential Elections from Infoplease:


Premium Partner Content
HighBeam Research

Related content from HighBeam Research on: Electoral College Votes by State, 2004 Presidential Elections

More Than One Million African-American College Graduates Did Not Vote in the 2004 Presidential Election (The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education)

Elections: The Politics of the Permanent Campaign: Presidential Travel and the Electoral College, 1977-2004 (Presidential Studies Quarterly)

The Electoral College System, Political Party Dominance, and Voter Turnout, with Evidence from the 2004 Presidential Election (Atlantic Economic Journal)

On the Web.(electoral college, presidential elections )(Brief Article) (Cobblestone)

News and Views; How the Black Vote Can Influence -- and Could Possibly Control -- the Outcome of the 2004 Presidential Election (The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education)

Electoral College Reform: By Awarding the Electoral Votes of Each State in Proportion to Its Popular Vote, Citizens Will Not Be Overlooked, and Viable Independent Candidates Can Provide Voters More Choices (Policy Studies Journal)

The African-American arts: attempts this year to suppress the black vote would not be the first.(Briefings: at issue in the 2004 Election) (Harper's Magazine)

Vote of No Confidence; A National Effort to Subvert the Electoral College Is Underway (Politics Magazine)

Instant Runoff Voting in the Electoral College: The States Should Choose Their Electors for President by Using Both Plurality and Instant Runoff Voting Systems (IRV). the Plurality Winner Should Receive the Electoral Votes Equal to the State's Number of U.S. Representatives, Using IRV to Award the Two Remaining Votes If Plurality Fails to Produce a Majority Winner (Policy Studies Journal)

The Race to 270: The Electoral College and the Campaign Strategies of 2000 and 2004.(Book review) (Presidential Studies Quarterly)

Additional search results provided by HighBeam Research, LLC. © Copyright 2005. All rights reserved.

A free, reliable Q&A site for homework help. Answerplease.com

24 X 7

Private Tutor

Click Here for Details
24 x 7 Tutor Availability
Unlimited Online Tutoring
1-on-1 Tutoring