United States Democratic presidential candidates, 2008
| This article or section contains information about an upcoming or ongoing election in the United States. Content may change as the election approaches. |
Candidates with national campaigns
These have filed (or announced plans to file) with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC).
| These have filed with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC), and are conducting multi-state campaigns. | |
|---|---|
Senator Joe Biden |
Joe Biden, born November 16 1942, in Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S. Senator from Delaware and candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988, although he ceased active campaigning in 1987, before the first primaries. Biden first hinted that he might run in 2008 in a December 8, 2004, radio interview with host Don Imus, saying: "I'm going to proceed as if I'm going to run." Biden has repeatedly stated his intention to run, and did so as early as 21 March, 2006. Biden's Federal Leadership PAC is "Unite Our States", which tracks Biden's public appearances and policy positions. On 7 January, 2007, when asked by Tim Russert on Meet the Press "Are you running for President?" he responded, "I am running for President." He also said he plans to create an exploratory committee by the end of the month.[61][62][63] On January 31, 2007, he officially signed the papers with the FEC to run for president.
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Senator Hillary Clinton |
Hillary Rodham Clinton, born October 26, 1947, in Illinois, U.S. Senator from New York and former First Lady of the United States. Clinton announced the formation of her exploratory committee on 20 January, 2007, with a post on her website.[64] She has delivered several speeches which analysts say are intended to reach out to moderates. She has also been holding fundraising meetings, including meeting with women from Massachusetts, a key constituency of potential rival and 2004 nominee John Kerry; however, these activities are consistent with the lead up to a campaign for re-election to her Senate seat in 2006. Many Republicans appear to be hoping that Senator Clinton will run for President, presumably believing her to be a polarizing figure.[65][66] If elected, Clinton would be the first female president. Clinton announced on January 20, 2007, that she will run in 2008 (the same day she announced the formation of an exploratory committee). She has filed the official paperwork for an exploratory committee.[67] |
Senator Christopher Dodd |
Christopher Dodd, was born May 27, 1944, in
|
Former Senator John Edwards |
John Edwards, born June 10, 1953, in South Carolina, former U.S. Senator from North Carolina, candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2000 and 2004 Democratic vice-presidential nominee. As a presidential candidate, Edwards was famed for his populist message in his "Two Americas" speech and also for his optimistic, positive attitude. This was evidenced by his refusal to attack his opponents. In the primaries, Sen. Edwards had strong come-from-behind showings in the crucial states of Iowa, Oklahoma, Virginia, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Georgia. He also won the North Carolina caucus and the South Carolina primary. Edwards has kept his Federal Leadership PAC, the One America Committee, active to help Democrats across the nation win elections in the future. On February 5, 2005, Edwards spoke at the New Hampshire Democratic Party's fundraising dinner. On August 18, 2005, Edwards traveled to Waterloo, Iowa, to deliver an address to the Iowa AFL-CIO, a potential key supporter in the Iowa caucus. On December 26, 2006, Edwards formally announced his candidacy.[70]
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Former Senator Mike Gravel |
Mike Gravel, born May 13, 1930, in Springfield, Massachusetts. U.S. Senator from Alaska from 1969 to 1981 and an active candidate for Vice President in 1972. He is most known for playing a key role in ending the draft during the Vietnam War through the release of the Pentagon Papers and through staging a one-man filibuster for 5 months. He is also notable for advocating a guaranteed annual income, which he termed a "citizen's wage," of $5,000 per person, regardless of whether the person worked. On April 13, 2006, Gravel announced his candidacy for the Democratic nomination. His policy announcements to date include support for direct democracy, FairTax and withdrawal from Iraq. Mike Gravel filed with the FEC in April according to various news sources.[71][72] The FEC's site has listed his reports since July.[73]
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Representative Dennis Kucinich |
Dennis Kucinich, born October 8, 1946, in Cleveland, Ohio. Ohio Congressman, former Mayor of Cleveland, and 2004 Democratic primary candidate. Dennis Kucinich is known by many as "The Peace Candidate", having received the 2003 Gandhi Peace Award. Kucinich opposed the war in Iraq and the Patriot Act. Under Kucinich's plan, United Nations peace-keepers would go to Iraq if the Iraqi citizens desire their presence. The Congressman re-introduced legislation to create a United States Department of Peace via HR 808 on February 5, 2007. He is currently campaigning to end the war in Iraq by cutting off funding, if such measures are necessary. He is the only democratic candidate who voted against authorizing President Bush to invade Iraq. He is in support of peaceful diplomatic relations with Iran, and all nations. Kucinich has received many awards praising his courage and work for peace.[74][75] On December 12, 2006, Kucinich announced his candidacy at an event at Cleveland's City Hall.[76]
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Senator Barack Obama |
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Governor Bill Richardson |
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Other candidates
The following people have filed with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC):
- Dal LaMagna, Founder of Tweezerman, Inc.[1][2]
- Albert B. Howard [3]
- James Prattas [4] [5]
- Danny M. Francis, Retired Marine Corps officer; two tours of Vietnam combat duty; Retired Department of Defense Civilian; Professional Educator[6]
The following people have announced their candidacy, but may not have filed with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC):
- Stephen Colbert, Comedy Central television host of The Colbert Report from South Carolina[7][8], announced October 16, 2007. He plans to run for the nomination from both the Republican and Democratic Parties, but only in the state of South Carolina.
Unannounced potential candidates
| Potential Notable Candidates Without Exploratory Committees | |
|---|---|
Al Gore, former Vice President of the United States |
Al Gore, born March 31, 1948, in Washington, D. C., is the former U.S. Vice President, and was the 2000 Democratic nominee, winning the popular
vote. Gore and his family have commented upon whether or not Gore would participate as a candidate in the 2008 presidential election. Gore was quoted in December 2006 as stating on
NBC's "Today,": "I am not planning to run for president again [...] I haven't
completely ruled it out."[9] His son, Albert Gore III,
followed with a comment in the 14 December 2006 article
"Albert Gore: Dad's Doing Well, Not Running in 2008":"I know that [my father] has no plans to run in 2008[...] Well, I guess I
have to add his addendum. I think the way he always says it is, 'I don't see any circumstances under which I would run for
president."[10]
Despite stating that he is not planning to run, Donna Brazile, Gore's campaign
chairwoman in the 2000 campaign, made a series of cryptic comments
during a speech on January 31, 2007, at Moravian College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania which
referred to the Academy Award nomination for An Inconvenient Truth. She said
"Wait till Oscar night, I tell people: 'I'm dating. I haven't fallen in love yet. On Oscar night, if Al Gore has slimmed down
25 or 30 pounds, Lord knows." An Inconvenient Truth, won the
2007 Academy Award for Documentary
Feature and Gore joined director Davis Guggenheim and other members of the cast
on stage during the Academy Awards and gave a brief speech.[11] The Agence France-Presse, noted the day after the
Academy Awards, on 26 February 2007, that: "Many analysts
believe he could yet enter the 2008 race for the White House although Gore has repeatedly said he is unlikely to run for
office."[12] In addition, in the 26 February 2007 edition of
The question of whether or not Gore will run is the cover story of the 28 May 2007 issue of TIME magazine, The Last Temptation of Al Gore. [14] As of 2007, Gore's popularity has increased among progressives and supporters of the Democratic
Party since his loss to George W. Bush following the close 2000 election.[15][16] Gore received 68% of
support among potential 2008 Democratic presidential candidates on a May 2006 Daily Kos
poll[17] of those who voted, and 35% on July 13, 2006, AlterNet poll.[18] When compared to other candidates, Gore is usually third on
most polls. A Gallup poll of August 2006 showed that nearly half of Americans currently view
Gore favorably (48 percent to 45 percent).[19][20] A CNN telephone poll conducted by the Opinion Research Corporation of registered or independent leaning Democrats in November
2006 has Gore with 14% support in a theoretical multi-candidate Democratic primary.[21] A poll of
Democratic Iowa voters in light of the 2008 Iowa Caucus put Gore at 7%.[22] In a recent California Field poll, Gore is second at 25%, behind Hillary Clinton by 6 percentage
points; however, in the California Bay Area, Gore is the leading candidate.[23] Gore also has the highest approval rating when compared to other Democratic nominees. On August 8,
2007, Gore said that he may re-enter politics in the future, but still has no plans to run for president in 2008. However, he
hopes to make the climate crisis a focus of the election during the campaign. A Draft Gore movement is active.[24] As of October 14, 2007, the
movement's petition has over 200,000 signatures.[25] A
live vote on MSNBC after the announcement of the Nobel Peace Prize showed 59% of respondents favoring a Gore run in 2008. When
asked who they would vote for among all democratic candidates should Gore run, Gore was favored at 54%, while Clinton recieved 9.3%, 02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Laxwarrior12 02:42, 21 October 2007 (UTC)
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Withdrawn from race
| Candidates who have withdrawn their candidacy | |
|---|---|
Former Governor Tom Vilsack |
Tom Vilsack, born December 13, 1950, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, former Governor of Iowa, Chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council. Many suspected Vilsack was high on the list of potential
running mates for John Kerry in the 2004 Presidential Election. In 2005, Vilsack established Heartland PAC,[27] a political action
committee aimed at electing Democratic Governors and other statewide candidates. Unlike the PACs of potential candidates,
Heartland PAC is not a federal PAC and can not contribute to federal
candidates. He filed papers with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) to
run for President on November 9, 2006.[28] However, he dropped out of the race on 23
February 2007 citing fundraising woes-he has since given his support to Hillary Rodham
Clinton.[29][30]
|
Declined to seek nomination
| Potential candidates who decided against running | |
|---|---|
Senator Evan Bayh |
Evan Bayh (born December 26, 1955), Indiana, former two-term Governor and currently a second-term U.S. Senator
from that state. In February 2005, Bayh renamed his Federal Leadership PAC
the All America PAC and hired a new veteran staff with experience on the 2004 campaigns of John Kerry and Wesley Clark for President and Tom Daschle for senate. Although Bayh filed papers with the FEC to form a presidential exploratory committee
on December 5, 2006, he announced on December 16, 2006 that he would not seek the Democratic nomination for
President, and since then has endorsed Senator Hillary Clinton.[31]
|
General Wesley Clark (Ret.) |
Wesley Clark born December 23, 1944, in Illinois, from Arkansas, a Vietnam war veteran, a retired United States Army four-star general and former Supreme Allied Commander of NATO. He graduated first in his class from West Point. Clark is traveling widely through his Federal Leadership PAC WesPAC,[32] and is a commentator on MSNBC, while grassroots campaigns for Clark have become active on the internet.[33] Clark was a 2004 Presidential candidate as well, narrowly winning the Oklahoma primary. During a January 17, 2007, speech given to a local UAW group in Alabama and posted on YouTube, Clark stated "when I run, I'll be the national security candidate." [34] He endorsed Senator Hillary Clinton on September 15, 2007, seemingly ruling out a future run, though making him a frontrunner to be Senator Clinton's running-mate, should she win the Democratic nomination. |
Tom Daschle, former Senate Majority Leader |
Tom Daschle, born December 9, 1947, in South Dakota, former U.S.
Senator from that state. He set up a new political action committee and planned a Jefferson-Jackson Day speech in the politically pivotal state of Iowa. Daschle has transferred $500,000 into the new Federal Leadership PAC, New Leadership for
America.[35] In July 2005, Daschle said he was not
planning a rematch against his successor John Thune in 2010, and he told the Sioux Falls Argus Leader newspaper that he was
seriously considering a run and would not "rule out the possibility of an official announcement in the near future." However, on
December 2, 2006, Daschle announced he would not run for
President in 2008, and has since thrown his support behind Barack Obama's campaign.[36]
|
Howard Dean, former Governor of Vermont |
Howard Dean, born November 17, 1947, in New York, former Governor of Vermont.
Howard Dean is the current DNC Chairman, and was a candidate for the
nomination in 2004. Dean said if he won the DNC Chairmanship
he would not run for president and, since he won, has often repeated this.[37]
|
Senator Russ Feingold |
Russ Feingold, born March 2, 1953, in Wisconsin, U.S. Senator from that state. Announced to a meeting of the
Tiger Bay Club of Volusia County,
Florida, in January 2005 that he was considering a run for the nomination, and would decide
after "going around the country" to campaign for fellow Democrats running for other offices.[38] His Federal Leadership PAC is the Progressive Patriots Fund,[39] which financed his travels around the country.[40] In early March 2005, his Senate campaign registered the
domain name for the website www.russfeingold08.com as well as the .org and .net versions.[41][42][43] Later that month, he
took a listening trip to Alabama.[44] In early April
2005, Feingold announced that he would be divorcing his second wife, a move which some analysts believe could diminish his
chances of winning the presidential nomination. On August 17, 2005, Feingold became the first U.S. Senator to publicly support a firm date for withdrawal from the
Iraq War,[45] suggesting December 31, 2006, as
a reasonable date. Although Feingold's stance was generally criticized by other Democratic senators, including Biden and Clinton,
his support in nonscientific internet polls of party activists jumped. In December 2005, when he led the Senate campaign against
the renewal of the Patriot Act his support among party activists further intensified. Following the overwhelming resonance for
his anti-war and bi-partisan rule of law positions in the 2006
Congressional elections, Feingold commented that the legislative victory "pushes me in both directions," and "he could
make a decision on a presidential run before the end of the year".[46] However, on November 12, 2006, Feingold ruled out a 2008 presidential candidacy,[40] but has stated he is willing to consider an offer from the
eventual nominee for the vice presidency.[47] Feingold
has stated that his first choice for president in 2008 would be someone who voted against the war in Iraq, and failing that, his
second choice would be someone who wasn't in Congress but spoke out against the war at the time. He also said he would "be happy"
if
|
Senator John Kerry |
John Kerry, born December 11, 1943, in Denver, Colorado, is the U.S.
Senator from Massachusetts, and the 2004 Democratic presidential nominee. On March
1, 2005, Kerry created a new Federal Leadership PAC named Keeping America's
Promise.[49] Dan Payne, a Democratic strategist, told
the Washington Post that "This is the kind of thing he has to do" in order to
run for president again in 2008.[50] Through Keeping
America's Promise, Kerry boasts to have raised or given away over $14 million to nearly 300 progressive candidates, committees or
causes.[51] Kerry told CNN,
with respect to a run in 2008, "it's crazy to be thinking about it now" but went on to say that "I'll make my judgment when the
time comes and I don't care what history says."[52]
However, there was a controversy on October 30, 2006, over a
speech made by Kerry at Pasadena City College. Future implications of his comments are still
unclear, however Kerry himself claimed the incident will have little bearing on 2008 and that he will make a decision in early
2007.[53] On January 24, 2007, Kerry announced that he
would not seek the Democratic nomination for the presidency in 2008.[54] Kerry and his JohnKerry.com e-mail list was also a supporter of Al
Gore's recent house parties across the United States to spread information about
global warming. In a letter e-mailed from JohnKerry.com, Kerry stated: "When strong
leaders like Al Gore step forward to educate and organize people around vitally important issues, they deserve our full
support."[55]
|
Al Sharpton |
Al Sharpton of New York, Pentecostal minister, "civil rights activist", former candidate for
mayor of New York and for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator from
New York, and candidate for the 2004 nomination. When asked about 2008, he replied, "Don't
get Hillary mad at me."[56] He was one of the first
candidates to enter the 2004 race, but thus far he has said nothing more about 2008. His 2004 campaign was not a great success.
He never got more than 10% of the vote in any state, although he did get 20% in the District
of Columbia.[57] There are still unresolved
campaign-finance issues left over from that campaign. In January 2007, when asked if he was considering running in 2008, Sharpton
said "I don't hear any reason not to," adding, "we'll see over the next couple of months." [58]
On April 2, 2007, Sharpton announced that he won't get into the 2008 presidential race this time. "I am not going to run." [1] |
Mark Warner, former Governor of Virginia |
Mark Warner (born December 15, 1954), former Governor of Virginia. As a successful Governor from a "red state" (barred from serving consecutive terms by state law) and popular within the party,
it was highly anticipated that Warner would mount a Presidential bid. While it was ruled out by Warner himself in
October[59], news that
he was considering a bid was confirmed by colleague Dan Conley in December[60]. With Governor Warner's fund-raising capabilities and his potential as a
vice presidential candidate, it was possible that Warner will still play a significant role in the campaign, until he became a
candidate for a U.S. Senate.
|
See also
- Opinion polling for the United States presidential election, 2008
- United States presidential election, 2008
- United States Republican presidential candidates, 2008
- United States third party presidential candidates, 2008
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