The general expectation was that, with President
Barack Obama having the advantage of
incumbency and being the only viable candidate running, the race would be merely
pro forma. Independent progressive Vermont senator
Bernie Sanders reportedly considered challenging Obama in the primaries but decided not to run after then-Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid talked him out of it (He would later run unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination in
2016 and
2020). Several of the lesser-known candidates made efforts to raise visibility. Some
Occupy movement activists made an attempt to take over the Iowa caucuses, and got about 2% of the vote for Uncommitted. With nine minor candidates on the ballot in New Hampshire, there was a debate at
Saint Anselm College in
Goffstown, New Hampshire on December 19, 2011, in which seven candidates participated.
Anti-abortion activist
Randall Terry bought time on television in order to show graphic commercials denouncing
abortion. Three candidates – other than Obama – who had been on the ballot in New Hampshire were also on the ballot in Missouri. One such candidate, Randall Terry, attempted to air graphic TV commercials during
Super Bowl XLIV, but was met with resistance from various TV stations in some locations. The
Democratic National Committee also tried to stop the ads by claiming that Terry was not a legitimate Democratic candidate even though he was legally on the ballot. A number of partisans of
Barack Obama citizenship conspiracy theories, challenging the legitimacy of Obama's
birthright citizenship, attempted to have the President's name removed from the Georgia primary ballot. A state administrative judge upheld a
subpoena, which was ignored by the President and his staff. In February 2012, the activists' legal challenge was rejected by a Georgia state law judge and by the
Secretary of State of Georgia, and Obama remained listed on the primary ballot. On May 8, 2012,
Keith Russell Judd, an inmate serving a 17.5-year sentence, won 41% of the primary vote in West Virginia against incumbent
Barack Obama, a higher percentage of the vote in one state than any other primary opponent of Obama had hitherto achieved in 2012. Darcy Richardson suspended his bid for the nomination on April 28, 2012. He still appeared on the ballot in Texas and was an eligible write-in candidate in California after suspending his campaign. Four states canceled their respective Democratic primaries altogether, citing Obama being the only candidate to qualify on their respective ballot: Connecticut, Delaware, New York, and Virginia. Despite the limited opposition and ultimately receiving 100% of the pledged delegates, Obama's total percentage of the national popular primary vote was the lowest of any incumbent since the contested
1992 election when
George H. W. Bush was challenged by
Pat Buchanan. Even without any clear candidate opposition, Obama faced a considerable amount of resistance in several southern states such as Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kentucky. None of the three had been contested by the same anti-Obama candidate, yet ran significant margins, to the point some speculated he would lose these contests. ==Performance of losing candidates==