2008 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont

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2008 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont, At-large district

← 2006 November 4, 2008 2010 →
  Peter Welch, official 110th Congress photo 2.jpg
Nominee Peter Welch
Party Democratic
Popular vote 243,203
Percentage 83.3%

VermontHouseofRepresentivesElection2008.svg
County results
Welch:      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

Representative
At-large before election

Peter Welch
Democratic

Elected Representative
At-large

Peter Welch
Democratic

The 2008 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont was held on November 4, 2008 and determined who represents the state of Vermont in the United States House of Representatives. Democratic Congressman Peter Welch decided to run for a second term in Congress, and, in an aberration for a freshman member of Congress, encountered no major-party opposition. Welch defeated a series of independent candidates with ease and represented Vermont in the 111th Congress.

Democratic Primary[]

Candidates[]

  • Peter Welch, incumbent United States Congressman
  • Craig Hill, perennial candidate and advocate of Vermont secession

Results[]

Democratic primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Peter Welch (incumbent) 19,566 87.74
Democratic Craig Hill 2,635 11.82
Democratic Write-ins 98 0.44
Total votes 22,299 100.00

Independent candidates[]

  • Mike Bethel
  • Cris Ericson, marijuana activist, perennial candidate
  • Jerry Trudell, renewable energy activist, pilot, independent candidate for U.S. House in 2006[2]

General election[]

Results[]

Vermont's At-large congressional district election, 2008[3]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Peter Welch (incumbent) 243,203 83.25
Independent Mike Bethel 14,349 4.81
Independent Jerry Trudell 10,818 3.63
Progressive Thomas James Hermann 9,081 3.05
Independent Cris Ericson 7,841 2.63
Liberty Union Jane Newton 5,307 1.78
Write-ins 2,552 0.86
Total votes 298,151 100.00
Democratic hold

References[]

  1. ^ http://vermont-elections.org/elections1/2008DemPriReptoCongress.pdf
  2. ^ "Trudell blows green energy whistle".
  3. ^ "Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives".
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