2012 United States presidential election in Kentucky Turnout 59.70%[ 1]
County Results
Congressional District Results
Romney
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
80–90%
Obama
40–50%
50–60%
The 2012 United States presidential election in Kentucky took place on November 6, 2012, as part of the 2012 General Election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Kentucky voters chose eight electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama and his running mate, Vice President Joe Biden , against Republican challenger and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney and his running mate, Congressman Paul Ryan .
Romney carried Kentucky by a landslide margin, winning 60.47% of the vote to Obama's 37.78%. This represented a margin of 22.69%, a great improvement for the Republican Party from 2008 , when they won with a 16.22% margin. Although Kentucky had been won by Southern Democrat Bill Clinton twice in the 1990s, Obama was seen as a poor cultural fit for the state, and he did not compete here either time he ran. The Romney campaign also attacked Obama's administration as being hostile to the coal industry , historically an important part of the state's economy. Consequently, Obama suffered a historically poor showing in the traditionally staunchly Democratic coalfields of Eastern Kentucky , where many counties that had even voted by wide margins for landslide Democratic losers like George McGovern and Walter Mondale defected to the Republicans in 2012.
Knott County , which had given Clinton 73% of the vote in 1996 and nearly 72% to Mondale in 1984 (despite the latter losing nationally by more than 18 percentage points and only carrying one state), gave Romney 73% of the vote in 2012. Even Elliott County , the only county in the state in which Obama had broken 60% in 2008, barely held on in 2012, giving Obama a narrow plurality win, his only victory in the region, and one of just four county wins in the entire state. This marked the first time since the county's founding that the Democratic nominee won less than 60% of the vote in Elliott County, and would prove to be the conclusion of Elliott's longest-in-the-nation, 140-year Democratic voting streak. The county would flip to the GOP by a landslide margin four years later . Wolfe County , which had returned to the Democratic Party in 2004 and 2008 after casting its first-ever Republican vote for George W. Bush in 2000 , went for Romney by over twenty points. As such, Obama became the first Democrat to ever win the White House without carrying Wolfe County since its founding in 1860, Menifee County since its founding in 1869, or Henderson County since the founding of the Republican Party.
The only part of the state where Obama won convincingly was Jefferson County , the most urban and populous county in the state, and home to Louisville . He also eked out a close win in Fayette County , the second-most populous county, home to Lexington . Despite losing five counties he won in 2008, he managed to flip Franklin County , home to the state capital of Frankfort , which he had narrowly lost in 2008. As of the 2020 presidential election , this is the last time that Elliott and Franklin Counties voted for a Democrat in a presidential election. Obama is the only Democrat to ever win two terms without carrying the state at least once.
Kentucky Democratic primary, 2012
Candidate
Barack Obama
Uncommitted
Home state
Illinois
n/a
Delegate count
39
34
Popular vote
119,293
86,925
Percentage
57.85%
42.15%
County Winner Vote share Kentucky results by county
Obama: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% 80–90% Uncommitted: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80%
Barack Obama
Uncommitted
Tie
Barack Obama's only "opponent" in the primary was the "Uncommitted" ballot option, which garnered more than 42% of the primary vote, making Kentucky one of Obama's worst contested primary results.[ 2]
Kentucky Democratic primary, 2012[ 3]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
Delegates
Barack Obama (incumbent)
119,293
57.85%
39
Uncommitted
86,925
42.15%
34
Kentucky Republican primary, 2012
Kentucky results by county
Mitt Romney
(Note:
Italicization indicates a withdrawn candidacy)
The Republican primary occurred on May 22, 2012.[ 4] [ 5] 42 delegates were chosen, all of which were allocated to and pledged to vote for Mitt Romney at the 2012 Republican National Convention . Three delegates remain unpledged to any candidate. All Republicans in Kentucky were allowed to participate in the primary. A Republican primary was also held in Arkansas on this day.
Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich withdrew from the presidential race on April 10 and May 2, 2012, respectively. Both endorsed Mitt Romney as the Republican nominee.
Kentucky Republican primary, 2012[ 6]
Candidate
Votes
Percentage
Delegates
Mitt Romney
117,621
66.8%
42
Ron Paul
22,074
12.53%
0
Rick Santorum
15,629
8.87%
0
Newt Gingrich
10,479
5.95%
0
Uncommitted
10,357
5.88%
0
Unpledged delegates:
3
Total:
176,160
100.00%
45
Key:
Withdrew prior to contest
County
Mitt Romney Republican
Barack Obama Democratic
Various candidates Other parties
Margin
Total
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
Adair
5,841
76.86%
1,660
21.84%
99
1.30%
4,181
55.02%
7,600
Allen
5,184
73.01%
1,808
25.46%
108
1.53%
3,376
47.55%
7,100
Anderson
6,822
66.10%
3,315
32.12%
183
1.78%
3,507
33.98%
10,320
Ballard
2,647
67.96%
1,189
30.53%
59
1.51%
1,458
37.43%
3,895
Barren
10,922
65.92%
5,400
32.59%
246
1.49%
5,522
33.33%
16,568
Bath
2,275
55.19%
1,770
42.94%
77
1.87%
505
12.25%
4,122
Bell
7,127
75.16%
2,224
23.45%
131
1.39%
4,903
51.71%
9,482
Boone
35,922
68.41%
15,629
29.76%
960
1.83%
20,293
38.65%
52,511
Bourbon
4,692
59.22%
3,075
38.81%
156
1.97%
1,617
20.41%
7,923
Boyd
10,884
57.14%
7,776
40.82%
389
2.04%
3,108
16.32%
19,049
Boyle
7,703
62.26%
4,471
36.14%
199
1.60%
3,232
26.12%
12,373
Bracken
2,029
62.78%
1,147
35.49%
56
1.73%
882
27.29%
3,232
Breathitt
3,318
66.25%
1,562
31.19%
128
2.56%
1,756
35.06%
5,008
Breckinridge
5,025
63.06%
2,825
35.45%
119
1.49%
2,200
27.61%
7,969
Bullitt
21,306
67.04%
9,971
31.38%
502
1.58%
11,335
35.66%
31,779
Butler
3,716
73.44%
1,293
25.55%
51
1.01%
2,423
47.89%
5,060
Caldwell
3,904
66.62%
1,852
31.60%
104
1.78%
2,052
35.02%
5,860
Calloway
9,440
62.63%
5,317
35.28%
315
2.09%
4,123
27.35%
15,072
Campbell
24,240
60.33%
15,080
37.53%
857
2.14%
9,160
22.80%
40,177
Carlisle
1,835
70.06%
750
28.64%
34
1.30%
1,085
41.42%
2,619
Carroll
1,999
54.32%
1,629
44.27%
52
1.41%
370
10.05%
3,680
Carter
5,279
59.26%
3,383
37.98%
246
2.76%
1,896
21.28%
8,908
Casey
4,904
80.51%
1,086
17.83%
101
1.66%
3,818
62.68%
6,091
Christian
13,475
61.38%
8,252
37.59%
228
1.03%
5,223
23.79%
21,955
Clark
9,931
64.42%
5,228
33.91%
257
1.67%
4,703
30.51%
15,416
Clay
6,176
83.65%
1,111
15.05%
96
1.30%
5,065
68.60%
7,383
Clinton
3,569
81.24%
752
17.12%
72
1.64%
2,817
64.12%
4,393
Crittenden
2,839
73.66%
960
24.91%
55
1.43%
1,879
48.75%
3,854
Cumberland
2,216
77.65%
599
20.99%
39
1.36%
1,617
56.66%
2,854
Daviess
25,092
59.62%
16,208
38.51%
787
1.87%
8,884
21.11%
42,087
Edmonson
3,232
69.24%
1,374
29.43%
62
1.33%
1,858
39.81%
4,668
Elliott
1,126
46.94%
1,186
49.44%
87
3.62%
-60
-2.50%
2,399
Estill
3,749
72.32%
1,356
26.16%
79
1.52%
2,393
46.16%
5,184
Fayette
60,795
48.30%
62,080
49.32%
2,991
2.38%
-1,285
-1.02%
125,866
Fleming
3,780
65.38%
1,911
33.05%
91
1.57%
1,869
32.33%
5,782
Floyd
9,784
65.71%
4,733
31.79%
373
2.50%
5,051
33.92%
14,890
Franklin
11,345
48.61%
11,535
49.43%
457
1.96%
-190
-0.82%
23,337
Fulton
1,425
57.44%
1,022
41.19%
34
1.37%
403
16.25%
2,481
Gallatin
1,758
57.43%
1,238
40.44%
65
2.13%
520
16.99%
3,061
Garrard
5,310
75.03%
1,661
23.47%
106
1.50%
3,649
51.56%
7,077
Grant
5,664
65.80%
2,810
32.64%
134
1.56%
2,854
33.16%
8,608
Graves
10,699
69.01%
4,547
29.33%
257
1.66%
6,152
39.68%
15,503
Grayson
6,404
69.08%
2,744
29.60%
123
1.32%
3,660
39.48%
9,271
Green
3,634
74.84%
1,165
23.99%
57
1.17%
2,469
50.85%
4,856
Greenup
8,855
58.38%
6,027
39.73%
286
1.89%
2,828
18.65%
15,168
Hancock
2,212
53.51%
1,833
44.34%
89
2.15%
379
9.17%
4,134
Hardin
23,357
59.56%
15,214
38.79%
647
1.65%
8,143
20.77%
39,218
Harlan
8,652
81.19%
1,830
17.17%
175
1.64%
6,822
64.02%
10,657
Harrison
4,556
63.60%
2,471
34.50%
136
1.90%
2,085
29.10%
7,163
Hart
4,257
64.29%
2,283
34.48%
82
1.23%
1,974
29.81%
6,622
Henderson
10,296
55.29%
8,091
43.45%
235
1.26%
2,205
11.84%
18,622
Henry
3,940
59.79%
2,530
38.39%
120
1.82%
1,410
21.40%
6,590
Hickman
1,431
66.90%
686
32.07%
22
1.03%
745
34.83%
2,139
Hopkins
13,681
69.21%
5,789
29.29%
297
1.50%
7,892
39.92%
19,767
Jackson
4,365
86.25%
612
12.09%
84
1.66%
3,753
74.16%
5,061
Jefferson
148,423
43.60%
186,181
54.69%
5,808
1.71%
-37,758
-11.09%
340,412
Jessamine
14,233
68.98%
6,001
29.08%
399
1.94%
8,232
39.90%
20,633
Johnson
7,095
78.53%
1,723
19.07%
217
2.40%
5,372
59.46%
9,035
Kenton
41,389
61.13%
24,920
36.81%
1,395
2.06%
16,469
24.32%
67,704
Knott
4,130
72.55%
1,420
24.94%
143
2.51%
2,710
47.61%
5,693
Knox
8,467
76.28%
2,484
22.38%
149
1.34%
5,983
53.90%
11,100
LaRue
3,911
67.85%
1,733
30.07%
120
2.08%
2,178
37.78%
5,764
Laurel
18,151
81.00%
3,905
17.43%
352
1.57%
14,246
63.57%
22,408
Lawrence
3,995
71.44%
1,520
27.18%
77
1.38%
2,475
44.26%
5,592
Lee
1,977
75.37%
595
22.68%
51
1.95%
1,382
52.69%
2,623
Leslie
4,439
89.62%
433
8.74%
81
1.64%
4,006
80.88%
4,953
Letcher
6,811
77.77%
1,702
19.43%
245
2.80%
5,109
58.34%
8,758
Lewis
3,326
69.74%
1,342
28.14%
101
2.12%
1,984
41.60%
4,769
Lincoln
6,416
70.10%
2,582
28.21%
154
1.69%
3,834
41.89%
9,152
Livingston
3,089
68.48%
1,346
29.84%
76
1.68%
1,743
38.64%
4,511
Logan
6,899
65.64%
3,469
33.01%
142
1.35%
3,430
32.63%
10,510
Lyon
2,412
62.83%
1,373
35.76%
54
1.41%
1,039
27.07%
3,839
Madison
21,128
63.41%
11,512
34.55%
682
2.04%
9,616
28.86%
33,322
Magoffin
3,391
69.12%
1,433
29.21%
82
1.67%
1,958
39.91%
4,906
Marion
3,800
51.93%
3,418
46.71%
100
1.36%
382
5.22%
7,318
Marshall
10,402
66.17%
5,022
31.95%
295
1.88%
5,380
34.22%
15,719
Martin
3,180
83.16%
574
15.01%
70
1.83%
2,606
68.15%
3,824
Mason
4,197
60.99%
2,592
37.67%
92
1.34%
1,605
23.32%
6,881
McCracken
19,979
65.40%
10,062
32.94%
510
1.66%
9,917
32.46%
30,551
McCreary
4,564
79.97%
1,069
18.73%
74
1.30%
3,495
61.24%
5,707
McLean
2,705
64.40%
1,432
34.10%
63
1.50%
1,273
30.30%
4,200
Meade
6,606
60.52%
4,122
37.76%
188
1.72%
2,484
22.76%
10,916
Menifee
1,484
57.12%
1,048
40.34%
66
2.54%
436
16.78%
2,598
Mercer
6,820
68.62%
2,966
29.84%
153
1.54%
3,854
38.78%
9,939
Metcalfe
2,676
63.96%
1,425
34.06%
83
1.98%
1,251
29.90%
4,184
Monroe
3,762
79.27%
936
19.72%
48
1.01%
2,826
59.55%
4,746
Montgomery
6,398
62.43%
3,701
36.11%
149
1.46%
2,697
26.32%
10,248
Morgan
3,021
67.55%
1,369
30.61%
82
1.84%
1,652
36.94%
4,472
Muhlenberg
7,762
60.93%
4,771
37.45%
206
1.62%
2,991
23.48%
12,739
Nelson
10,673
57.59%
7,611
41.07%
249
1.34%
3,062
16.52%
18,533
Nicholas
1,583
61.33%
948
36.73%
50
1.94%
635
24.60%
2,581
Ohio
6,470
67.07%
2,987
30.97%
189
1.96%
3,483
36.10%
9,646
Oldham
20,179
67.52%
9,240
30.92%
465
1.56%
10,939
36.60%
29,884
Owen
2,971
65.20%
1,501
32.94%
85
1.86%
1,470
32.26%
4,557
Owsley
1,279
80.95%
283
17.91%
18
1.14%
996
63.04%
1,580
Pendleton
3,556
64.26%
1,859
33.59%
119
2.15%
1,697
30.67%
5,534
Perry
8,040
78.51%
2,047
19.99%
154
1.50%
5,993
58.52%
10,241
Pike
17,590
74.42%
5,646
23.89%
400
1.69%
11,944
50.53%
23,636
Powell
2,766
61.73%
1,620
36.15%
95
2.12%
1,146
25.58%
4,481
Pulaski
20,714
79.66%
4,976
19.14%
313
1.20%
15,738
60.52%
26,003
Robertson
579
61.93%
340
36.36%
16
1.71%
239
25.57%
935
Rockcastle
5,028
80.89%
1,097
17.65%
91
1.46%
3,931
63.24%
6,216
Rowan
4,035
52.64%
3,438
44.85%
192
2.51%
597
7.79%
7,665
Russell
6,346
80.24%
1,445
18.27%
118
1.49%
4,901
61.97%
7,909
Scott
12,679
61.63%
7,532
36.61%
362
1.76%
5,147
25.02%
20,573
Shelby
11,790
63.17%
6,634
35.55%
239
1.28%
5,156
27.62%
18,663
Simpson
4,355
61.40%
2,650
37.36%
88
1.24%
1,705
24.04%
7,093
Spencer
5,726
67.92%
2,549
30.23%
156
1.85%
3,177
37.69%
8,431
Taylor
7,551
68.96%
3,285
30.00%
114
1.04%
4,266
38.96%
10,950
Todd
3,247
68.82%
1,403
29.74%
68
1.44%
1,844
39.08%
4,718
Trigg
4,520
67.04%
2,115
31.37%
107
1.59%
2,405
35.67%
6,742
Trimble
2,133
60.20%
1,355
38.24%
55
1.56%
778
21.96%
3,543
Union
3,955
66.15%
1,942
32.48%
82
1.37%
2,013
33.67%
5,979
Warren
26,384
60.10%
16,805
38.28%
714
1.62%
9,579
21.82%
43,903
Washington
3,495
66.97%
1,669
31.98%
55
1.05%
1,826
34.99%
5,219
Wayne
5,289
73.36%
1,855
25.73%
66
0.91%
3,434
47.63%
7,210
Webster
3,607
65.94%
1,765
32.27%
98
1.79%
1,842
33.67%
5,470
Whitley
10,232
78.27%
2,683
20.52%
157
1.21%
7,549
57.75%
13,072
Wolfe
1,542
60.26%
976
38.14%
41
1.60%
566
22.12%
2,559
Woodford
7,219
58.54%
4,883
39.60%
230
1.86%
2,336
18.94%
12,332
Totals
1,087,190
60.47%
679,370
37.78%
31,488
1.75%
407,820
22.69%
1,798,048
County Flips: Democratic Hold
Gain from Republican
Republican Hold
Gain from Democratic
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
By congressional district [ edit ]
Romney won 5 of 6 congressional districts.[ 15]
On election night, Kentucky went as expected to the Republican candidate Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney over Incumbent Democratic President Barack Obama of bordering Illinois . Obama was reelected but nonetheless, lost Kentucky . In most recent years Democrats have maintained their lead in registered voters compared to Republicans.[ 16] However, Kentucky is known as a highly conservative state with a populist streak. In most recent presidential elections in Kentucky, Democrats usually achieve lower 40 or upper 30% margins. Obama performed significantly worse in 2012 than he did in 2008. Appalachian Kentucky used to be a place were Democrats thrived because of working-class people, particularly unionized coal miners.[ 17] However this region has become more and more Republican in recent years. Romney performed, for the most part, very well statewide. Obama won four counties. Obama was however able to maintain a solid performance in perhaps the most Democratic place in the state, Jefferson County (Louisville Metro ). The other counties Obama won were Franklin , Elliott and Fayette .
^ "Summary TXT file" .
^ Dougherty, Michael Brendan (May 22, 2012). "Obama Is Getting Humiliated In The Kentucky Primary, 40 Percent Of Democrats Voted For 'Uncommitted' " . Business Insider . Retrieved July 9, 2019 .
^ "Kentucky Secretary of State" (PDF) . elect.ky.gov . May 22, 2012. Retrieved June 19, 2016 .
^ "Primary and Caucus Printable Calendar" . CNN. Retrieved January 11, 2012 .
^ "Presidential Primary Dates" (PDF) . Federal Election Commission . Retrieved January 23, 2012 .
^ "Kentucky State Board of Elections" .
^ "Huffington Post Election Dashboard" . HuffPost . Archived from the original on August 13, 2013.
^ "America's Choice 2012 Election Center: CNN Electoral Map" . CNN . Archived from the original on January 19, 2013.
^ "Election 2012 - The Electoral Map: Building a Path to Victory" . The New York Times . Archived from the original on July 8, 2012.
^ "2012 Presidential Election Results" . The Washington Post . Archived from the original on July 26, 2012.
^ "RealClearPolitics - 2012 Election Maps - Battle for White House" . Archived from the original on June 8, 2011.
^ "PROJECTION: OBAMA WILL LIKELY WIN SECOND TERM" .
^ "Nate Silver's political calculations predict 2012 election outcome" .
^ "Kentucky State Board of Elections" . Kentucky State Board of Elections.
^ "Daily Kos Elections' statewide election results by congressional and legislative districts" . Daily Kos . Retrieved August 11, 2020 .
^ "Registration Statistics – State Board of Elections" . elect.ky.gov . Archived from the original on January 1, 2018. Retrieved December 2, 2017 .
^ "Appalachia Used To Be A Democratic Stronghold. Here's How To Make It One Again" . Retrieved December 2, 2017 .
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