John McCain got the most votes in North Carolina, followed by Mike Huckabee and Ron Paul. But there were several thousands who cast their votes for Alan Keyes.
Although many states in this year's Republican Primary season have a winner-take-all delegate allocation, North Carolina is different. It allocates its delegates based on a vote distribution. Here is an explanation of the process from The Green Papers website ([link edited for length]):
North Carolina is also different in that the top three chair people do not necessarily act as super delegates. Most other states reserve those three votes for the chair man, chair woman and chair "person".
Taking my numbers from the official North Carolina Elections website ([link edited for length]), it looks like John McCain didn't get every crumb.
| Candidate | % Vote | Votes | Votes to Cand's | % to a Cand. | Est. of Del's |
| No Preference | 3.99% | 20,667 | 0 | 0.0% | - |
| Alan Keyes | 2.63% | 13,631 | 13,631 | 2.7% | 2 |
| Ron Paul | 7.22% | 37,392 | 37,392 | 7.5% | 5 |
| Mike Huckabee | 12.17% | 63,061 | 63,061 | 12.7% | 9 |
| John McCain | 73.99% | 383,401 | 383,401 | 77.1% | 53 |
| TOTAL | 518,152 | 497,485 | 100.0% | 69 |
The first three columns were from the state elections website. I extrapolated the last three columns.
Honestly, I had forgotten that Alan Keyes was even on the ballot, as did CNN. This is their chart as of 12:44 a.m. EST, May 7, 2008:
| Candidate | Votes | Vote % | Del* |
| McCain | 381,138 | 73% | 0 |
| Huckabee | 62,917 | 12% | 0 |
| Paul | 40,275 | 8% | 0 |
| No Preference | 20,305 | 4% | 0 |
MSNBC's website was a little better. Their numbers are the same as CNN's, but they included Alan Keyes. I find it interesting that the statisticians of both companies unplug their computers at the same time. It must be a union thing to stop working at 1 a.m.
| Candidate | Votes | % of votes | Delegates won |
| John McCain | 381,138 | 74% | 0 |
| Mike Huckabee | 62,917 | 12% | 0 |
| Ron Paul | 40,275 | 8% | 0 |
| No Preference | 20,305 | 4% | |
| Alan Keyes | 13,589 | 3% |
Last year, many polls and pundits were projecting Rudy Giuliani as the best hope of the Republican Party (see Gallop page at USAElectionPolls.com [link edited for length] ). How strange is it that Alan Keyes may end up with more delegates in the convention? Both of them.
©2008 Bob Nightingale, all rights reserved. You must have written permission from the author in order to republish this work.
Published: Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Last modified: Wednesday, May 7, 2008
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Reader Comments:
Posted By: Keyes/Nopreference 08
Date: 2008-05-07 12:26:53
Our candidates got just as many votes as Ron Paul! Clearly the Keyes/Noprefference Revolation is a success!