The 2012 United States presidential election in Washington took place on November 6, 2012, as part of the 2012 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Washington voters chose 12 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.
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Turnout | 81.25% (of registered voters) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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President Obama easily won the state of Washington, taking 55.80% of the vote to Mitt Romney's 41.03%, a 14.77% margin of victory. In terms of raw vote total, Obama received 1,755,396 votes to Romney's 1,290,670 votes, a 464,726 vote margin. Obama received the largest number of votes of any candidate up to that point, a record which would be broken by his then-running mate Joe Biden in 2020, when Biden broke Obama's record by 614,216 votes. Third parties collectively made up 79,450 votes, or 2.54%. Obama led in every single poll conducted, often by double digits. Washington has not voted for a Republican since Ronald Reagan carried it in his 1984 landslide, and today is considered part of the Blue Wall, a bloc of 242 electoral votes that have safely voted for the Democratic nominee since 1992. Despite being a Republican-leaning swing state in the early- to mid-20th century, the rise of cultural conservatism and resistance to social liberalism in the Republican Party pushed voters in Washington, as well as many other Blue Wall states, away from the Republicans.
Caucuses
Democratic caucuses
As incumbent President Barack Obama ran without opposition nationwide, the non-binding primary was canceled by the Washington State Legislature. Precinct caucuses took place on April 15, legislative district caucuses on April 28, county conventions on April 29, and congressional district caucuses on May 30. The Washington state convection took place from June 1 to 3, and according to The Green Papers, Obama ran unopposed in the caucuses, receiving 114 delegates in the Democratic National Convention floor vote. The other 6 delegates' votes were unannounced.
Republican caucuses

The Republican caucuses were held on March 3, 2012. The additional preferential primary, as held since 1992, was canceled this year for budgetary reasons, as was the one in 2004. Caucus participants, however, did not allocate national delegates to the candidates – they only elected delegates to the county conventions and took part in a nonbinding straw poll. Only the state convention from May 31 to June 2, 2012, legally pledged delegates to the national convention to specific candidates.
Results
With 3,677,919 registered voters as of February 29, the turnout was 1.4%. Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney won the caucuses with a plurality, receiving 19,111 votes or 37.65%. Ron Paul, representative from Texas's 14th district, narrowly won second place with 24.81% of the vote against former Senator from Pennsylvania Rick Santorum's 23.81%. Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich placed fourth, with 5,221 votes, or 10.28%. The other 3.44% of votes were uncommitted or write-ins.
Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Mitt Romney | 19,111 | 37.65% |
Ron Paul | 12,594 | 24.81% |
Rick Santorum | 12,089 | 23.81% |
Newt Gingrich | 5,221 | 10.28% |
Uncommitted | 1,656 | 3.26% |
Total Write-Ins | 93 | 0.18% |
Totals | 50,764 | 100.00% |
Convention
At the Republican National Convention, Romney received all 3 delegates from the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 9th, and 10th districts. Ron Paul received 2 delegates from the 3rd district and all 3 from the 7th. The 3rd district also allocated 1 delegate to Rick Santorum. All 10 state delegates were allocated to Romney, as were the 3 superdelegates.
Convention Results | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | State | Party leaders | Total |
Mitt Romney | 3 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 3 | 10 | 3 | 37 |
Ron Paul | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 |
Rick Santorum | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Total | 30 | 10 | 3 | 43 |
General election
Polling
President Obama consistently led in polling up until election day: at one point, a SurveyUSA poll conducted from September 28 to 30 had him leading by 20 points. In only two polls did Obama lead by single digits: a Public Policy Polling poll conducted October 15 to 16 had him leading by 5 points, and another conducted November 1 to 3 had him up 7. An average of all polls conducted before election day had Obama leading by 13.6 percentage points.
Poll source | Date administered | Democrat | % | Republican | % | Lead margin | Sample Size | Margin of error |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
YouGov | October 31 – November 3, 2012 | Barack Obama | 54% | Mitt Romney | 40% | 14 | 837 LV | ±--% |
Public Policy Polling | November 1–3, 2012 | Barack Obama | 53% | Mitt Romney | 46% | 7 | 932 LV | ±3.2% |
Survey USA | October 28–31, 2012 | Barack Obama | 54% | Mitt Romney | 40% | 14 | 555 LV | ±4.2% |
University of Washington | October 18–31, 2012 | Barack Obama | 57% | Mitt Romney | 36% | 21 | 632 LV | ±3.9% |
October 17–20, 2012 | Barack Obama | 52% | Mitt Romney | 39% | 13 | 500 LV | ±4.4% | |
Public Policy Polling | October 15–16, 2012 | Barack Obama | 50% | Mitt Romney | 45% | 5 | 574 LV | ±--% |
October 1–16, 2012 | Barack Obama | 52% | Mitt Romney | 41% | 11 | 782 LV | ±3.5% | |
Rasmussen Reports | October 14, 2012 | Barack Obama | 55% | Mitt Romney | 42% | 13 | 500 LV | ±4.5% |
SurveyUSA | October 12–14, 2012 | Barack Obama | 54% | Mitt Romney | 40% | 14 | 543 LV | ±4.3% |
SurveyUSA | September 28–30, 2012 | Barack Obama | 56% | Mitt Romney | 36% | 20 | 540 LV | ±4.3% |
Rasmussen Reports | September 26, 2012 | Barack Obama | 52% | Mitt Romney | 41% | 11 | 500 LV | ±4.5% |
September 21–22, 2012 | Barack Obama | 56% | Mitt Romney | 39% | 17 | 625 RV | ±4.6% | |
Elway | September 9–12, 2012 | Barack Obama | 53% | Mitt Romney | 36% | 17 | 405 RV | ±5.0% |
Public Policy Polling | September 7–9, 2012 | Barack Obama | 53% | Mitt Romney | 42% | 11 | 563 | ±n/a% |
/SurveyUSA | September 7–9, 2012 | Barack Obama | 54% | Mitt Romney | 38% | 16 | 700 | ±4.4% |
Predictions
Source | Ranking | As of |
---|---|---|
Huffington Post | Lean D | November 6, 2012 |
CNN | Safe D | November 6, 2012 |
New York Times | Safe D | November 6, 2012 |
Washington Post | Safe D | November 6, 2012 |
RealClearPolitics | Lean D | November 6, 2012 |
Sabato's Crystal Ball | Solid D | November 5, 2012 |
FiveThirtyEight | Solid D | November 6, 2012 |
Candidate ballot access
- Barack Hussein Obama / Joseph Robinette Biden Jr., Democratic
- Willard Mitt Romney / Paul Davis Ryan, Republican
- Gary Earl Johnson / James Polin Gray, Libertarian
- Virgil Hamlin Good Jr. / James N. Clymer, Constitution
- Jill Ellen Stein / Cheri Lynn Honkala, Green
- Peta Lindsay / Yari Osorio, Socialism and Liberation
- James Harris / Alyson Kennedy, Socialist Workers
- Ross Carl "Rocky" Anderson / Luis Javier Rodriguez, Justice
Results
Party | Candidate | Running mate | Votes | Percentage | Electoral votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Barack Obama (incumbent) | Joe Biden (incumbent) | 1,755,396 | 55.80% | 12 | |
Republican | Mitt Romney | Paul Ryan | 1,290,670 | 41.03% | 0 | |
Libertarian | Gary Johnson | Jim Gray | 42,202 | 1.34% | 0 | |
Green | Jill Stein | Cheri Honkala | 20,928 | 0.67% | 0 | |
Write-ins | 20,442 | 0.65% | 0 | |||
Constitution | Virgil Goode | Jim Clymer | 8,851 | 0.28% | 0 | |
Justice | Rocky Anderson | Luis J. Rodriguez | 4,946 | 0.16% | 0 | |
Socialism and Liberation | Peta Lindsay | Yari Osorio | 1,318 | 0.04% | 0 | |
Socialist Workers | James Harris | Alyson Kennedy | 1,205 | 0.04% | 0 | |
Totals | 3,145,958 | 100.00% | 12 |
By county
County | Barack Obama Democratic | Mitt Romney Republican | Various candidates Other parties | Margin | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Adams | 1,540 | 31.94% | 3,171 | 65.76% | 111 | 2.30% | -1,631 | -33.82% | 4,822 |
Asotin | 4,003 | 40.14% | 5,654 | 56.70% | 315 | 3.16% | -1,651 | -16.56% | 9,972 |
Benton | 28,145 | 35.09% | 49,461 | 61.66% | 2,611 | 3.25% | -21,316 | -26.57% | 80,217 |
Chelan | 13,112 | 40.36% | 18,402 | 56.64% | 974 | 3.00% | -5,290 | -16.28% | 32,488 |
Clallam | 18,580 | 48.40% | 18,437 | 48.03% | 1,368 | 3.57% | 143 | 0.37% | 38,385 |
Clark | 93,382 | 48.59% | 92,951 | 48.37% | 5,843 | 3.04% | 431 | 0.22% | 192,176 |
Columbia | 645 | 28.29% | 1,568 | 68.77% | 67 | 2.94% | -923 | -40.48% | 2,280 |
Cowlitz | 22,726 | 50.49% | 20,746 | 46.09% | 1,540 | 3.42% | 1,980 | 4.40% | 45,012 |
Douglas | 5,166 | 34.30% | 9,425 | 62.58% | 469 | 3.12% | -4,259 | -28.28% | 15,060 |
Ferry | 1,294 | 37.10% | 1,995 | 57.20% | 199 | 5.70% | -701 | -20.10% | 3,488 |
Franklin | 8,398 | 36.89% | 13,748 | 60.39% | 618 | 2.72% | -5,350 | -23.50% | 22,764 |
Garfield | 336 | 26.23% | 913 | 71.27% | 32 | 2.50% | -577 | -45.04% | 1,281 |
Grant | 8,950 | 32.16% | 17,852 | 64.15% | 1,027 | 3.69% | -8,902 | -31.99% | 27,829 |
Grays Harbor | 15,960 | 55.14% | 11,914 | 41.16% | 1,073 | 3.70% | 4,046 | 13.98% | 28,947 |
Island | 21,478 | 50.69% | 19,605 | 46.27% | 1,289 | 3.04% | 1,873 | 4.42% | 42,372 |
Jefferson | 12,739 | 63.82% | 6,405 | 32.09% | 817 | 4.09% | 6,334 | 31.73% | 19,961 |
King | 668,004 | 68.72% | 275,700 | 28.36% | 28,317 | 2.92% | 392,304 | 40.36% | 972,021 |
Kitsap | 67,277 | 54.21% | 52,846 | 42.58% | 3,978 | 3.21% | 14,431 | 11.63% | 124,101 |
Kittitas | 7,949 | 43.45% | 9,782 | 53.47% | 562 | 3.08% | -1,833 | -10.02% | 18,293 |
Klickitat | 4,598 | 44.25% | 5,316 | 51.16% | 477 | 4.59% | -718 | -6.91% | 10,391 |
Lewis | 12,664 | 36.90% | 20,452 | 59.59% | 1,204 | 3.51% | -7,788 | -22.69% | 34,320 |
Lincoln | 1,673 | 28.30% | 4,063 | 68.74% | 175 | 2.96% | -2,390 | -40.44% | 5,911 |
Mason | 14,764 | 51.82% | 12,761 | 44.79% | 964 | 3.39% | 2,003 | 7.03% | 28,489 |
Okanogan | 7,108 | 41.80% | 9,221 | 54.23% | 674 | 3.97% | -2,113 | -12.43% | 17,003 |
Pacific | 5,711 | 53.69% | 4,499 | 42.30% | 426 | 4.01% | 1,212 | 11.39% | 10,636 |
Pend Oreille | 2,508 | 37.16% | 3,952 | 58.56% | 289 | 4.28% | -1,444 | -21.40% | 6,749 |
Pierce | 186,430 | 54.05% | 148,467 | 43.04% | 10,035 | 2.91% | 37,963 | 11.01% | 344,932 |
San Juan | 7,125 | 66.64% | 3,111 | 29.10% | 456 | 4.26% | 4,014 | 37.54% | 10,692 |
Skagit | 28,688 | 51.51% | 25,071 | 45.01% | 1,938 | 3.48% | 3,617 | 6.50% | 55,697 |
Skamania | 2,628 | 47.51% | 2,687 | 48.57% | 217 | 3.92% | -59 | -1.06% | 5,532 |
Snohomish | 188,516 | 56.79% | 133,016 | 40.07% | 10,436 | 3.14% | 55,500 | 16.72% | 331,968 |
Spokane | 102,295 | 45.31% | 115,285 | 51.07% | 8,174 | 3.62% | -12,990 | -5.76% | 225,754 |
Stevens | 7,762 | 34.50% | 13,691 | 60.85% | 1,047 | 4.65% | -5,929 | -26.35% | 22,500 |
Thurston | 74,037 | 57.96% | 49,287 | 38.58% | 4,416 | 3.46% | 24,750 | 21.18% | 127,740 |
Wahkiakum | 1,094 | 47.30% | 1,119 | 48.38% | 100 | 4.32% | -25 | -1.08% | 2,313 |
Walla Walla | 9,768 | 38.61% | 14,648 | 57.90% | 882 | 3.49% | -4,880 | -19.29% | 25,298 |
Whatcom | 57,089 | 55.01% | 42,703 | 41.14% | 3,996 | 3.85% | 14,386 | 13.87% | 103,788 |
Whitman | 8,037 | 46.54% | 8,507 | 49.26% | 726 | 4.20% | -470 | -2.72% | 17,270 |
Yakima | 33,217 | 42.86% | 42,239 | 54.50% | 2,050 | 2.64% | -9,022 | -11.64% | 77,506 |
Totals | 1,755,396 | 55.80% | 1,290,670 | 41.03% | 99,892 | 3.18% | 464,726 | 14.77% | 3,145,958 |

Democratic Hold | Republican Hold Gain from Democratic |
- Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
- Klickitat (largest city: Goldendale)
- Skamania (largest community: Carson)
- Wahkhiakum (largest community: Puget Island)
- Whitman (largest city: Pulman)
By congressional district
President Obama won 7 of 10 congressional districts, including one that elected a Republican.
District | Barack Obama Democratic | Mitt Romney Republican | Other | Representative |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 54.1% | 43.3% | 2.6% | Jay Inslee (111th Congress) |
Suzan DelBene (112th Congress) | ||||
2nd | 59.2% | 38.0% | 2.8% | Rick Larsen |
3rd | 47.9% | 49.6% | 2.5% | Jaime Herrera Beutler |
4th | 37.9% | 59.7% | 2.4% | Doc Hastings |
5th | 43.7% | 53.5% | 2.8% | Cathy McMorris Rodgers |
6th | 56.1% | 41.2% | 2.7% | Norm Dicks (111th Congress) |
Derek Kilmer (112th Congress) | ||||
7th | 79.2% | 18.1% | 2.7% | Jim McDermott |
8th | 49.7% | 48.1% | 2.2% | Dave Reichert |
9th | 68.3% | 29.6% | 2.1% | Adam Smith |
10th | 56.3% | 41.1% | 2.6% | Denny Heck |
Analysis
As with all other Pacific states, Washington politics are dominated by its progressive metropolitan areas. Washington itself is one of the most progressive states in the country, most notably on women's issues: it was one of the first states to loosen abortion restrictions and is the United States' 7th most secular state. Economically, while Washington was historically a socially liberal and economically conservative state, it has become more dominated by leftism in the past few years at the presidential, congressional, and local level. Thus, an Obama win was near guaranteed. He dominated the Seattle–Tacoma metropolitan area, winning 69.07% of the vote (a 40.56% margin) in King County, the largest in the state and home to Seattle. King County alone casts 29% of the state's ballots, and the Seattle metropolitan area (as defined by the United States Census Bureau) comprised 69.66% of the state's population in 2012. This area of Washington also has the highest minority composition with a 15% Asian, 9% Hispanic, and 7% African American population, and is dominated by diverse, well-educated voters. The Seattle LGBT community is one of the largest in the country. Thurston County, the 6th largest county in the state and home to the state capital of Olympia, gave Obama 58.27% of the vote, a 19.48% margin. The Democratic ticket also won by great margins in the counties of (in decreasing order of margin) Snohomish (Everett), Whatcom (Bellingham), Kitsap (Bremerton), and Pierce (Tacoma). Clark County, home to Vancouver, in the southwest of the state, was won by the president with a 431-vote margin. Overall, Western Washington voted 7.7% more Democratic than the state overall.
Meanwhile, Romney's best performance was in the east of the state, which is mostly rural and sparse and has an economy dominated by agriculture. Washington's geographic divide resembles that of California and Oregon: voters east of the Cascade Mountains are the most conservative in Washington, and Eastern Washington voted 28.5% more Republican than the state as a whole. While comprising most of the counties in the state, this area casts only one-fifth of the ballots. Though many of these counties the Republicans won with over 60% of the vote, these victories were not able to offset Obama's landslide margins in the Seattle–Tacoma metro. Romney's biggest prize was Spokane County, which gave him over 115,000 votes and a 5.81% margin of victory. He also won Yakima County. However, he was able to flip four counties that Obama won in 2008: Klickitat, Skamania, Wahkhiakum, and Whitman. Obama thus became the first Democrat to win the White House without carrying Skamania or Wahkiakum Counties since Woodrow Wilson in 1916 and the first to do so without carrying Klickitat County since John F. Kennedy in 1960.
This election continued Clallam County's bellwether streak, marking the 9th election since 1980 that it voted for the winner of the nationwide election. Clallam's streak would eventually become the longest of any county in 2020. Washington weighed in as 11.01% more Democratic than the national average in 2012. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last presidential election in which the Republican nominee won Whitman County and the Democratic nominee won Cowlitz, Grays Harbor, Mason, and Pacific Counties. This is also the last time a Republican received more than 40% of the vote in Washington.
See also
- United States presidential elections in Washington (state)
- 2012 Democratic Party presidential primaries
- 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries
- Results of the 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries
- 2012 Republican Party presidential debates and forums
Notes
- Calculated by subtracting Obama and Romney's percentages from 100.
References
- Secretary of State: Kim Wyman. "November 6, 2012 General Election Results". www.sos.wa.gov. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
- "November 06, 2012 General Election Results: President/Vice President". www.wa.gov. Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- "November 3, 2020 General Election Results – President/Vice President". www.wa.gov. Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- Cohen, Micah (September 25, 2012). "Washington State, Women's Rights and Big Cities". FiveThirtyEight. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- "Washington Democratic Delegation 2012". The Green Papers. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- Grygiel, Chris (September 27, 2011). "Washington state GOP to hold presidential caucus March 3". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Hearst Corporation. ISSN 0745-970X. OCLC 3734418. Retrieved January 10, 2011.
- "GOP candidates vie for delegates in Washington, feet planted in Ohio". Fox News. March 3, 2012. Retrieved March 3, 2012.
- "Elections & Voting". Washington Secretary of State – Elections Division. Retrieved March 4, 2012.
- Washington Republican – The Green Papers
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 10, 2012. Retrieved July 19, 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - "Washington Republican Delegation 2012".
- @FHQ (June 2, 2012). "Includes the 3 automatic delegates..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- YouGov
- Public Policy Polling
- Survey USA
- "University of Washington" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 4, 2012. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- Strategies 360
- Public Policy Polling
- The Washington Poll
- Rasmussen Reports
- SurveyUSA
- SurveyUSA
- Gravis Marketing
- Elway
- Public Policy Polling
- KING5NEWS/SurveyUSA
- "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".
- https://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?fips=53&year=2012&f=0&off=0
- "2012 General Data". sos.wa.gov. Archived from the original on September 10, 2024.
- Lipka, Michael; Wormald, Benjamin (February 29, 2016). "Most and least religious U.S. states". Pew Research Center. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- Savicki, Drew (June 1, 2020). "The Road to 270: Washington". 270toWin. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- "State Population Totals: 2010–2019". The United States Census Bureau. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- "County Population Totals: 2010–2019". The United States Census Bureau. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
- Farley, Josh (November 7, 2020). "What does Clallam County know? Voters just chose a winner for the tenth straight election". Kitsap Sun. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
External links
- The Green Papers: for Washington
- The Green Papers: Major state elections in chronological order
Author: www.NiNa.Az
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The 2012 United States presidential election in Washington took place on November 6 2012 as part of the 2012 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated Washington voters chose 12 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 2012 United States presidential election in Washington state 2008 November 6 2012 2016 Turnout81 25 of registered voters 3 36 Nominee Barack Obama Mitt Romney Party Democratic Republican Home state Illinois Massachusetts Running mate Joe Biden Paul Ryan Electoral vote 12 0 Popular vote 1 755 396 1 290 670 Percentage 55 80 41 03 County resultsCongressional district resultsPrecinct resultsObama 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Romney 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Tie No Data President before election Barack Obama Democratic Elected President Barack Obama Democratic President Obama easily won the state of Washington taking 55 80 of the vote to Mitt Romney s 41 03 a 14 77 margin of victory In terms of raw vote total Obama received 1 755 396 votes to Romney s 1 290 670 votes a 464 726 vote margin Obama received the largest number of votes of any candidate up to that point a record which would be broken by his then running mate Joe Biden in 2020 when Biden broke Obama s record by 614 216 votes Third parties collectively made up 79 450 votes or 2 54 Obama led in every single poll conducted often by double digits Washington has not voted for a Republican since Ronald Reagan carried it in his 1984 landslide and today is considered part of the Blue Wall a bloc of 242 electoral votes that have safely voted for the Democratic nominee since 1992 Despite being a Republican leaning swing state in the early to mid 20th century the rise of cultural conservatism and resistance to social liberalism in the Republican Party pushed voters in Washington as well as many other Blue Wall states away from the Republicans CaucusesDemocratic caucuses As incumbent President Barack Obama ran without opposition nationwide the non binding primary was canceled by the Washington State Legislature Precinct caucuses took place on April 15 legislative district caucuses on April 28 county conventions on April 29 and congressional district caucuses on May 30 The Washington state convection took place from June 1 to 3 and according to The Green Papers Obama ran unopposed in the caucuses receiving 114 delegates in the Democratic National Convention floor vote The other 6 delegates votes were unannounced Republican caucuses Results of the non binding strawpoll by county Orange indicates a county won by Romney gold by Paul dark green by Santorum The Republican caucuses were held on March 3 2012 The additional preferential primary as held since 1992 was canceled this year for budgetary reasons as was the one in 2004 Caucus participants however did not allocate national delegates to the candidates they only elected delegates to the county conventions and took part in a nonbinding straw poll Only the state convention from May 31 to June 2 2012 legally pledged delegates to the national convention to specific candidates Results With 3 677 919 registered voters as of February 29 the turnout was 1 4 Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney won the caucuses with a plurality receiving 19 111 votes or 37 65 Ron Paul representative from Texas s 14th district narrowly won second place with 24 81 of the vote against former Senator from Pennsylvania Rick Santorum s 23 81 Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich placed fourth with 5 221 votes or 10 28 The other 3 44 of votes were uncommitted or write ins Washington state Republican caucuses nonbinding strawpoll Candidate Votes Percentage Mitt Romney 19 111 37 65 Ron Paul 12 594 24 81 Rick Santorum 12 089 23 81 Newt Gingrich 5 221 10 28 Uncommitted 1 656 3 26 Total Write Ins 93 0 18 Totals 50 764 100 00 Convention At the Republican National Convention Romney received all 3 delegates from the 1st 2nd 4th 5th 6th 8th 9th and 10th districts Ron Paul received 2 delegates from the 3rd district and all 3 from the 7th The 3rd district also allocated 1 delegate to Rick Santorum All 10 state delegates were allocated to Romney as were the 3 superdelegates Convention Results Candidate 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th State Party leaders Total Mitt Romney 3 3 0 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 10 3 37 Ron Paul 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 5 Rick Santorum 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Total 30 10 3 43General electionPolling President Obama consistently led in polling up until election day at one point a SurveyUSA poll conducted from September 28 to 30 had him leading by 20 points In only two polls did Obama lead by single digits a Public Policy Polling poll conducted October 15 to 16 had him leading by 5 points and another conducted November 1 to 3 had him up 7 An average of all polls conducted before election day had Obama leading by 13 6 percentage points Poll source Date administered Democrat Republican Lead margin Sample Size Margin of error YouGov October 31 November 3 2012 Barack Obama 54 Mitt Romney 40 14 837 LV Public Policy Polling November 1 3 2012 Barack Obama 53 Mitt Romney 46 7 932 LV 3 2 Survey USA October 28 31 2012 Barack Obama 54 Mitt Romney 40 14 555 LV 4 2 University of Washington October 18 31 2012 Barack Obama 57 Mitt Romney 36 21 632 LV 3 9 October 17 20 2012 Barack Obama 52 Mitt Romney 39 13 500 LV 4 4 Public Policy Polling October 15 16 2012 Barack Obama 50 Mitt Romney 45 5 574 LV October 1 16 2012 Barack Obama 52 Mitt Romney 41 11 782 LV 3 5 Rasmussen Reports October 14 2012 Barack Obama 55 Mitt Romney 42 13 500 LV 4 5 SurveyUSA October 12 14 2012 Barack Obama 54 Mitt Romney 40 14 543 LV 4 3 SurveyUSA September 28 30 2012 Barack Obama 56 Mitt Romney 36 20 540 LV 4 3 Rasmussen Reports September 26 2012 Barack Obama 52 Mitt Romney 41 11 500 LV 4 5 September 21 22 2012 Barack Obama 56 Mitt Romney 39 17 625 RV 4 6 Elway September 9 12 2012 Barack Obama 53 Mitt Romney 36 17 405 RV 5 0 Public Policy Polling September 7 9 2012 Barack Obama 53 Mitt Romney 42 11 563 n a SurveyUSA September 7 9 2012 Barack Obama 54 Mitt Romney 38 16 700 4 4 Predictions Source Ranking As of Huffington Post Lean D November 6 2012 CNN Safe D November 6 2012 New York Times Safe D November 6 2012 Washington Post Safe D November 6 2012 RealClearPolitics Lean D November 6 2012 Sabato s Crystal Ball Solid D November 5 2012 FiveThirtyEight Solid D November 6 2012 Candidate ballot access Barack Hussein Obama Joseph Robinette Biden Jr Democratic Willard Mitt Romney Paul Davis Ryan Republican Gary Earl Johnson James Polin Gray Libertarian Virgil Hamlin Good Jr James N Clymer Constitution Jill Ellen Stein Cheri Lynn Honkala Green Peta Lindsay Yari Osorio Socialism and Liberation James Harris Alyson Kennedy Socialist Workers Ross Carl Rocky Anderson Luis Javier Rodriguez Justice Results 2012 United States presidential election in Washington state Party Candidate Running mate Votes Percentage Electoral votes Democratic Barack Obama incumbent Joe Biden incumbent 1 755 396 55 80 12 Republican Mitt Romney Paul Ryan 1 290 670 41 03 0 Libertarian Gary Johnson Jim Gray 42 202 1 34 0 Green Jill Stein Cheri Honkala 20 928 0 67 0 Write ins 20 442 0 65 0 Constitution Virgil Goode Jim Clymer 8 851 0 28 0 Justice Rocky Anderson Luis J Rodriguez 4 946 0 16 0 Socialism and Liberation Peta Lindsay Yari Osorio 1 318 0 04 0 Socialist Workers James Harris Alyson Kennedy 1 205 0 04 0 Totals 3 145 958 100 00 12 By county County Barack Obama Democratic Mitt Romney Republican Various candidates Other parties Margin Total Adams 1 540 31 94 3 171 65 76 111 2 30 1 631 33 82 4 822 Asotin 4 003 40 14 5 654 56 70 315 3 16 1 651 16 56 9 972 Benton 28 145 35 09 49 461 61 66 2 611 3 25 21 316 26 57 80 217 Chelan 13 112 40 36 18 402 56 64 974 3 00 5 290 16 28 32 488 Clallam 18 580 48 40 18 437 48 03 1 368 3 57 143 0 37 38 385 Clark 93 382 48 59 92 951 48 37 5 843 3 04 431 0 22 192 176 Columbia 645 28 29 1 568 68 77 67 2 94 923 40 48 2 280 Cowlitz 22 726 50 49 20 746 46 09 1 540 3 42 1 980 4 40 45 012 Douglas 5 166 34 30 9 425 62 58 469 3 12 4 259 28 28 15 060 Ferry 1 294 37 10 1 995 57 20 199 5 70 701 20 10 3 488 Franklin 8 398 36 89 13 748 60 39 618 2 72 5 350 23 50 22 764 Garfield 336 26 23 913 71 27 32 2 50 577 45 04 1 281 Grant 8 950 32 16 17 852 64 15 1 027 3 69 8 902 31 99 27 829 Grays Harbor 15 960 55 14 11 914 41 16 1 073 3 70 4 046 13 98 28 947 Island 21 478 50 69 19 605 46 27 1 289 3 04 1 873 4 42 42 372 Jefferson 12 739 63 82 6 405 32 09 817 4 09 6 334 31 73 19 961 King 668 004 68 72 275 700 28 36 28 317 2 92 392 304 40 36 972 021 Kitsap 67 277 54 21 52 846 42 58 3 978 3 21 14 431 11 63 124 101 Kittitas 7 949 43 45 9 782 53 47 562 3 08 1 833 10 02 18 293 Klickitat 4 598 44 25 5 316 51 16 477 4 59 718 6 91 10 391 Lewis 12 664 36 90 20 452 59 59 1 204 3 51 7 788 22 69 34 320 Lincoln 1 673 28 30 4 063 68 74 175 2 96 2 390 40 44 5 911 Mason 14 764 51 82 12 761 44 79 964 3 39 2 003 7 03 28 489 Okanogan 7 108 41 80 9 221 54 23 674 3 97 2 113 12 43 17 003 Pacific 5 711 53 69 4 499 42 30 426 4 01 1 212 11 39 10 636 Pend Oreille 2 508 37 16 3 952 58 56 289 4 28 1 444 21 40 6 749 Pierce 186 430 54 05 148 467 43 04 10 035 2 91 37 963 11 01 344 932 San Juan 7 125 66 64 3 111 29 10 456 4 26 4 014 37 54 10 692 Skagit 28 688 51 51 25 071 45 01 1 938 3 48 3 617 6 50 55 697 Skamania 2 628 47 51 2 687 48 57 217 3 92 59 1 06 5 532 Snohomish 188 516 56 79 133 016 40 07 10 436 3 14 55 500 16 72 331 968 Spokane 102 295 45 31 115 285 51 07 8 174 3 62 12 990 5 76 225 754 Stevens 7 762 34 50 13 691 60 85 1 047 4 65 5 929 26 35 22 500 Thurston 74 037 57 96 49 287 38 58 4 416 3 46 24 750 21 18 127 740 Wahkiakum 1 094 47 30 1 119 48 38 100 4 32 25 1 08 2 313 Walla Walla 9 768 38 61 14 648 57 90 882 3 49 4 880 19 29 25 298 Whatcom 57 089 55 01 42 703 41 14 3 996 3 85 14 386 13 87 103 788 Whitman 8 037 46 54 8 507 49 26 726 4 20 470 2 72 17 270 Yakima 33 217 42 86 42 239 54 50 2 050 2 64 9 022 11 64 77 506 Totals 1 755 396 55 80 1 290 670 41 03 99 892 3 18 464 726 14 77 3 145 958 County Flips Democratic Hold Republican Hold Gain from Democratic Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican Klickitat largest city Goldendale Skamania largest community Carson Wahkhiakum largest community Puget Island Whitman largest city Pulman By congressional district President Obama won 7 of 10 congressional districts including one that elected a Republican District Barack Obama Democratic Mitt Romney Republican Other Representative 1st 54 1 43 3 2 6 Jay Inslee 111th Congress Suzan DelBene 112th Congress 2nd 59 2 38 0 2 8 Rick Larsen 3rd 47 9 49 6 2 5 Jaime Herrera Beutler 4th 37 9 59 7 2 4 Doc Hastings 5th 43 7 53 5 2 8 Cathy McMorris Rodgers 6th 56 1 41 2 2 7 Norm Dicks 111th Congress Derek Kilmer 112th Congress 7th 79 2 18 1 2 7 Jim McDermott 8th 49 7 48 1 2 2 Dave Reichert 9th 68 3 29 6 2 1 Adam Smith 10th 56 3 41 1 2 6 Denny HeckAnalysisAs with all other Pacific states Washington politics are dominated by its progressive metropolitan areas Washington itself is one of the most progressive states in the country most notably on women s issues it was one of the first states to loosen abortion restrictions and is the United States 7th most secular state Economically while Washington was historically a socially liberal and economically conservative state it has become more dominated by leftism in the past few years at the presidential congressional and local level Thus an Obama win was near guaranteed He dominated the Seattle Tacoma metropolitan area winning 69 07 of the vote a 40 56 margin in King County the largest in the state and home to Seattle King County alone casts 29 of the state s ballots and the Seattle metropolitan area as defined by the United States Census Bureau comprised 69 66 of the state s population in 2012 This area of Washington also has the highest minority composition with a 15 Asian 9 Hispanic and 7 African American population and is dominated by diverse well educated voters The Seattle LGBT community is one of the largest in the country Thurston County the 6th largest county in the state and home to the state capital of Olympia gave Obama 58 27 of the vote a 19 48 margin The Democratic ticket also won by great margins in the counties of in decreasing order of margin Snohomish Everett Whatcom Bellingham Kitsap Bremerton and Pierce Tacoma Clark County home to Vancouver in the southwest of the state was won by the president with a 431 vote margin Overall Western Washington voted 7 7 more Democratic than the state overall Meanwhile Romney s best performance was in the east of the state which is mostly rural and sparse and has an economy dominated by agriculture Washington s geographic divide resembles that of California and Oregon voters east of the Cascade Mountains are the most conservative in Washington and Eastern Washington voted 28 5 more Republican than the state as a whole While comprising most of the counties in the state this area casts only one fifth of the ballots Though many of these counties the Republicans won with over 60 of the vote these victories were not able to offset Obama s landslide margins in the Seattle Tacoma metro Romney s biggest prize was Spokane County which gave him over 115 000 votes and a 5 81 margin of victory He also won Yakima County However he was able to flip four counties that Obama won in 2008 Klickitat Skamania Wahkhiakum and Whitman Obama thus became the first Democrat to win the White House without carrying Skamania or Wahkiakum Counties since Woodrow Wilson in 1916 and the first to do so without carrying Klickitat County since John F Kennedy in 1960 This election continued Clallam County s bellwether streak marking the 9th election since 1980 that it voted for the winner of the nationwide election Clallam s streak would eventually become the longest of any county in 2020 Washington weighed in as 11 01 more Democratic than the national average in 2012 As of the 2020 presidential election this is the last presidential election in which the Republican nominee won Whitman County and the Democratic nominee won Cowlitz Grays Harbor Mason and Pacific Counties This is also the last time a Republican received more than 40 of the vote in Washington See alsoUnited States presidential elections in Washington state 2012 Democratic Party presidential primaries 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries Results of the 2012 Republican Party presidential primaries 2012 Republican Party presidential debates and forumsNotesCalculated by subtracting Obama and Romney s percentages from 100 ReferencesSecretary of State Kim Wyman November 6 2012 General Election Results www sos wa gov Retrieved May 25 2020 November 06 2012 General Election Results President Vice President www wa gov Washington Secretary of State Retrieved December 5 2020 November 3 2020 General Election Results President Vice President www wa gov Washington Secretary of State Retrieved December 5 2020 Cohen Micah September 25 2012 Washington State Women s Rights and Big Cities FiveThirtyEight Retrieved December 5 2020 Washington Democratic Delegation 2012 The Green Papers Retrieved December 5 2020 Grygiel Chris September 27 2011 Washington state GOP to hold presidential caucus March 3 Seattle Post Intelligencer Hearst Corporation ISSN 0745 970X OCLC 3734418 Retrieved January 10 2011 GOP candidates vie for delegates in Washington feet planted in Ohio Fox News March 3 2012 Retrieved March 3 2012 Elections amp Voting Washington Secretary of State Elections Division Retrieved March 4 2012 Washington Republican The Green Papers Archived copy Archived from the original on June 10 2012 Retrieved July 19 2012 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Washington Republican Delegation 2012 FHQ June 2 2012 Includes the 3 automatic delegates Tweet via Twitter YouGov Public Policy Polling Survey USA University of Washington PDF Archived from the original PDF on November 4 2012 Retrieved December 5 2020 Strategies 360 Public Policy Polling The Washington Poll Rasmussen Reports SurveyUSA SurveyUSA Gravis Marketing Elway Public Policy Polling KING5NEWS SurveyUSA 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 https uselectionatlas org RESULTS state php fips 53 amp year 2012 amp f 0 amp off 0 2012 General Data sos wa gov Archived from the original on September 10 2024 Lipka Michael Wormald Benjamin February 29 2016 Most and least religious U S states Pew Research Center Retrieved December 5 2020 Savicki Drew June 1 2020 The Road to 270 Washington 270toWin Retrieved December 5 2020 State Population Totals 2010 2019 The United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 5 2020 County Population Totals 2010 2019 The United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 5 2020 Farley Josh November 7 2020 What does Clallam County know Voters just chose a winner for the tenth straight election Kitsap Sun Retrieved December 5 2020 External linksThe Green Papers for Washington The Green Papers Major state elections in chronological order