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1996 United States presidential election

The 1996 United States presidential election was the 53rd quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 5, 1996.[2] Incumbent Democratic President Bill Clinton defeated former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, the Republican nominee (and the party's nominee for vice president in 1976), and Ross Perot, the Reform Party nominee and 1992 independent presidential candidate. This was the first election since 1944 in which the incumbent Democratic president was reelected.

1996 United States presidential election

← 1992 November 5, 1996 2000 →

538 members of the Electoral College
270 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout51.7%[1] 6.4 pp
 
Nominee Bill Clinton Bob Dole Ross Perot
Party Democratic Republican Reform
Home state Arkansas Kansas Texas
Running mate Al Gore Jack Kemp Pat Choate
Electoral vote 379 159 0
States carried 31 + DC 19 0
Popular vote 47,401,185 39,197,469 8,085,294
Percentage 49.2% 40.7% 8.4%

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Presidential election results map. Blue denotes states won by Clinton/Gore and red denotes those won by Dole/Kemp. Numbers indicate electoral votes cast by each state and the District of Columbia.

President before election

Bill Clinton
Democratic

Elected President

Bill Clinton
Democratic

Clinton and Vice President Al Gore were re-nominated without incident by the Democratic Party. Numerous candidates entered the 1996 Republican primaries, with Dole considered the early front-runner. Dole clinched the nomination after defeating challenges by publisher Steve Forbes and paleoconservative leader Pat Buchanan. Dole's running mate was Jack Kemp, a former Congressman and football player who had served as the Housing Secretary under President George H. W. Bush. Ross Perot, who had won 18.9% of the popular vote as an independent candidate in the 1992 election, ran as the candidate of the Reform Party. Perot received less media attention in 1996 and was excluded from the presidential debates.

Clinton's chances of winning were initially considered slim in the middle of his term, as his party had lost both the House of Representatives and the Senate in 1994 for the first time in decades. He was able to regain ground as the economy began to recover from the early 1990s recession with a relatively stable world stage. Clinton tied Dole to Newt Gingrich, the unpopular Republican Speaker of the House, and warned that Republicans would increase the deficit and slash spending on popular programs like Social Security and Medicare. Dole promised an across-the-board 15% reduction in federal income taxes and labeled Clinton as a member of the "spoiled" Baby Boomer generation. Dole's age was a persistent issue in the election, and gaffes by Dole exacerbated the issue for his campaign.

On election day, Clinton defeated Dole by a wide margin, winning 379 electors to Dole's 159 and taking 49.2% of the national popular vote to Dole's 40.7%. As in 1992, Perot's strong candidacy held both major party candidates below 50% nationwide. Notably, Clinton's strength with many southern and rural whites makes him the last Democrat as of 2020 to carry the states of Kentucky, Louisiana, West Virginia, Arkansas, Missouri, and Tennessee in a presidential election. He was also the last Democrat to win Arizona until 2020.

Background edit

In 1995, the Republican Party was riding high on the significant gains made in the 1994 mid-term elections. In those races, the Republicans, led by whip Newt Gingrich, captured the majority of seats in the House for the first time in forty years and the majority of seats in the Senate for the first time in eight years. Gingrich became Speaker of the House, while Bob Dole was elevated to Senate Majority leader.

The Republicans of the 104th Congress pursued an ambitious agenda, highlighted by their Contract with America, but were often forced to compromise with President Clinton, who wielded veto power. A budget impasse between Congress and the Clinton Administration eventually resulted in a government shutdown. Clinton, meanwhile, was praised for signing the GOP's welfare reform, and other notable bills, but was forced to abandon his own health care plan.

Democratic Party nomination edit

Democratic Candidates

 
Democratic Party (United States)
1996 Democratic Party ticket
Bill Clinton Al Gore
for President for Vice President
 
 
42nd
President of the United States
(1993–2001)
45th
Vice President of the United States
(1993–2001)
Campaign
 

Candidates gallery edit

With the advantage of incumbency, Bill Clinton's path to renomination by the Democratic Party was uneventful. At the 1996 Democratic National Convention, Clinton and incumbent Vice President Al Gore were renominated with token opposition. Formerly incarcerated fringe candidate Lyndon LaRouche won a few Arkansas delegates who were barred from the convention. Jimmy Griffin, former Mayor of Buffalo, New York, mounted a brief campaign but withdrew after a poor showing in the New Hampshire primary. Former Pennsylvania governor Bob Casey contemplated a challenge to Clinton, but health problems forced Casey to abandon a bid.[3][4]

Clinton easily won primaries nationwide, with margins consistently higher than 80%.

Popular primaries vote:[5]

Convention tally:[6]

  • Bill Clinton (inc.) – 4,277
  • Not voting – 12

Republican Party nomination edit

Republican Candidates

 
Republican Party (United States)
1996 Republican Party ticket
Bob Dole Jack Kemp
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Senator
from Kansas
(1969–1996)
9th
U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
(1989–1993)
Campaign
 

Candidates gallery edit

A number of Republican candidates entered the field to challenge the incumbent Democratic president, Bill Clinton.

The fragmented field of candidates debated issues such as a flat tax and other tax cut proposals, and a return to supply-side economic policies popularized by Ronald Reagan. More attention was drawn to the race by the budget stalemate in 1995 between Congress and the President, which caused temporary shutdowns and slowdowns in many areas of federal government service.

Former Secretary of Labor Lynn Martin of Illinois, who served in the United States House of Representatives from Illinois's 16th District and was the 1990 Republican U.S. Senate nominee losing to incumbent Paul Simon conducted a bid for most of 1995, but withdrew before the Iowa caucuses as polls showed her languishing far behind. She participated in a number of primary presidential debates before withdrawing.[7] Martin's predecessor in Congress, John Anderson had made first a Republican then independent presidential bid in 1980. Also, Simon who defeated Martin for the U.S. Senate had run for president as a Democrat in 1988.

Former U.S. Army General Colin Powell was widely courted as a potential Republican nominee. However, on November 8, 1995, Powell announced that he would not seek the nomination. Former Secretary of Defense and future Vice President of the United States Dick Cheney was touted by many as a possible candidate for the presidency, but he declared his intentions not to run in early 1995. Former and future Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld formed a presidential campaign exploratory committee, but declined to formally enter the race. Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and former Secretary of Education William Bennett both flirted with bids, both even set up exploratory committees, for a number of months but both finally declared within days of each other they would not run either.[8]

Primaries and convention edit

Ahead of the 1996 primary contest, Republican Leader of the United States Senate and former vice-presidential candidate Bob Dole was seen as the most likely winner. However, Steve Forbes finished first in Delaware and Arizona while paleoconservative firebrand Pat Buchanan managed early victories in Alaska and Louisiana, in addition to a strong second place in the Iowa caucuses and a surprising victory in the small but key New Hampshire primary. Buchanan's New Hampshire win alarmed the Republican "establishment" sufficiently as to provoke prominent Republicans to quickly coalesce around Dole,[9] and Dole won every primary starting with North and South Dakota. Dole resigned his Senate seat on June 11 and the Republican National Convention formally nominated Dole on August 15, 1996, for president.

Popular primaries vote:[5]

Convention tally:[10]

Former Representative and Housing Secretary Jack Kemp was nominated by acclamation for vice president, the following day. This was the only Republican ticket between 1980 and 2008 that did not include a member of the Bush family.

Reform Party nomination edit

1996 Reform Party ticket
Ross Perot Pat Choate
for President for Vice President
 
 
President and CEO of Perot Systems
(1988–2009)
Economist
Campaign
 
 
Ross Perot was on the ballot in every state.

Candidates gallery edit

The United States Reform Party had great difficulty in finding a candidate willing to run in the general election. Lowell Weicker, Tim Penny, David Boren and Richard Lamm were among those who toyed with the notion of seeking its presidential nomination, though all but Lamm decided against it; Lamm had himself come close to withdrawing his name from consideration. Lamm designated Ed Zschau as his vice presidential candidate.

Ultimately, the Reform Party nominated its founder Ross Perot from Texas in its first election as an official political party. Although Perot easily won the nomination, his victory at the party's national convention led to a schism as supporters of Lamm accused him of rigging the vote to prevent them from casting their ballots. This faction walked out of the national convention and eventually formed their own group, the American Reform Party, and attempted to convince Lamm to run as an Independent in the general election; Lamm declined, pointing out a promise he made before running that he would respect the Party's final decision.

Economist Pat Choate was nominated for Vice President.

Minor parties and independents edit

Parties in this section obtained ballot access in enough states to theoretically obtain the minimum number of electoral votes needed to win the election. Individuals included in this section completed one or more of the following actions: received, or formally announced their candidacy for, the presidential nomination of a third party; formally announced intention to run as an independent candidate and obtained enough ballot access to win the election; filed as a third party or non-affiliated candidate with the FEC (for other than exploratory purposes). Within each party, candidates are listed alphabetically by surname.

Minor party candidates, 1996
Libertarian Green Natural Law U.S. Taxpayers'
Harry Browne Ralph Nader John Hagelin Howard Phillips
 
 
 
 
Investment analyst Author and
consumer advocate
Scientist
and researcher
Conservative
political activist

Libertarian Party nomination edit

 
Harry Browne was on the ballot in every state.

Libertarian candidates

The Libertarian Party nominated free-market writer and investment analyst, Harry Browne from Tennessee, and selected Jo Jorgensen from South Carolina as his running-mate. Browne and Jorgensen drew 485,798 votes (0.5% of the popular vote).

The Balloting
Presidential Ballot 1st
Harry Browne 416
Rick Tompkins 74
None 61
Irwin Schiff 32
Douglas J. Ohmen 20
Jeffrey Diket 1
Jo Jorgensen 1

Green Party nomination edit

 
Ralph Nader was on the ballot in twenty-one states (225 Electoral Votes). Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write-in candidate.

The Green Party of the United States – Ralph Nader of Connecticut was drafted as a candidate for President of the United States on the Green Party ticket. He was not formally nominated by the Green Party USA, which was, at the time, the largest national Green group; instead, he was nominated independently by various state Green parties (in some areas, he appeared on the ballot as an independent). Nader vowed to spend only $5,000 in his election campaign (to avoid having to file a financial statement with the FEC). Winona LaDuke, a Native American activist and economist from Wisconsin, was named as his running-mate. In Iowa and Vermont, Anne Goeke was listed as Nader's running mate; in New Jersey it was Madelyn Hoffman and in New York it was Muriel Tillinghast.

Nader and his running mates drew 685,128 votes (0.71% of the popular vote).

Natural Law Party nomination edit

 
John Hagelin was on the ballot in forty-three states (463 Electoral Votes). Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write-in candidate.

The Natural Law Party for a second time nominated scientist and researcher John Hagelin for president and Mike Tompkins for vice president. The party platform included preventive health care, sustainable agriculture and renewable energy technologies. During his campaigns, Hagelin favored abortion rights without public financing, campaign finance law reform, improved gun control, a flat tax, the eradication of PACs, a ban on soft money contributions, and school vouchers, and was a believer in "yogic flying."

Hagelin and Tompkins drew 113,671 votes (0.1% of the popular vote).

U.S. Taxpayers' Party nomination edit

 
Howard Phillips was on the ballot in thirty-eight states (414 Electoral Votes). Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write-in candidate.

The U.S. Taxpayers Party had run its first presidential ticket in 1992, it being head by Howard Phillips who had failed to find any prominent conservative willing to take the mantle. In 1996 the situation ultimately proved the same, though Pat Buchanan for a time was widely speculated to be planning on bolting to the Taxpayers' Party should the expected Republican nominee, Senator Bob Dole, name a pro-choice running-mate. When Jack Kemp, who opposed abortion, was tapped for the position Buchanan agreed to endorse the Republican ticket. Again, Phillips found himself at a temporary post that was made permanent, with Herbert Titus being nominated for the vice presidency.

Phillips and Titus drew 182,820 votes (0.2% of the popular vote).

General election edit

Campaign edit

Without meaningful primary opposition, Clinton was able to focus on the general election early, while Dole was forced to move to the right and spend his campaign reserves fighting off challengers. Political adviser Dick Morris urged Clinton to raise huge sums of campaign funds via soft money for an unprecedented early TV blitz of swing states promoting Clinton's agenda and record. As a result, Clinton could run a campaign through the summer defining his opponent as an aged conservative far from the mainstream before Dole was in a position to respond. Compared to the 50-year-old Clinton, then 73-year-old Dole appeared especially old and frail, as illustrated by an embarrassing fall off a stage during a campaign event in Chico, California. Dole further enhanced this contrast on September 18 when he made a reference to a no-hitter thrown the day before by Hideo Nomo of the "Brooklyn Dodgers", a team that had left Brooklyn for Los Angeles 38 years earlier. A few days later Dole would make a joke about the remark by saying, "And I'd like to congratulate the St. Louis Cardinals on winning the N.L. Central. Notice I said the St. Louis Cardinals, not the St. Louis Browns." (The Browns had left St. Louis after the 1954 season to become the Baltimore Orioles.)

Dole chose to focus on Clinton as being "part of the spoiled baby boomer generation" and stating, "My generation won [World War II], and we may need to be called to service one last time." Although his message won appeal with older voters, surveys found that his age was widely held as a liability and his frequent allusions to WWII and the Great Depression in speeches and campaign ads "unappealing" to younger voters. To prove that he was still healthy and active, Dole released all of his medical records to the public and published photographs of himself running on a treadmill. After the falling incident in California, he joked that he "was trying to do that new Democratic dance, the macarena."[11]

The Clinton campaign avoided mentioning Dole's age directly, instead choosing to confront it in more subtle ways such as the campaign slogan "Building Bridges to the Future" in contrast to the Republican candidate's frequent remarks that he was a "bridge to the past", before the social upheavals of the 1960s. Clinton, without actually calling Dole old, questioned the age of his ideas.[12]

 
Dole (left) and Clinton (right) at the first presidential debate on October 6, 1996, at The Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts in Hartford, Connecticut.

With respect to the issues, Dole promised a 15% across-the-board reduction in income tax rates and made former Congressman and supply side advocate Jack Kemp his running mate. Bill Clinton framed the narrative against Dole early, painting him as a mere clone of unpopular House Speaker Newt Gingrich, warning America that Bob Dole would work in concert with the Republican Congress to slash popular social programs, like Medicare and Social Security, dubbed by Clinton as "Dole-Gingrich".[13] Bob Dole's tax-cut plan found itself under attack from the White House, who said it would "blow a hole in the deficit," which had been cut nearly in half during his opponent's term.[14]

The televised debates featured only Dole and Clinton, locking out Perot and the other minor candidates from the discussion. Perot, who had been allowed to participate in the 1992 debates, would eventually take his case to court, seeking damages from not being in the debate, as well as citing unfair coverage from the major media outlets.

In a first for either major party in a presidential election, both the Clinton and Dole campaigns had official websites. Dole invited viewers to visit his "homepage" at the end of the first debate.[15]

Throughout the campaign, Clinton maintained leads in the polls over Dole and Perot, generally by large margins. In October, Republican National Committee "operatives urg[ed] their party's Congressional candidates to cut loose from Bob Dole and press voters to maintain a Republican majority"[16] and spent $4 million on advertising in targeted districts.[17]

Presidential debates edit

Three debates, organized by the Commission on Presidential Debates, took place—two between the presidential candidates and one between the vice presidential candidates:

Debates among candidates for the 1996 U.S. presidential election
No. Date Host Location Moderators Participants Viewership
(millions)
P1 Sunday, October 6, 1996 Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts Hartford, Connecticut Jim Lehrer President Bill Clinton
Former Senator Bob Dole
46.1[18]
VP Wednesday, October 9, 1996 Mahaffey Theater St. Petersburg, Florida Jim Lehrer Vice President Al Gore
Former Secretary Jack Kemp
26.6[18]
P2 Wednesday, October 16, 1996 University of San Diego San Diego, California Jim Lehrer President Bill Clinton
Former Senator Bob Dole
36.6[18]
 
 
Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts
Hartford, CT
 
Mahaffey Theater
St. Petersburg, FL
 
University of San Diego
San Diego CA
class=notpageimage|
Sites of the 1996 general election debates

Campaign donations controversy edit

In late September 1995, questions arose regarding the Democratic National Committee's fund-raising practices. In February the following year, China's alleged role in the campaign finance controversy first gained public attention after The Washington Post published a story stating that a U.S. Department of Justice investigation had discovered evidence that agents of China sought to direct contributions from foreign sources to the DNC before the 1996 presidential campaign. The paper wrote that intelligence information had showed the Chinese Embassy in Washington, D.C. was used for coordinating contributions to the DNC[19] in violation of U.S. law forbidding non-American citizens from giving monetary donations to U.S. politicians and political parties. Seventeen people were eventually convicted for fraud or for funneling Asian funds into the U.S. elections.

One of the more notable events learned involved Vice President Al Gore and a fund-raising event held at Hsi Lai Temple in Hacienda Heights, California. The Temple event was organized by DNC fund-raisers John Huang and Maria Hsia. It is illegal under U.S. law for religious organizations to donate money to politicians or political groups due to their tax-exempt status. The U.S. Justice Department alleged Hsia facilitated $100,000 (~$161,840 in 2021) in illegal contributions to the 1996 Clinton-Gore re-election campaign through her efforts at the Temple. Hsia was eventually convicted by a jury in March 2000.[20] The DNC eventually returned the money donated by the Temple's monks and nuns. Twelve nuns and employees of the Temple refused to answer questions by pleading the Fifth Amendment when they were subpoenaed to testify before Congress in 1997.[21]

Results edit

On election day, President Clinton won a decisive victory over Dole, becoming the first Democrat to win two consecutive presidential elections since Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936, 1940, and 1944. In the popular vote, he out-polled Dole by over 8.2 million votes. The Electoral College map did not change much from the previous election, with the Democratic incumbent winning 379 votes to the Republican ticket's 159. In the West, Dole managed to narrowly win Colorado and Montana (both had voted for Clinton four years earlier), while Clinton became the first Democrat to win Arizona since Harry Truman in 1948. In the South, Clinton won Florida, a state he had failed to win in 1992, but lost Georgia, a state that he had carried. The election helped to cement Democratic presidential control in California, Vermont, Maine, Illinois, New Jersey and Connecticut; all went on to vote Democratic in every subsequent presidential election after having voted Republican in the five prior to 1992. 1996 marked the first time that Vermont voted for a Democrat in two successive elections. Pennsylvania and Michigan both voted Democratic, and would remain in the Democratic presidential fold until 2016.

Although Clinton's margin of victory in the popular vote was slightly greater than that of George H.W. Bush eight years prior, he won fewer states, in part due to his relatively poor performance in areas of low population density – a precursor of the trend where future Democratic contenders for the presidency perform very well in populous metropolitan areas but vastly underperform in rural counties.

Reform Party nominee Ross Perot won approximately 8% of the popular vote. His vote total was less than half of his performance in 1992. The 1996 national exit poll showed that just as in 1992,[22] Perot drew supporters from Clinton and Dole equally.[23] In polls directed at Perot voters as to who would be a second choice, Clinton consistently held substantial leads.[24] Perot's best showing was in states that tended to strongly favor either Clinton (such as Maine) or Dole (particularly Montana, though the margin of victory there was much closer). Perot once again received his lowest amount of support in the South.

Although Clinton is a native of Arkansas and his running mate hailed from Tennessee, the Democratic ticket carried just four of the eleven states of the former Confederacy (and of those four only Florida and Georgia have voted Democratic in any election since). As such, Clinton's 1992 run was tied for the weakest performance in the region by a nationally successful Democratic presidential candidate up until that point. Clinton's performance both followed and preceded a substantial decline in support for the Democratic Party in the South; in the 2000 and 2004 elections, the Democrats would fail to carry even one of the former Confederate states, contributing to their defeat both times. This completed the Republican takeover of the American South, a region in which Democrats had held a near monopoly from 1880 to 1948. In 2008, the Democrats were able to win three former Confederate states (Virginia, North Carolina, and Florida), however this was still a worse performance than either of Clinton's. Since 1984, no winning presidential candidate has surpassed Bill Clinton's 8.5 percent popular vote margin, or his 220 electoral vote margin since 1988. Additionally, since 1964, no other Democratic presidential candidate has surpassed Clinton's electoral vote margin and, except Lyndon B. Johnson in that election, no Democratic presidential candidate has surpassed Clinton's 8.5 percentage popular vote margin since 1940.

The election also marked the first time in U.S. history that the winner was elected without winning the male vote, the third time in U.S. history that a candidate won two terms as president without winning a majority either time (after Grover Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson, both Democrats).[23] Clinton also remains the last presidential candidate of either party to win at least one county in every state.[25] Clinton maintained a consistent polling edge over Dole, and he won re-election with a substantial margin in the popular vote and the Electoral College. Clinton became the first Democrat since Franklin D. Roosevelt to win two consecutive presidential elections. Dole won 40.7% of the popular vote and 159 electoral votes, while Perot won 8.4% of the popular vote. Despite Dole's defeat, the Republican Party was able to maintain majorities in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. Voter turnout was registered at 51.7%, the lowest for a presidential election since 1924.

As of 2020, this remains the last time that the states of Kentucky, Louisiana, West Virginia, Arkansas, Missouri, and Tennessee were carried by a Democratic presidential nominee. It was also the first time most Arizona voters chose a Democratic candidate since 1948, which they would not do again until 2020. Five states switched party predominance in 1996 with their presidential voting: Montana, Colorado, and Georgia were flipped by Senator Dole, while Florida and Arizona were flipped by President Clinton. This is also the most recent time a third-party candidate finished with over 5% of the vote nationwide. This is the last time a Democratic president was re-elected with a higher share of the electoral or popular vote.

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
William Jefferson Clinton (Incumbent) Democratic[a] Arkansas 47,401,185 49.24% 379 Albert Arnold Gore Jr. (Incumbent) Tennessee 379
Robert Joseph Dole Republican[b] Kansas 39,197,469 40.71% 159 Jack French Kemp New York[27] 159
Henry Ross Perot Reform[c] Texas 8,085,294 8.40% 0 Patrick Choate[d] Washington, D.C. 0
Ralph Nader Green Connecticut 684,871 0.71% 0 Winona LaDuke[e] California 0
Harry Edson Browne Libertarian Tennessee 485,759 0.50% 0 Jo Jorgensen South Carolina 0
Howard Jay Phillips Taxpayers Virginia 184,656 0.19% 0 Herbert W. Titus Oregon 0
John Samuel Hagelin Natural Law Iowa 113,667 0.12% 0 Mike Tompkins Massachusetts 0
Other[f] 121,663 0.12% Other[f]
Total 96,274,564 100% 538 538
Needed to win 270 270

Official Source (Popular Vote):

Source (popular and electoral vote): Federal Elections Commission Electoral and Popular Vote Summary unofficial Secondary Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1996 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved August 7, 2005.

Voting age population: 196,498,000

Percent of voting age population casting a vote for President: 49.00%

Popular vote
Clinton
49.24%
Dole
40.71%
Perot
8.40%
Nader
0.71%
Browne
0.50%
Others
0.44%
Electoral vote
Clinton
70.45%
Dole
29.55%
 

Results by state edit

Legend
States/districts won by Clinton/Gore
States/districts won by Dole/Kemp
At-large results (For states that split electoral votes)
Bill Clinton
Democratic
Bob Dole
Republican
Ross Perot
Reform
Ralph Nader
Green
Harry Browne
Libertarian
Others Margin State Total
State elec­toral
votes
# % elec­toral
votes
# % elec­toral
votes
# % elec­toral
votes
# % elec­toral
votes
# % elec­toral
votes
# % elec­toral
votes
# % #
Alabama 9 662,165 43.16% 769,044 50.12% 9 92,149 6.01% 5,290 0.34% 5,701 0.37% −106,879 −6.96% 1,534,349 AL
Alaska 3 80,380 33.27% 122,746 50.80% 3 26,333 10.90% 7,597 3.14% 2,276 0.94% 2,288 0.95% −42,366 −17.53% 241,620 AK
Arizona 8 653,288 46.52% 8 622,073 44.29% 112,072 7.98% 2,062 0.15% 14,358 1.02% 552 0.04% 31,215 2.23% 1,404,405 AZ
Arkansas 6 475,171 53.74% 6 325,416 36.80% 69,884 7.90% 3,649 0.41% 3,076 0.35% 7,066 0.80% 149,755 16.94% 884,262 AR
California 54 5,119,835 51.10% 54 3,828,380 38.21% 697,847 6.96% 237,016 2.37% 73,600 0.73% 62,806 0.63% 1,291,455 12.89% 10,019,484 CA
Colorado 8 671,152 44.43% 691,848 45.80% 8 99,629 6.59% 25,070 1.66% 12,392 0.82% 10,613 0.70% −20,696 −1.37% 1,510,704 CO
Connecticut 8 735,740 52.83% 8 483,109 34.69% 139,523 10.02% 24,321 1.75% 5,788 0.42% 4,133 0.30% 252,631 18.14% 1,392,614 CT
Delaware 3 140,355 51.80% 3 99,062 36.58% 28,719 10.60% 18 0.01% 2,052 0.76% 639 0.24% 41,293 15.22% 270,845 DE
D.C. 3 158,220 85.19% 3 17,339 9.34% 3,611 1.94% 4,780 2.57% 588 0.32% 1,188 0.64% 140,881 75.85% 185,726 DC
Florida 25 2,546,870 48.02% 25 2,244,536 42.32% 483,870 9.12% 4,101 0.08% 23,965 0.45% 452 0.01% 302,334 5.70% 5,303,794 FL
Georgia 13 1,053,849 45.84% 1,080,843 47.01% 13 146,337 6.37% 17,870 0.78% 172 0.01% −26,994 −1.17% 2,299,071 GA
Hawaii 4 205,012 56.93% 4 113,943 31.64% 27,358 7.60% 10,386 2.88% 2,493 0.69% 928 0.26% 91,069 25.29% 360,120 HI
Idaho 4 165,443 33.65% 256,595 52.18% 4 62,518 12.71% 3,325 0.68% 3,838 0.78% −91,152 −18.53% 491,719 ID
Illinois 22 2,341,744 54.32% 22 1,587,021 36.81% 346,408 8.03% 1,447 0.03% 22,548 0.52% 12,223 0.29% 754,723 17.51% 4,311,391 IL
Indiana 12 887,424 41.55% 1,006,693 47.13% 12 224,299 10.50% 1,121 0.05% 15,632 0.73% 673 0.03% −119,269 −5.58% 2,135,842 IN
Iowa 7 620,258 50.26% 7 492,644 39.92% 105,159 8.52% 6,550 0.53% 2,315 0.19% 7,149 0.58% 127,614 10.34% 1,234,075 IA
Kansas 6 387,659 36.08% 583,245 54.29% 6 92,639 8.62% 914 0.09% 4,557 0.42% 5,286 0.49% −195,586 −18.21% 1,074,300 KS
Kentucky 8 636,614 45.84% 8 623,283 44.88% 120,396 8.67% 701 0.05% 4,009 0.29% 3,705 0.27% 13,331 0.96% 1,388,708 KY
Louisiana 9 927,837 52.01% 9 712,586 39.94% 123,293 6.91% 4,719 0.26% 7,499 0.42% 8,025 0.45% 215,251 12.07% 1,783,959 LA
Maine 2 312,788 51.62% 2 186,378 30.76% 85,970 14.19% 15,279 2.52% 2,996 0.49% 2,486 0.41% 126,410 20.86% 605,897 ME
Maine-1 1 165,053 52.1% 1 100,851 31.8% 39,845 12.6% 11,372 3.6% 64,202 20.3% 317,121 ME1
Maine-2 1 147,735 51.2% 1 85,527 29.6% 46,125 16.0% 9.389 3.3% 62,208 21.5% 288,776 ME2
Maryland 10 966,207 54.25% 10 681,530 38.27% 115,812 6.50% 2,606 0.15% 8,765 0.49% 5,950 0.33% 284,677 15.98% 1,780,870 MD
Massachusetts 12 1,571,763 61.47% 12 718,107 28.08% 227,217 8.89% 4,565 0.18% 20,426 0.80% 14,708 0.58% 853,656 33.39% 2,556,786 MA
Michigan 18 1,989,653 51.69% 18 1,481,212 38.48% 336,670 8.75% 2,322 0.06% 27,670 0.72% 11,317 0.29% 508,441 13.21% 3,848,844 MI
Minnesota 10 1,120,438 51.10% 10 766,476 34.96% 257,704 11.75% 24,908 1.14% 8,271 0.38% 14,843 0.68% 353,962 16.14% 2,192,640 MN
Mississippi 7 394,022 44.08% 439,838 49.21% 7 52,222 5.84% 2,809 0.31% 4,966 0.56% −45,816 −5.13% 893,857 MS
Missouri 11 1,025,935 47.54% 11 890,016 41.24% 217,188 10.06% 534 0.02% 10,522 0.49% 13,870 0.64% 135,919 6.30% 2,158,065 MO
Montana 3 167,922 41.23% 179,652 44.11% 3 55,229 13.56% 2,526 0.62% 1,932 0.47% −11,730 −2.88% 407,261 MT
Nebraska 2 236,761 34.95% 363,467 53.65% 2 71,278 10.52% 2,792 0.41% 3,117 0.46% −126,706 −18.70% 677,415 NE
Nebraska-1 1 87,713 38.1% 114,560 49.7% 1 25,973 11.3% 2,074 0.9% -28,847 -11.7% 230,330 NE1
Nebraska-2 1 84,666 38.0% 116,892 52.5% 1 18,935 8.5% 2,164 1.0% -32,226 -14.5% 222,660 NE2
Nebraska-3 1 64,382 28.7% 132,015 58.8% 1 26,370 11.8% 1,658 0.7% -67,633 -30.1% 224,425 NE3
Nevada 4 203,974 43.93% 4 199,244 42.91% 43,986 9.47% 4,730 1.02% 4,460 0.96% 7,885 1.70% 4,730 1.02% 464,279 NV
New Hampshire 4 246,214 49.32% 4 196,532 39.37% 48,390 9.69% 4,237 0.85% 3,802 0.76% 49,682 9.95% 499,175 NH
New Jersey 15 1,652,329 53.72% 15 1,103,078 35.86% 262,134 8.52% 32,465 1.06% 14,763 0.48% 11,038 0.36% 549,251 17.86% 3,075,807 NJ
New Mexico 5 273,495 49.18% 5 232,751 41.86% 32,257 5.80% 13,218 2.38% 2,996 0.54% 1,357 0.24% 40,744 7.32% 556,074 NM
New York 33 3,756,177 59.47% 33 1,933,492 30.61% 503,458 7.97% 75,956 1.20% 12,220 0.19% 34,826 0.55% 1,822,685 28.86% 6,316,129 NY
North Carolina 14 1,107,849 44.04% 1,225,938 48.73% 14 168,059 6.68% 2,108 0.08% 8,740 0.35% 3,113 0.12% −118,089 −4.69% 2,515,807 NC
North Dakota 3 106,905 40.13% 125,050 46.94% 3 32,515 12.20% 847 0.32% 1,094 0.41% −18,145 −6.81% 266,411 ND
Ohio 21 2,148,222 47.38% 21 1,859,883 41.02% 483,207 10.66% 2,962 0.07% 12,851 0.28% 27,309 0.60% 288,339 6.36% 4,534,434 OH
Oklahoma 8 488,105 40.45% 582,315 48.26% 8 130,788 10.84% 5,505 0.46% −94,210 −7.81% 1,206,713 OK
Oregon 7 649,641 47.15% 7 538,152 39.06% 121,221 8.80% 49,415 3.59% 8,903 0.65% 10,428 0.76% 111,489 8.09% 1,377,760 OR
Pennsylvania 23 2,215,819 49.17% 23 1,801,169 39.97% 430,984 9.56% 3,086 0.07% 28,000 0.62% 27,060 0.60% 414,650 9.20% 4,506,118 PA
Rhode Island 4 233,050 59.71% 4 104,683 26.82% 43,723 11.20% 6,040 1.55% 1,109 0.28% 1,679 0.43% 128,367 32.89% 390,284 RI
South Carolina 8 506,283 43.96% 573,458 49.79% 8 64,386 5.59% 4,271 0.37% 3,291 0.29% −67,175 −5.83% 1,151,689 SC
South Dakota 3 139,333 43.03% 150,543 46.49% 3 31,250 9.65% 1,472 0.45% 1,228 0.38% −11,210 −3.46% 323,826 SD
Tennessee 11 909,146 48.00% 11 863,530 45.59% 105,918 5.59% 6,427 0.34% 5,020 0.27% 4,064 0.21% 45,616 2.41% 1,894,105 TN
Texas 32 2,459,683 43.83% 2,736,167 48.76% 32 378,537 6.75% 4,810 0.09% 20,256 0.36% 12,191 0.22% −276,484 −4.93% 5,611,644 TX
Utah 5 221,633 33.30% 361,911 54.37% 5 66,461 9.98% 4,615 0.69% 4,129 0.62% 6,880 1.03% −140,278 −21.07% 665,629 UT
Vermont 3 137,894 53.35% 3 80,352 31.09% 31,024 12.00% 5,585 2.16% 1,183 0.46% 2,411 0.93% 57,542 22.26% 258,449 VT
Virginia 13 1,091,060 45.15% 1,138,350 47.10% 13 159,861 6.62% 9,174 0.38% 18,197 0.75% −47,290 −1.95% 2,416,642 VA
Washington 11 1,123,323 49.84% 11 840,712 37.30% 201,003 8.92% 60,322 2.68% 12,522 0.56% 15,955 0.71% 282,611 12.54% 2,253,837 WA
West Virginia 5 327,812 51.51% 5 233,946 36.76% 71,639 11.26% 3,062 0.48% 93,866 14.75% 636,459 WV
Wisconsin 11 1,071,971 48.81% 11 845,029 38.48% 227,339 10.35% 28,723 1.31% 7,929 0.36% 15,178 0.69% 226,942 10.33% 2,196,169 WI
Wyoming 3 77,934 36.84% 105,388 49.81% 3 25,928 12.25% 1,739 0.82% 582 0.28% −27,454 −12.97% 211,571 WY
TOTALS: 538 47,402,357 49.24% 379 39,198,755 40.71% 159 8,085,402 8.40% 685,128 0.71% 485,798 0.50% 420,194 0.44% 8,203,602 8.52% 96,277,634 US

[31]

Maine and Nebraska district results edit

Maine and Nebraska each allow for their electoral votes to be split between candidates. In both states, two electoral votes are awarded to the winner of the statewide race and one electoral vote is awarded to the winner of each congressional district.[32]

Close states edit

State where the margin of victory was under 1% (8 electoral votes):

  1. Kentucky, 0.96% (13,331 votes)

States where the margin of victory was under 5% (109 electoral votes):

  1. Nevada, 1.02% (4,730 votes)
  2. Georgia, 1.17% (26,994 votes)
  3. Colorado, 1.37% (20,696 votes)
  4. Virginia, 1.96% (47,290 votes)
  5. Arizona, 2.22% (31,215 votes)
  6. Tennessee, 2.41% (45,616 votes)
  7. Montana, 2.88% (11,730 votes)
  8. South Dakota, 3.46% (11,210 votes)
  9. North Carolina, 4.69% (118,089 votes)
  10. Texas, 4.93% (276,484 votes)

States where the margin of victory was between 5% and 10% (143 electoral votes):

  1. Mississippi, 5.13% (45,816 votes)
  2. Indiana, 5.58% (119,269 votes)
  3. Florida, 5.70% (302,334 votes)
  4. South Carolina, 6.04% (69,407 votes)
  5. Missouri, 6.30% (135,919 votes)
  6. Ohio, 6.36% (288,339 votes)
  7. North Dakota, 6.81% (18,145 votes)
  8. Alabama, 6.96% (106,879 votes)
  9. New Mexico, 7.32% (40,744 votes)
  10. Oklahoma, 7.81% (94,210 votes)
  11. Oregon, 8.09% (111,489 votes)
  12. Pennsylvania, 9.20% (414,650 votes) (tipping point state)
  13. New Hampshire, 9.95% (49,682 votes)

Statistics edit

[31]

Counties with Highest Percent of Vote (Democratic)

  1. Starr County, Texas 86.94%
  2. Bronx County, New York 85.80%
  3. Macon County, Alabama 85.55%
  4. Washington, D.C. 85.19%
  5. Duval County, Texas 84.94%

Counties with Highest Percent of Vote (Republican)

  1. Ochiltree County, Texas 79.20%
  2. Russell County, Kansas 78.98%
  3. Glasscock County, Texas 78.93%
  4. Hayes County, Nebraska 77.02%
  5. Sioux County, Iowa 77.00%

Counties with Highest Percent of Vote (Other)

  1. Mineral County, Montana 23.72%
  2. Grant County, North Dakota 21.55%
  3. Shoshone County, Idaho 21.55%
  4. Sanders County, Montana 21.24%
  5. Billings County, North Dakota 21.10%

Voter demographics edit

The presidential vote in social groups (percentages)
Social group Clinton Dole Perot Others % of
total vote
Total vote 49 41 8 2 100
Party and ideology
Conservative Republicans 6 88 5 1 21
Moderate Republicans 20 72 7 1 13
Liberal Republicans 44 46 9 1 2
Conservative independents 19 60 19 2 7
Moderate independents 50 30 17 3 15
Liberal independents 58 15 18 9 4
Conservative Democrats 69 23 7 1 6
Moderate Democrats 84 10 5 1 20
Liberal Democrats 89 5 4 2 13
Gender and marital status
Married men 40 48 10 2 32
Married women 48 43 7 2 33
Unmarried men 49 36 12 3 15
Unmarried women 62 28 7 3 20
Race
White 43 46 9 2 83
Black 84 11 4 1 10
Hispanic 72 21 6 1 5
Asian 43 48 8 1 1
Religion
Protestant 41 50 8 1 38
Catholic 53 37 9 1 29
Other Christian 45 41 12 2 16
Jewish 78 16 3 3 3
Other 60 23 11 6 6
None 59 23 13 5 7
White Religious Right
White Religious Right 26 65 8 1 17
Everyone else 54 35 9 2 83
Age
18–29 years old 53 34 10 3 16
30–44 years old 48 41 9 2 33
45–59 years old 48 41 9 2 26
60 and older 48 44 7 1 25
First time voters
First time voter 54 34 11 1 9
Everyone else 48 42 8 2 91
Sexual orientation
Gay, lesbian, or bisexual 66 23 7 4 5
Heterosexual 47 43 8 2 95
Education
Not a high school graduate 59 28 11 2 6
High school graduate 51 35 13 1 24
Some college education 48 40 10 2 27
College graduate 44 46 8 2 26
Postgraduate education 52 40 5 3 17
Family income
Under $15,000 59 28 11 2 11
$15,000–30,000 51 38 9 2 23
$30,000–50,000 48 40 10 2 27
$50,000–75,000 47 45 7 1 21
$75,000–100,000 44 48 7 1 9
Over $100,000 38 54 6 2 9
Region
East 55 34 9 2 23
Midwest 48 41 10 1 26
South 46 46 7 1 30
West 48 40 8 4 20
Community size
Population over 500,000 68 25 5 2 10
Population 50,000 to 500,000 50 39 8 3 21
Suburbs 47 42 8 3 39
Rural areas, towns 45 44 10 1 30

Source: Voter News Service exit poll, reported in The New York Times, November 10, 1996, 28.[33]

Polling controversy edit

The polling in the election was criticized by Everett Carll Ladd, who argued that "polls had overestimated Clinton's lead during the campaign and had thereby dampened interest in the election."[34] Others such as Warren J. Mitofsky rebutted Ladd's view; in an analysis in Public Opinion Quarterly, Mitofsky wrote that "1996 was not the best but was far from the worst year for the polls", with accuracy surpassing the polling in 1948 and in 1980.[34] Because Clinton won the election by a comfortable margin, there was no major reaction towards the impreciseness of the polls.[34]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In New York, the Clinton vote was a fusion of the Democratic and Liberal slates. There, Clinton obtained 3,649,630 votes on the Democratic ticket and 106,547 votes on the Liberal ticket.[26]
  2. ^ In New York, the Dole vote was a fusion of the Republican, Conservative, and Freedom slates. There, Dole obtained 1,738,707 votes on the Republican ticket, 183,392 votes on the Conservative ticket, and 11,393 votes on the Freedom ticket.[26]
  3. ^ In South Carolina, the Perot vote was a fusion of the Reform and Patriot slates. There, Perot obtained 27,464 votes on the Reform ticket and 36,913 votes on the Patriot ticket.[26]
  4. ^ On the California, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Texas election ballots, James Campbell of California, Perot's former boss at IBM, was listed as a stand-in vice-presidential candidate until Perot decided on Pat Choate as his choice for Vice President.
  5. ^ The Green Party vice presidential candidate varied from state to state. Winona LaDuke was his vice presidential candidate in eighteen of the twenty-two states where he appeared on the ballot. Anne Goeke was Nader's running mate in Iowa[28] and Vermont. Madelyn Hoffman was his running mate in New Jersey.[29] Muriel Tillinghast was his running mate in New York.[30]
  6. ^ Candidates receiving less than 0.05% of the total popular vote.

References edit

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ "Election Dates". Uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  3. ^ "Anyone left? The search for a Clinton challenger in 1996". The Progressive. TheFreeLibrary.com. May 1, 1995. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  4. ^ Newton-Small, Jay (November 24, 2009). . Time. Archived from the original on November 27, 2009. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  5. ^ a b Kalb, Deborah, ed. (2010). Guide to U.S. Elections. Washington, DC: CQ Press. pp. 460–461. ISBN 978-1-60426-536-1.
  6. ^ Kalb, Deborah, ed. (2010). Guide to U.S. Elections. Washington, DC: CQ Press. p. 745. ISBN 978-1-60426-536-1.
  7. ^ "New Hampshire Republican Forum". C-SPAN.org. February 19, 1995. Retrieved August 7, 2018.
  8. ^ Washington watch (June 6, 1994). . Aaiusa.org. Archived from the original on October 1, 2017. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  9. ^ Julie Hirschfeld Davis (January 26, 2012), "'Stop-Newt' Republicans Confront New Base" Bloomberg News
  10. ^ Kalb, Deborah, ed. (2010). Guide to U.S. Elections. Washington, DC: CQ Press. p. 744. ISBN 978-1-60426-536-1.
  11. ^ Hardy, Thomas (September 20, 1996). "Dole Makes Strong Rebound After Fall". Chicago Tribune.
  12. ^ Lewis, Matt (September 25, 2008). "McCain and Obama Can Learn A Lot From Past Debaters". Townhall.com. Retrieved August 18, 2016. It's the age of his ideas that I question
  13. ^ Berke, Richard L. (October 7, 1996). "Clinton And Dole, Face To Face, Spar Over Medicare And Taxes". The New York Times. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  14. ^ . Business Week. June 14, 1997. Archived from the original on June 28, 1997. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  15. ^ Shields, Mike (February 18, 2016). "An Oral History of The First Presidential Campaign Websites in 1996". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  16. ^ Clyme, Adam (October 23, 1996). "G.O.P. Pushes Congress Strategy That Shuns Dole". The New York Times.
  17. ^ Romano, Andrew (August 16, 2016). "Down Ticket #3: Republicans want to keep Congress by sacrificing Trump. Good luck with that". Yahoo! News.
  18. ^ a b c "CPD: 1996 Debates". www.debates.org. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
  19. ^ Woodward, Bob; Duffy, Brian (February 13, 1997). "Chinese Embassy Role In Contributions Probed". The Washington Post.
  20. ^ Eskenazi, Michael (March 3, 2000). . CNN. Archived from the original on April 3, 2013.
  21. ^ Abse, Nathan (June 9, 1998). "A Look at the 94 Who Aren't Talking". The Washington Post.
  22. ^ Holmes, Steven A. (November 5, 1992). "The 1992 Elections: Disappointment – News Analysis An Eccentric but No Joke; Perot's Strong Showing Raises Questions On What Might Have Been, and Might Be". The New York Times. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  23. ^ a b "AllPolitics – Presidential Election Exit Poll Results". CNN. November 1996.
  24. ^ "AllPolitics – Tracking Poll". CNN. November 4, 1996.
  25. ^ Sullivan, Robert David; 'How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century'; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  26. ^ a b c . Official website of the Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives. Archived from the original on January 26, 2006. Retrieved February 17, 2006.
  27. ^ Matthews, Dylan (August 9, 2012). "The effect of veep picks, in two charts". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 27, 2014. Jack Kemp, whose home state of New York saw an even stronger anti-Republican swing in 1996
  28. ^ (PDF). Minutes of the Meetings of the Board of Supervisors. Cerro Gordo County. 1996. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 26, 2006. Retrieved March 30, 2006.
  29. ^ Fernandez, Sonia (February 22, 2000). . The Daily Princetonian. Daily Princetonian Publishing Company, Inc. Archived from the original on March 24, 2007. Retrieved March 30, 2006.
  30. ^ . Cattaraugus County: Board of Elections: 1996 Election Results. Cattaraugus County, New York State. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved March 30, 2006.
  31. ^ a b 1996 Presidential General Election Data - National, Uselectionatlas.org.
  32. ^ Quain, Anthony J. (1999). The Political Reference Almanac, 1999–2000. Keynote Publishing Company. pp. 405, 406, 435, 436. ISBN 978-0-9670286-0-6.
  33. ^ Connelly, Marjorie (November 10, 1996). "Portrait of the Electorate". The New York Times.
  34. ^ a b c Mitofsky, W. J. (1998). "Review: Was 1996 a Worse Year for Polls Than 1948?". The Public Opinion Quarterly. 62 (2): 230–249. doi:10.1086/297842.

Further reading edit

Books edit

Journals edit

  • Immelman, Aubrey. "The political personalities of 1996 US presidential candidates Bill Clinton and Bob Dole." Leadership Quarterly 9.3 (1998): 335–366. online
  • Jelen, Ted G.; Marthe Chandler (2000). "Culture Wars in the Trenches: Social Issues as Short-Term Forces in Presidential Elections, 1968–1996". The American Review of Politics. 21: 69–87.

Web references edit

  • . Archived from the original on January 30, 2006. Retrieved January 25, 2006.
  • . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 21, 2011.

External links edit

Campaign websites
  • Clinton-Gore 1996 website screen shots
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 1996-11-06) (as of 1996)
    • Dole-Kemp 1996 website (still active as of February 2021)
Other links
  • 1996 popular vote by counties
  • 1996 popular vote by states
  • 1996 popular vote by states (with bar graphs)
  • CNN: 1996 Presidential Campaign Ads
  • Popular vote data from the Federal Election Commission
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 1996-12-22) – MTV pages on the election
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived April 4, 2016)
  • Documentary about the 1996 Vice Presidential Candidates, "Running Mate", 1996-10-01, The Walter J. Brown Media Archives & Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia, American Archive of Public Broadcasting

1996, united, states, presidential, election, related, races, 1996, united, states, elections, 53rd, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1996, incumbent, democratic, president, bill, clinton, defeated, former, senate, majority, leader. For related races see 1996 United States elections The 1996 United States presidential election was the 53rd quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 5 1996 2 Incumbent Democratic President Bill Clinton defeated former Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole the Republican nominee and the party s nominee for vice president in 1976 and Ross Perot the Reform Party nominee and 1992 independent presidential candidate This was the first election since 1944 in which the incumbent Democratic president was reelected 1996 United States presidential election 1992 November 5 1996 2000 538 members of the Electoral College270 electoral votes needed to winTurnout51 7 1 6 4 pp Nominee Bill Clinton Bob Dole Ross PerotParty Democratic Republican ReformHome state Arkansas Kansas TexasRunning mate Al Gore Jack Kemp Pat ChoateElectoral vote 379 159 0States carried 31 DC 19 0Popular vote 47 401 185 39 197 469 8 085 294Percentage 49 2 40 7 8 4 Presidential election results map Blue denotes states won by Clinton Gore and red denotes those won by Dole Kemp Numbers indicate electoral votes cast by each state and the District of Columbia President before electionBill ClintonDemocratic Elected President Bill ClintonDemocraticClinton and Vice President Al Gore were re nominated without incident by the Democratic Party Numerous candidates entered the 1996 Republican primaries with Dole considered the early front runner Dole clinched the nomination after defeating challenges by publisher Steve Forbes and paleoconservative leader Pat Buchanan Dole s running mate was Jack Kemp a former Congressman and football player who had served as the Housing Secretary under President George H W Bush Ross Perot who had won 18 9 of the popular vote as an independent candidate in the 1992 election ran as the candidate of the Reform Party Perot received less media attention in 1996 and was excluded from the presidential debates Clinton s chances of winning were initially considered slim in the middle of his term as his party had lost both the House of Representatives and the Senate in 1994 for the first time in decades He was able to regain ground as the economy began to recover from the early 1990s recession with a relatively stable world stage Clinton tied Dole to Newt Gingrich the unpopular Republican Speaker of the House and warned that Republicans would increase the deficit and slash spending on popular programs like Social Security and Medicare Dole promised an across the board 15 reduction in federal income taxes and labeled Clinton as a member of the spoiled Baby Boomer generation Dole s age was a persistent issue in the election and gaffes by Dole exacerbated the issue for his campaign On election day Clinton defeated Dole by a wide margin winning 379 electors to Dole s 159 and taking 49 2 of the national popular vote to Dole s 40 7 As in 1992 Perot s strong candidacy held both major party candidates below 50 nationwide Notably Clinton s strength with many southern and rural whites makes him the last Democrat as of 2020 to carry the states of Kentucky Louisiana West Virginia Arkansas Missouri and Tennessee in a presidential election He was also the last Democrat to win Arizona until 2020 Contents 1 Background 2 Democratic Party nomination 2 1 Candidates gallery 3 Republican Party nomination 3 1 Candidates gallery 3 2 Primaries and convention 4 Reform Party nomination 4 1 Candidates gallery 5 Minor parties and independents 5 1 Libertarian Party nomination 5 2 Green Party nomination 5 3 Natural Law Party nomination 5 4 U S Taxpayers Party nomination 6 General election 6 1 Campaign 6 2 Presidential debates 6 3 Campaign donations controversy 6 4 Results 6 5 Results by state 6 5 1 Maine and Nebraska district results 6 5 2 Close states 6 5 3 Statistics 7 Voter demographics 8 Polling controversy 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 Books 12 2 Journals 12 3 Web references 13 External linksBackground editIn 1995 the Republican Party was riding high on the significant gains made in the 1994 mid term elections In those races the Republicans led by whip Newt Gingrich captured the majority of seats in the House for the first time in forty years and the majority of seats in the Senate for the first time in eight years Gingrich became Speaker of the House while Bob Dole was elevated to Senate Majority leader The Republicans of the 104th Congress pursued an ambitious agenda highlighted by their Contract with America but were often forced to compromise with President Clinton who wielded veto power A budget impasse between Congress and the Clinton Administration eventually resulted in a government shutdown Clinton meanwhile was praised for signing the GOP s welfare reform and other notable bills but was forced to abandon his own health care plan Democratic Party nomination editMain articles Bill Clinton 1996 presidential campaign 1996 Democratic Party presidential primaries and 1996 Democratic National Convention Democratic Candidates Bill Clinton President of the United States Lyndon LaRouche Activist from Virginia Jimmy Griffin Former Mayor of Buffalo from New York nbsp Democratic Party United States 1996 Democratic Party ticketBill Clinton Al Gorefor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 42nd President of the United States 1993 2001 45thVice President of the United States 1993 2001 Campaign nbsp Candidates gallery edit nbsp PresidentBill Clintonfrom Arkansas nbsp ActivistLyndon LaRouchefrom VirginiaWith the advantage of incumbency Bill Clinton s path to renomination by the Democratic Party was uneventful At the 1996 Democratic National Convention Clinton and incumbent Vice President Al Gore were renominated with token opposition Formerly incarcerated fringe candidate Lyndon LaRouche won a few Arkansas delegates who were barred from the convention Jimmy Griffin former Mayor of Buffalo New York mounted a brief campaign but withdrew after a poor showing in the New Hampshire primary Former Pennsylvania governor Bob Casey contemplated a challenge to Clinton but health problems forced Casey to abandon a bid 3 4 Clinton easily won primaries nationwide with margins consistently higher than 80 Popular primaries vote 5 Bill Clinton inc 9 730 184 88 5 Lyndon LaRouche 597 081 5 4 Unpledged 423 265 3 8 Convention tally 6 Bill Clinton inc 4 277 Not voting 12Republican Party nomination editMain articles Bob Dole 1996 presidential campaign 1996 Republican Party presidential primaries and 1996 Republican National Convention Republican Candidates Bob Dole U S Senator from Kansas and Republican nominee for Vice President of the United States in 1976 Pat Buchanan conservative columnist from Virginia Steve Forbes newspaper and magazine publisher from New York Lamar Alexander former Governor of Tennessee Phil Gramm U S Senator from Texas Alan Keyes former U S ECOSOC Ambassador from Maryland Richard Lugar U S Senator from Indiana Bob Dornan U S Representative from California Arlen Specter U S Senator from Pennsylvania Pete Wilson Governor of California Morry Taylor CEO from Michigan nbsp Republican Party United States 1996 Republican Party ticketBob Dole Jack Kempfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp U S Senator from Kansas 1969 1996 9thU S Secretary of Housing and Urban Development 1989 1993 Campaign nbsp Candidates gallery edit nbsp Senator then former Senator Bob Dolefrom Kansas nbsp Conservative columnistPat Buchananfrom Virginia nbsp Newspaper and magazine publisherSteve Forbesfrom New York nbsp Former GovernorLamar Alexanderof Tennessee nbsp Former U S ECOSOC AmbassadorAlan Keyes from Maryland nbsp SenatorRichard Lugarfrom Indiana nbsp SenatorPhil Grammfrom Texas nbsp RepresentativeBob Dornanfrom California nbsp SenatorArlen Specterfrom Pennsylvania nbsp GovernorPete Wilsonof CaliforniaA number of Republican candidates entered the field to challenge the incumbent Democratic president Bill Clinton The fragmented field of candidates debated issues such as a flat tax and other tax cut proposals and a return to supply side economic policies popularized by Ronald Reagan More attention was drawn to the race by the budget stalemate in 1995 between Congress and the President which caused temporary shutdowns and slowdowns in many areas of federal government service Former Secretary of Labor Lynn Martin of Illinois who served in the United States House of Representatives from Illinois s 16th District and was the 1990 Republican U S Senate nominee losing to incumbent Paul Simon conducted a bid for most of 1995 but withdrew before the Iowa caucuses as polls showed her languishing far behind She participated in a number of primary presidential debates before withdrawing 7 Martin s predecessor in Congress John Anderson had made first a Republican then independent presidential bid in 1980 Also Simon who defeated Martin for the U S Senate had run for president as a Democrat in 1988 Former U S Army General Colin Powell was widely courted as a potential Republican nominee However on November 8 1995 Powell announced that he would not seek the nomination Former Secretary of Defense and future Vice President of the United States Dick Cheney was touted by many as a possible candidate for the presidency but he declared his intentions not to run in early 1995 Former and future Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld formed a presidential campaign exploratory committee but declined to formally enter the race Former Secretary of State James A Baker III and former Secretary of Education William Bennett both flirted with bids both even set up exploratory committees for a number of months but both finally declared within days of each other they would not run either 8 Primaries and convention edit Main article 1996 Republican Party presidential primaries Ahead of the 1996 primary contest Republican Leader of the United States Senate and former vice presidential candidate Bob Dole was seen as the most likely winner However Steve Forbes finished first in Delaware and Arizona while paleoconservative firebrand Pat Buchanan managed early victories in Alaska and Louisiana in addition to a strong second place in the Iowa caucuses and a surprising victory in the small but key New Hampshire primary Buchanan s New Hampshire win alarmed the Republican establishment sufficiently as to provoke prominent Republicans to quickly coalesce around Dole 9 and Dole won every primary starting with North and South Dakota Dole resigned his Senate seat on June 11 and the Republican National Convention formally nominated Dole on August 15 1996 for president Popular primaries vote 5 Bob Dole 8 427 601 59 2 Pat Buchanan 3 021 935 21 2 Steve Forbes 1 425 998 10 0 Lamar Alexander 495 590 3 5 Alan Keyes 449 536 3 2 Richard Lugar 127 111 0 9 Unpledged 123 765 0 9 Phil Gramm 71 457 0 5 Bob Dornan 42 141 0 3 Morry Taylor 21 180 0 1 Convention tally 10 Bob Dole 1928 Pat Buchanan 43 Phil Gramm 2 Alan Keyes 1 Robert Bork 1 Not voting 15Former Representative and Housing Secretary Jack Kemp was nominated by acclamation for vice president the following day This was the only Republican ticket between 1980 and 2008 that did not include a member of the Bush family Reform Party nomination editMain articles 1996 Reform Party presidential primaries and Ross Perot 1996 presidential campaign 1996 Reform Party ticketRoss Perot Pat Choatefor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp President and CEO of Perot Systems 1988 2009 EconomistCampaign nbsp nbsp Ross Perot was on the ballot in every state Candidates gallery edit nbsp Party Founder Ross Perot from Texas nbsp Former Governor Richard Lamm of ColoradoThe United States Reform Party had great difficulty in finding a candidate willing to run in the general election Lowell Weicker Tim Penny David Boren and Richard Lamm were among those who toyed with the notion of seeking its presidential nomination though all but Lamm decided against it Lamm had himself come close to withdrawing his name from consideration Lamm designated Ed Zschau as his vice presidential candidate Ultimately the Reform Party nominated its founder Ross Perot from Texas in its first election as an official political party Although Perot easily won the nomination his victory at the party s national convention led to a schism as supporters of Lamm accused him of rigging the vote to prevent them from casting their ballots This faction walked out of the national convention and eventually formed their own group the American Reform Party and attempted to convince Lamm to run as an Independent in the general election Lamm declined pointing out a promise he made before running that he would respect the Party s final decision Economist Pat Choate was nominated for Vice President Minor parties and independents editMain article Third party and independent candidates for the 1996 United States presidential election Parties in this section obtained ballot access in enough states to theoretically obtain the minimum number of electoral votes needed to win the election Individuals included in this section completed one or more of the following actions received or formally announced their candidacy for the presidential nomination of a third party formally announced intention to run as an independent candidate and obtained enough ballot access to win the election filed as a third party or non affiliated candidate with the FEC for other than exploratory purposes Within each party candidates are listed alphabetically by surname Minor party candidates 1996Libertarian Green Natural Law U S Taxpayers Harry Browne Ralph Nader John Hagelin Howard Phillips nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Investment analyst Author and consumer advocate Scientist and researcher Conservative political activistLibertarian Party nomination edit nbsp Harry Browne was on the ballot in every state Libertarian candidates Harry Browne writer and investment analyst from Tennessee Rick Tompkins former candidate for Senator from Arizona Irwin Schiff writer and prominent figure in the tax protester movement from Nevada Douglas J Ohmen political activist from California Jeffrey Diket political activist from LouisianaThe Libertarian Party nominated free market writer and investment analyst Harry Browne from Tennessee and selected Jo Jorgensen from South Carolina as his running mate Browne and Jorgensen drew 485 798 votes 0 5 of the popular vote The Balloting Presidential Ballot 1stHarry Browne 416Rick Tompkins 74None 61Irwin Schiff 32Douglas J Ohmen 20Jeffrey Diket 1Jo Jorgensen 1Green Party nomination edit nbsp Ralph Nader was on the ballot in twenty one states 225 Electoral Votes Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write in candidate The Green Party of the United States Ralph Nader of Connecticut was drafted as a candidate for President of the United States on the Green Party ticket He was not formally nominated by the Green Party USA which was at the time the largest national Green group instead he was nominated independently by various state Green parties in some areas he appeared on the ballot as an independent Nader vowed to spend only 5 000 in his election campaign to avoid having to file a financial statement with the FEC Winona LaDuke a Native American activist and economist from Wisconsin was named as his running mate In Iowa and Vermont Anne Goeke was listed as Nader s running mate in New Jersey it was Madelyn Hoffman and in New York it was Muriel Tillinghast Nader and his running mates drew 685 128 votes 0 71 of the popular vote Natural Law Party nomination edit nbsp John Hagelin was on the ballot in forty three states 463 Electoral Votes Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write in candidate The Natural Law Party for a second time nominated scientist and researcher John Hagelin for president and Mike Tompkins for vice president The party platform included preventive health care sustainable agriculture and renewable energy technologies During his campaigns Hagelin favored abortion rights without public financing campaign finance law reform improved gun control a flat tax the eradication of PACs a ban on soft money contributions and school vouchers and was a believer in yogic flying Hagelin and Tompkins drew 113 671 votes 0 1 of the popular vote U S Taxpayers Party nomination edit nbsp Howard Phillips was on the ballot in thirty eight states 414 Electoral Votes Those states with a lighter shade are states in which he was an official write in candidate The U S Taxpayers Party had run its first presidential ticket in 1992 it being head by Howard Phillips who had failed to find any prominent conservative willing to take the mantle In 1996 the situation ultimately proved the same though Pat Buchanan for a time was widely speculated to be planning on bolting to the Taxpayers Party should the expected Republican nominee Senator Bob Dole name a pro choice running mate When Jack Kemp who opposed abortion was tapped for the position Buchanan agreed to endorse the Republican ticket Again Phillips found himself at a temporary post that was made permanent with Herbert Titus being nominated for the vice presidency Phillips and Titus drew 182 820 votes 0 2 of the popular vote General election editCampaign edit Without meaningful primary opposition Clinton was able to focus on the general election early while Dole was forced to move to the right and spend his campaign reserves fighting off challengers Political adviser Dick Morris urged Clinton to raise huge sums of campaign funds via soft money for an unprecedented early TV blitz of swing states promoting Clinton s agenda and record As a result Clinton could run a campaign through the summer defining his opponent as an aged conservative far from the mainstream before Dole was in a position to respond Compared to the 50 year old Clinton then 73 year old Dole appeared especially old and frail as illustrated by an embarrassing fall off a stage during a campaign event in Chico California Dole further enhanced this contrast on September 18 when he made a reference to a no hitter thrown the day before by Hideo Nomo of the Brooklyn Dodgers a team that had left Brooklyn for Los Angeles 38 years earlier A few days later Dole would make a joke about the remark by saying And I d like to congratulate the St Louis Cardinals on winning the N L Central Notice I said the St Louis Cardinals not the St Louis Browns The Browns had left St Louis after the 1954 season to become the Baltimore Orioles Dole chose to focus on Clinton as being part of the spoiled baby boomer generation and stating My generation won World War II and we may need to be called to service one last time Although his message won appeal with older voters surveys found that his age was widely held as a liability and his frequent allusions to WWII and the Great Depression in speeches and campaign ads unappealing to younger voters To prove that he was still healthy and active Dole released all of his medical records to the public and published photographs of himself running on a treadmill After the falling incident in California he joked that he was trying to do that new Democratic dance the macarena 11 The Clinton campaign avoided mentioning Dole s age directly instead choosing to confront it in more subtle ways such as the campaign slogan Building Bridges to the Future in contrast to the Republican candidate s frequent remarks that he was a bridge to the past before the social upheavals of the 1960s Clinton without actually calling Dole old questioned the age of his ideas 12 nbsp Dole left and Clinton right at the first presidential debate on October 6 1996 at The Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts in Hartford Connecticut With respect to the issues Dole promised a 15 across the board reduction in income tax rates and made former Congressman and supply side advocate Jack Kemp his running mate Bill Clinton framed the narrative against Dole early painting him as a mere clone of unpopular House Speaker Newt Gingrich warning America that Bob Dole would work in concert with the Republican Congress to slash popular social programs like Medicare and Social Security dubbed by Clinton as Dole Gingrich 13 Bob Dole s tax cut plan found itself under attack from the White House who said it would blow a hole in the deficit which had been cut nearly in half during his opponent s term 14 The televised debates featured only Dole and Clinton locking out Perot and the other minor candidates from the discussion Perot who had been allowed to participate in the 1992 debates would eventually take his case to court seeking damages from not being in the debate as well as citing unfair coverage from the major media outlets In a first for either major party in a presidential election both the Clinton and Dole campaigns had official websites Dole invited viewers to visit his homepage at the end of the first debate 15 Throughout the campaign Clinton maintained leads in the polls over Dole and Perot generally by large margins In October Republican National Committee operatives urg ed their party s Congressional candidates to cut loose from Bob Dole and press voters to maintain a Republican majority 16 and spent 4 million on advertising in targeted districts 17 Presidential debates edit Main article 1996 United States presidential debates Three debates organized by the Commission on Presidential Debates took place two between the presidential candidates and one between the vice presidential candidates Debates among candidates for the 1996 U S presidential election No Date Host Location Moderators Participants Viewership millions P1 Sunday October 6 1996 Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts Hartford Connecticut Jim Lehrer President Bill ClintonFormer Senator Bob Dole 46 1 18 VP Wednesday October 9 1996 Mahaffey Theater St Petersburg Florida Jim Lehrer Vice President Al GoreFormer Secretary Jack Kemp 26 6 18 P2 Wednesday October 16 1996 University of San Diego San Diego California Jim Lehrer President Bill ClintonFormer Senator Bob Dole 36 6 18 nbsp nbsp Bushnell Center for the Performing ArtsHartford CT nbsp Mahaffey TheaterSt Petersburg FL nbsp University of San DiegoSan Diego CAclass notpageimage Sites of the 1996 general election debates Campaign donations controversy edit Main article 1996 United States campaign finance controversy In late September 1995 questions arose regarding the Democratic National Committee s fund raising practices In February the following year China s alleged role in the campaign finance controversy first gained public attention after The Washington Post published a story stating that a U S Department of Justice investigation had discovered evidence that agents of China sought to direct contributions from foreign sources to the DNC before the 1996 presidential campaign The paper wrote that intelligence information had showed the Chinese Embassy in Washington D C was used for coordinating contributions to the DNC 19 in violation of U S law forbidding non American citizens from giving monetary donations to U S politicians and political parties Seventeen people were eventually convicted for fraud or for funneling Asian funds into the U S elections One of the more notable events learned involved Vice President Al Gore and a fund raising event held at Hsi Lai Temple in Hacienda Heights California The Temple event was organized by DNC fund raisers John Huang and Maria Hsia It is illegal under U S law for religious organizations to donate money to politicians or political groups due to their tax exempt status The U S Justice Department alleged Hsia facilitated 100 000 161 840 in 2021 in illegal contributions to the 1996 Clinton Gore re election campaign through her efforts at the Temple Hsia was eventually convicted by a jury in March 2000 20 The DNC eventually returned the money donated by the Temple s monks and nuns Twelve nuns and employees of the Temple refused to answer questions by pleading the Fifth Amendment when they were subpoenaed to testify before Congress in 1997 21 Results edit On election day President Clinton won a decisive victory over Dole becoming the first Democrat to win two consecutive presidential elections since Franklin D Roosevelt in 1936 1940 and 1944 In the popular vote he out polled Dole by over 8 2 million votes The Electoral College map did not change much from the previous election with the Democratic incumbent winning 379 votes to the Republican ticket s 159 In the West Dole managed to narrowly win Colorado and Montana both had voted for Clinton four years earlier while Clinton became the first Democrat to win Arizona since Harry Truman in 1948 In the South Clinton won Florida a state he had failed to win in 1992 but lost Georgia a state that he had carried The election helped to cement Democratic presidential control in California Vermont Maine Illinois New Jersey and Connecticut all went on to vote Democratic in every subsequent presidential election after having voted Republican in the five prior to 1992 1996 marked the first time that Vermont voted for a Democrat in two successive elections Pennsylvania and Michigan both voted Democratic and would remain in the Democratic presidential fold until 2016 Although Clinton s margin of victory in the popular vote was slightly greater than that of George H W Bush eight years prior he won fewer states in part due to his relatively poor performance in areas of low population density a precursor of the trend where future Democratic contenders for the presidency perform very well in populous metropolitan areas but vastly underperform in rural counties Reform Party nominee Ross Perot won approximately 8 of the popular vote His vote total was less than half of his performance in 1992 The 1996 national exit poll showed that just as in 1992 22 Perot drew supporters from Clinton and Dole equally 23 In polls directed at Perot voters as to who would be a second choice Clinton consistently held substantial leads 24 Perot s best showing was in states that tended to strongly favor either Clinton such as Maine or Dole particularly Montana though the margin of victory there was much closer Perot once again received his lowest amount of support in the South Although Clinton is a native of Arkansas and his running mate hailed from Tennessee the Democratic ticket carried just four of the eleven states of the former Confederacy and of those four only Florida and Georgia have voted Democratic in any election since As such Clinton s 1992 run was tied for the weakest performance in the region by a nationally successful Democratic presidential candidate up until that point Clinton s performance both followed and preceded a substantial decline in support for the Democratic Party in the South in the 2000 and 2004 elections the Democrats would fail to carry even one of the former Confederate states contributing to their defeat both times This completed the Republican takeover of the American South a region in which Democrats had held a near monopoly from 1880 to 1948 In 2008 the Democrats were able to win three former Confederate states Virginia North Carolina and Florida however this was still a worse performance than either of Clinton s Since 1984 no winning presidential candidate has surpassed Bill Clinton s 8 5 percent popular vote margin or his 220 electoral vote margin since 1988 Additionally since 1964 no other Democratic presidential candidate has surpassed Clinton s electoral vote margin and except Lyndon B Johnson in that election no Democratic presidential candidate has surpassed Clinton s 8 5 percentage popular vote margin since 1940 The election also marked the first time in U S history that the winner was elected without winning the male vote the third time in U S history that a candidate won two terms as president without winning a majority either time after Grover Cleveland and Woodrow Wilson both Democrats 23 Clinton also remains the last presidential candidate of either party to win at least one county in every state 25 Clinton maintained a consistent polling edge over Dole and he won re election with a substantial margin in the popular vote and the Electoral College Clinton became the first Democrat since Franklin D Roosevelt to win two consecutive presidential elections Dole won 40 7 of the popular vote and 159 electoral votes while Perot won 8 4 of the popular vote Despite Dole s defeat the Republican Party was able to maintain majorities in both the House of Representatives and the Senate Voter turnout was registered at 51 7 the lowest for a presidential election since 1924 As of 2020 this remains the last time that the states of Kentucky Louisiana West Virginia Arkansas Missouri and Tennessee were carried by a Democratic presidential nominee It was also the first time most Arizona voters chose a Democratic candidate since 1948 which they would not do again until 2020 Five states switched party predominance in 1996 with their presidential voting Montana Colorado and Georgia were flipped by Senator Dole while Florida and Arizona were flipped by President Clinton This is also the most recent time a third party candidate finished with over 5 of the vote nationwide This is the last time a Democratic president was re elected with a higher share of the electoral or popular vote Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteWilliam Jefferson Clinton Incumbent Democratic a Arkansas 47 401 185 49 24 379 Albert Arnold Gore Jr Incumbent Tennessee 379Robert Joseph Dole Republican b Kansas 39 197 469 40 71 159 Jack French Kemp New York 27 159Henry Ross Perot Reform c Texas 8 085 294 8 40 0 Patrick Choate d Washington D C 0Ralph Nader Green Connecticut 684 871 0 71 0 Winona LaDuke e California 0Harry Edson Browne Libertarian Tennessee 485 759 0 50 0 Jo Jorgensen South Carolina 0Howard Jay Phillips Taxpayers Virginia 184 656 0 19 0 Herbert W Titus Oregon 0John Samuel Hagelin Natural Law Iowa 113 667 0 12 0 Mike Tompkins Massachusetts 0Other f 121 663 0 12 Other f Total 96 274 564 100 538 538Needed to win 270 270Official Source Popular Vote 1996 Official Presidential General Election ResultsSource popular and electoral vote Federal Elections Commission Electoral and Popular Vote Summary unofficial Secondary Source Popular Vote Leip David 1996 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved August 7 2005 Voting age population 196 498 000Percent of voting age population casting a vote for President 49 00 Popular voteClinton 49 24 Dole 40 71 Perot 8 40 Nader 0 71 Browne 0 50 Others 0 44 Electoral voteClinton 70 45 Dole 29 55 nbsp nbsp Election results by county Bill Clinton Bob Dole nbsp Results by congressional district shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the vote nbsp Results by county shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the vote Results by state edit Legend States districts won by Clinton GoreStates districts won by Dole Kemp At large results For states that split electoral votes Bill ClintonDemocratic Bob DoleRepublican Ross PerotReform Ralph NaderGreen Harry BrowneLibertarian Others Margin State TotalState elec toralvotes elec toralvotes elec toralvotes elec toralvotes elec toralvotes elec toralvotes elec toralvotes Alabama 9 662 165 43 16 769 044 50 12 9 92 149 6 01 5 290 0 34 5 701 0 37 106 879 6 96 1 534 349 ALAlaska 3 80 380 33 27 122 746 50 80 3 26 333 10 90 7 597 3 14 2 276 0 94 2 288 0 95 42 366 17 53 241 620 AKArizona 8 653 288 46 52 8 622 073 44 29 112 072 7 98 2 062 0 15 14 358 1 02 552 0 04 31 215 2 23 1 404 405 AZArkansas 6 475 171 53 74 6 325 416 36 80 69 884 7 90 3 649 0 41 3 076 0 35 7 066 0 80 149 755 16 94 884 262 ARCalifornia 54 5 119 835 51 10 54 3 828 380 38 21 697 847 6 96 237 016 2 37 73 600 0 73 62 806 0 63 1 291 455 12 89 10 019 484 CAColorado 8 671 152 44 43 691 848 45 80 8 99 629 6 59 25 070 1 66 12 392 0 82 10 613 0 70 20 696 1 37 1 510 704 COConnecticut 8 735 740 52 83 8 483 109 34 69 139 523 10 02 24 321 1 75 5 788 0 42 4 133 0 30 252 631 18 14 1 392 614 CTDelaware 3 140 355 51 80 3 99 062 36 58 28 719 10 60 18 0 01 2 052 0 76 639 0 24 41 293 15 22 270 845 DED C 3 158 220 85 19 3 17 339 9 34 3 611 1 94 4 780 2 57 588 0 32 1 188 0 64 140 881 75 85 185 726 DCFlorida 25 2 546 870 48 02 25 2 244 536 42 32 483 870 9 12 4 101 0 08 23 965 0 45 452 0 01 302 334 5 70 5 303 794 FLGeorgia 13 1 053 849 45 84 1 080 843 47 01 13 146 337 6 37 17 870 0 78 172 0 01 26 994 1 17 2 299 071 GAHawaii 4 205 012 56 93 4 113 943 31 64 27 358 7 60 10 386 2 88 2 493 0 69 928 0 26 91 069 25 29 360 120 HIIdaho 4 165 443 33 65 256 595 52 18 4 62 518 12 71 3 325 0 68 3 838 0 78 91 152 18 53 491 719 IDIllinois 22 2 341 744 54 32 22 1 587 021 36 81 346 408 8 03 1 447 0 03 22 548 0 52 12 223 0 29 754 723 17 51 4 311 391 ILIndiana 12 887 424 41 55 1 006 693 47 13 12 224 299 10 50 1 121 0 05 15 632 0 73 673 0 03 119 269 5 58 2 135 842 INIowa 7 620 258 50 26 7 492 644 39 92 105 159 8 52 6 550 0 53 2 315 0 19 7 149 0 58 127 614 10 34 1 234 075 IAKansas 6 387 659 36 08 583 245 54 29 6 92 639 8 62 914 0 09 4 557 0 42 5 286 0 49 195 586 18 21 1 074 300 KSKentucky 8 636 614 45 84 8 623 283 44 88 120 396 8 67 701 0 05 4 009 0 29 3 705 0 27 13 331 0 96 1 388 708 KYLouisiana 9 927 837 52 01 9 712 586 39 94 123 293 6 91 4 719 0 26 7 499 0 42 8 025 0 45 215 251 12 07 1 783 959 LAMaine 2 312 788 51 62 2 186 378 30 76 85 970 14 19 15 279 2 52 2 996 0 49 2 486 0 41 126 410 20 86 605 897 MEMaine 1 1 165 053 52 1 1 100 851 31 8 39 845 12 6 11 372 3 6 64 202 20 3 317 121 ME1Maine 2 1 147 735 51 2 1 85 527 29 6 46 125 16 0 9 389 3 3 62 208 21 5 288 776 ME2Maryland 10 966 207 54 25 10 681 530 38 27 115 812 6 50 2 606 0 15 8 765 0 49 5 950 0 33 284 677 15 98 1 780 870 MDMassachusetts 12 1 571 763 61 47 12 718 107 28 08 227 217 8 89 4 565 0 18 20 426 0 80 14 708 0 58 853 656 33 39 2 556 786 MAMichigan 18 1 989 653 51 69 18 1 481 212 38 48 336 670 8 75 2 322 0 06 27 670 0 72 11 317 0 29 508 441 13 21 3 848 844 MIMinnesota 10 1 120 438 51 10 10 766 476 34 96 257 704 11 75 24 908 1 14 8 271 0 38 14 843 0 68 353 962 16 14 2 192 640 MNMississippi 7 394 022 44 08 439 838 49 21 7 52 222 5 84 2 809 0 31 4 966 0 56 45 816 5 13 893 857 MSMissouri 11 1 025 935 47 54 11 890 016 41 24 217 188 10 06 534 0 02 10 522 0 49 13 870 0 64 135 919 6 30 2 158 065 MOMontana 3 167 922 41 23 179 652 44 11 3 55 229 13 56 2 526 0 62 1 932 0 47 11 730 2 88 407 261 MTNebraska 2 236 761 34 95 363 467 53 65 2 71 278 10 52 2 792 0 41 3 117 0 46 126 706 18 70 677 415 NENebraska 1 1 87 713 38 1 114 560 49 7 1 25 973 11 3 2 074 0 9 28 847 11 7 230 330 NE1Nebraska 2 1 84 666 38 0 116 892 52 5 1 18 935 8 5 2 164 1 0 32 226 14 5 222 660 NE2Nebraska 3 1 64 382 28 7 132 015 58 8 1 26 370 11 8 1 658 0 7 67 633 30 1 224 425 NE3Nevada 4 203 974 43 93 4 199 244 42 91 43 986 9 47 4 730 1 02 4 460 0 96 7 885 1 70 4 730 1 02 464 279 NVNew Hampshire 4 246 214 49 32 4 196 532 39 37 48 390 9 69 4 237 0 85 3 802 0 76 49 682 9 95 499 175 NHNew Jersey 15 1 652 329 53 72 15 1 103 078 35 86 262 134 8 52 32 465 1 06 14 763 0 48 11 038 0 36 549 251 17 86 3 075 807 NJNew Mexico 5 273 495 49 18 5 232 751 41 86 32 257 5 80 13 218 2 38 2 996 0 54 1 357 0 24 40 744 7 32 556 074 NMNew York 33 3 756 177 59 47 33 1 933 492 30 61 503 458 7 97 75 956 1 20 12 220 0 19 34 826 0 55 1 822 685 28 86 6 316 129 NYNorth Carolina 14 1 107 849 44 04 1 225 938 48 73 14 168 059 6 68 2 108 0 08 8 740 0 35 3 113 0 12 118 089 4 69 2 515 807 NCNorth Dakota 3 106 905 40 13 125 050 46 94 3 32 515 12 20 847 0 32 1 094 0 41 18 145 6 81 266 411 NDOhio 21 2 148 222 47 38 21 1 859 883 41 02 483 207 10 66 2 962 0 07 12 851 0 28 27 309 0 60 288 339 6 36 4 534 434 OHOklahoma 8 488 105 40 45 582 315 48 26 8 130 788 10 84 5 505 0 46 94 210 7 81 1 206 713 OKOregon 7 649 641 47 15 7 538 152 39 06 121 221 8 80 49 415 3 59 8 903 0 65 10 428 0 76 111 489 8 09 1 377 760 ORPennsylvania 23 2 215 819 49 17 23 1 801 169 39 97 430 984 9 56 3 086 0 07 28 000 0 62 27 060 0 60 414 650 9 20 4 506 118 PARhode Island 4 233 050 59 71 4 104 683 26 82 43 723 11 20 6 040 1 55 1 109 0 28 1 679 0 43 128 367 32 89 390 284 RISouth Carolina 8 506 283 43 96 573 458 49 79 8 64 386 5 59 4 271 0 37 3 291 0 29 67 175 5 83 1 151 689 SCSouth Dakota 3 139 333 43 03 150 543 46 49 3 31 250 9 65 1 472 0 45 1 228 0 38 11 210 3 46 323 826 SDTennessee 11 909 146 48 00 11 863 530 45 59 105 918 5 59 6 427 0 34 5 020 0 27 4 064 0 21 45 616 2 41 1 894 105 TNTexas 32 2 459 683 43 83 2 736 167 48 76 32 378 537 6 75 4 810 0 09 20 256 0 36 12 191 0 22 276 484 4 93 5 611 644 TXUtah 5 221 633 33 30 361 911 54 37 5 66 461 9 98 4 615 0 69 4 129 0 62 6 880 1 03 140 278 21 07 665 629 UTVermont 3 137 894 53 35 3 80 352 31 09 31 024 12 00 5 585 2 16 1 183 0 46 2 411 0 93 57 542 22 26 258 449 VTVirginia 13 1 091 060 45 15 1 138 350 47 10 13 159 861 6 62 9 174 0 38 18 197 0 75 47 290 1 95 2 416 642 VAWashington 11 1 123 323 49 84 11 840 712 37 30 201 003 8 92 60 322 2 68 12 522 0 56 15 955 0 71 282 611 12 54 2 253 837 WAWest Virginia 5 327 812 51 51 5 233 946 36 76 71 639 11 26 3 062 0 48 93 866 14 75 636 459 WVWisconsin 11 1 071 971 48 81 11 845 029 38 48 227 339 10 35 28 723 1 31 7 929 0 36 15 178 0 69 226 942 10 33 2 196 169 WIWyoming 3 77 934 36 84 105 388 49 81 3 25 928 12 25 1 739 0 82 582 0 28 27 454 12 97 211 571 WYTOTALS 538 47 402 357 49 24 379 39 198 755 40 71 159 8 085 402 8 40 685 128 0 71 485 798 0 50 420 194 0 44 8 203 602 8 52 96 277 634 US 31 Maine and Nebraska district results edit Maine and Nebraska each allow for their electoral votes to be split between candidates In both states two electoral votes are awarded to the winner of the statewide race and one electoral vote is awarded to the winner of each congressional district 32 Close states edit State where the margin of victory was under 1 8 electoral votes Kentucky 0 96 13 331 votes States where the margin of victory was under 5 109 electoral votes Nevada 1 02 4 730 votes Georgia 1 17 26 994 votes Colorado 1 37 20 696 votes Virginia 1 96 47 290 votes Arizona 2 22 31 215 votes Tennessee 2 41 45 616 votes Montana 2 88 11 730 votes South Dakota 3 46 11 210 votes North Carolina 4 69 118 089 votes Texas 4 93 276 484 votes States where the margin of victory was between 5 and 10 143 electoral votes Mississippi 5 13 45 816 votes Indiana 5 58 119 269 votes Florida 5 70 302 334 votes South Carolina 6 04 69 407 votes Missouri 6 30 135 919 votes Ohio 6 36 288 339 votes North Dakota 6 81 18 145 votes Alabama 6 96 106 879 votes New Mexico 7 32 40 744 votes Oklahoma 7 81 94 210 votes Oregon 8 09 111 489 votes Pennsylvania 9 20 414 650 votes tipping point state New Hampshire 9 95 49 682 votes Statistics edit 31 Counties with Highest Percent of Vote Democratic Starr County Texas 86 94 Bronx County New York 85 80 Macon County Alabama 85 55 Washington D C 85 19 Duval County Texas 84 94 Counties with Highest Percent of Vote Republican Ochiltree County Texas 79 20 Russell County Kansas 78 98 Glasscock County Texas 78 93 Hayes County Nebraska 77 02 Sioux County Iowa 77 00 Counties with Highest Percent of Vote Other Mineral County Montana 23 72 Grant County North Dakota 21 55 Shoshone County Idaho 21 55 Sanders County Montana 21 24 Billings County North Dakota 21 10 Voter demographics editThe presidential vote in social groups percentages Social group Clinton Dole Perot Others oftotal voteTotal vote 49 41 8 2 100Party and ideologyConservative Republicans 6 88 5 1 21Moderate Republicans 20 72 7 1 13Liberal Republicans 44 46 9 1 2Conservative independents 19 60 19 2 7Moderate independents 50 30 17 3 15Liberal independents 58 15 18 9 4Conservative Democrats 69 23 7 1 6Moderate Democrats 84 10 5 1 20Liberal Democrats 89 5 4 2 13Gender and marital statusMarried men 40 48 10 2 32Married women 48 43 7 2 33Unmarried men 49 36 12 3 15Unmarried women 62 28 7 3 20RaceWhite 43 46 9 2 83Black 84 11 4 1 10Hispanic 72 21 6 1 5Asian 43 48 8 1 1ReligionProtestant 41 50 8 1 38Catholic 53 37 9 1 29Other Christian 45 41 12 2 16Jewish 78 16 3 3 3Other 60 23 11 6 6None 59 23 13 5 7White Religious RightWhite Religious Right 26 65 8 1 17Everyone else 54 35 9 2 83Age18 29 years old 53 34 10 3 1630 44 years old 48 41 9 2 3345 59 years old 48 41 9 2 2660 and older 48 44 7 1 25First time votersFirst time voter 54 34 11 1 9Everyone else 48 42 8 2 91Sexual orientationGay lesbian or bisexual 66 23 7 4 5Heterosexual 47 43 8 2 95EducationNot a high school graduate 59 28 11 2 6High school graduate 51 35 13 1 24Some college education 48 40 10 2 27College graduate 44 46 8 2 26Postgraduate education 52 40 5 3 17Family incomeUnder 15 000 59 28 11 2 11 15 000 30 000 51 38 9 2 23 30 000 50 000 48 40 10 2 27 50 000 75 000 47 45 7 1 21 75 000 100 000 44 48 7 1 9Over 100 000 38 54 6 2 9RegionEast 55 34 9 2 23Midwest 48 41 10 1 26South 46 46 7 1 30West 48 40 8 4 20Community sizePopulation over 500 000 68 25 5 2 10Population 50 000 to 500 000 50 39 8 3 21Suburbs 47 42 8 3 39Rural areas towns 45 44 10 1 30Source Voter News Service exit poll reported in The New York Times November 10 1996 28 33 Polling controversy editThe polling in the election was criticized by Everett Carll Ladd who argued that polls had overestimated Clinton s lead during the campaign and had thereby dampened interest in the election 34 Others such as Warren J Mitofsky rebutted Ladd s view in an analysis in Public Opinion Quarterly Mitofsky wrote that 1996 was not the best but was far from the worst year for the polls with accuracy surpassing the polling in 1948 and in 1980 34 Because Clinton won the election by a comfortable margin there was no major reaction towards the impreciseness of the polls 34 See also editList of presidents of the United States Second inauguration of Bill Clinton Newspaper endorsements in the 1996 United States presidential election 1996 United States gubernatorial elections 1996 United States House of Representatives elections 1996 United States Senate electionsNotes edit In New York the Clinton vote was a fusion of the Democratic and Liberal slates There Clinton obtained 3 649 630 votes on the Democratic ticket and 106 547 votes on the Liberal ticket 26 In New York the Dole vote was a fusion of the Republican Conservative and Freedom slates There Dole obtained 1 738 707 votes on the Republican ticket 183 392 votes on the Conservative ticket and 11 393 votes on the Freedom ticket 26 In South Carolina the Perot vote was a fusion of the Reform and Patriot slates There Perot obtained 27 464 votes on the Reform ticket and 36 913 votes on the Patriot ticket 26 On the California Indiana Iowa Kansas Louisiana Maine Maryland Missouri Montana Oregon South Dakota Tennessee and Texas election ballots James Campbell of California Perot s former boss at IBM was listed as a stand in vice presidential candidate until Perot decided on Pat Choate as his choice for Vice President The Green Party vice presidential candidate varied from state to state Winona LaDuke was his vice presidential candidate in eighteen of the twenty two states where he appeared on the ballot Anne Goeke was Nader s running mate in Iowa 28 and Vermont Madelyn Hoffman was his running mate in New Jersey 29 Muriel Tillinghast was his running mate in New York 30 Candidates receiving less than 0 05 of the total popular vote References edit National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Election Project CQ Press Election Dates Uselectionatlas org Retrieved June 17 2010 Anyone left The search for a Clinton challenger in 1996 The Progressive TheFreeLibrary com May 1 1995 Retrieved December 6 2010 Newton Small Jay November 24 2009 Can a Pro Life Dem Bridge the Health Care Divide Time Archived from the original on November 27 2009 Retrieved December 6 2010 a b Kalb Deborah ed 2010 Guide to U S Elections Washington DC CQ Press pp 460 461 ISBN 978 1 60426 536 1 Kalb Deborah ed 2010 Guide to U S Elections Washington DC CQ Press p 745 ISBN 978 1 60426 536 1 New Hampshire Republican Forum C SPAN org February 19 1995 Retrieved August 7 2018 Washington watch June 6 1994 Republicans Prepare to Run in 1996 Arab American Institute Aaiusa org Archived from the original on October 1 2017 Retrieved April 4 2018 Julie Hirschfeld Davis January 26 2012 Stop Newt Republicans Confront New Base Bloomberg News Kalb Deborah ed 2010 Guide to U S Elections Washington DC CQ Press p 744 ISBN 978 1 60426 536 1 Hardy Thomas September 20 1996 Dole Makes Strong Rebound After Fall Chicago Tribune Lewis Matt September 25 2008 McCain and Obama Can Learn A Lot From Past Debaters Townhall com Retrieved August 18 2016 It s the age of his ideas that I question Berke Richard L October 7 1996 Clinton And Dole Face To Face Spar Over Medicare And Taxes The New York Times Retrieved May 26 2010 09 02 96 Medicare Taxes and Bob Dole A Talk with the President Business Week June 14 1997 Archived from the original on June 28 1997 Retrieved June 17 2010 Shields Mike February 18 2016 An Oral History of The First Presidential Campaign Websites in 1996 The Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 12 2020 Clyme Adam October 23 1996 G O P Pushes Congress Strategy That Shuns Dole The New York Times Romano Andrew August 16 2016 Down Ticket 3 Republicans want to keep Congress by sacrificing Trump Good luck with that Yahoo News a b c CPD 1996 Debates www debates org Retrieved January 8 2019 Woodward Bob Duffy Brian February 13 1997 Chinese Embassy Role In Contributions Probed The Washington Post Eskenazi Michael March 3 2000 For both Gore and GOP a guilty verdict to watch CNN Archived from the original on April 3 2013 Abse Nathan June 9 1998 A Look at the 94 Who Aren t Talking The Washington Post Holmes Steven A November 5 1992 The 1992 Elections Disappointment News Analysis An Eccentric but No Joke Perot s Strong Showing Raises Questions On What Might Have Been and Might Be The New York Times Retrieved May 26 2010 a b AllPolitics Presidential Election Exit Poll Results CNN November 1996 AllPolitics Tracking Poll CNN November 4 1996 Sullivan Robert David How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century America Magazine in The National Catholic Review June 29 2016 a b c 96 Presidential and Congressional Election Statistics Official website of the Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives Archived from the original on January 26 2006 Retrieved February 17 2006 Matthews Dylan August 9 2012 The effect of veep picks in two charts The Washington Post Retrieved November 27 2014 Jack Kemp whose home state of New York saw an even stronger anti Republican swing in 1996 November 12 1996 PDF Minutes of the Meetings of the Board of Supervisors Cerro Gordo County 1996 Archived from the original PDF on May 26 2006 Retrieved March 30 2006 Fernandez Sonia February 22 2000 Nader 55 to run for president The Daily Princetonian Daily Princetonian Publishing Company Inc Archived from the original on March 24 2007 Retrieved March 30 2006 Electors of President and Vice President Cattaraugus County Board of Elections 1996 Election Results Cattaraugus County New York State Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved March 30 2006 a b 1996 Presidential General Election Data National Uselectionatlas org Quain Anthony J 1999 The Political Reference Almanac 1999 2000 Keynote Publishing Company pp 405 406 435 436 ISBN 978 0 9670286 0 6 Connelly Marjorie November 10 1996 Portrait of the Electorate The New York Times a b c Mitofsky W J 1998 Review Was 1996 a Worse Year for Polls Than 1948 The Public Opinion Quarterly 62 2 230 249 doi 10 1086 297842 Further reading editBooks edit Ceaser James W Andrew E Busch 1997 Losing to Win The 1996 Elections and American Politics ISBN 0 8476 8405 9 Clinton Bill 2005 My Life Vintage ISBN 1 4000 3003 X Dole Bob and Jack Kemp 1996 Trusting the People The Dole Kemp Plan to Free the Economy and Create a Better America HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 101153 3 Green John C 1999 Financing the 1996 Election ISBN 0 585 26014 1 Moreland Laurence W Steed Robert P eds 1997 The 1996 Presidential Election in the South Southern Party Systems in the 1990s ISBN 0 275 95951 1 Pomper Gerald M et al 1997 The Election of 1996 Reports and Interpretations ISBN 0 585 22457 9 Srodes James L Arthur Jones 1996 Campaign 1996 Who s Who in the Race for the White House ISBN 978 006100993 8 Woodward Bob 1996 The Choice Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 068481308 0 Journals edit Immelman Aubrey The political personalities of 1996 US presidential candidates Bill Clinton and Bob Dole Leadership Quarterly 9 3 1998 335 366 online Jelen Ted G Marthe Chandler 2000 Culture Wars in the Trenches Social Issues as Short Term Forces in Presidential Elections 1968 1996 The American Review of Politics 21 69 87 Web references edit Libertarian Party Historical Overview Archived from the original on January 30 2006 Retrieved January 25 2006 Fear amp Loathing on the Campaign Trail 96 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 21 2011 External links editCampaign websitesClinton Gore 1996 website screen shots Dole Kemp Page at the Wayback Machine archived 1996 11 06 as of 1996 Dole Kemp 1996 website still active as of February 2021 Other linksThe Election Wall s 1996 Election Video Page 1996 popular vote by counties 1996 popular vote by states 1996 popular vote by states with bar graphs CNN 1996 Presidential Campaign Ads Popular vote data from the Federal Election Commission Choose or Lose at the Wayback Machine archived 1996 12 22 MTV pages on the election Election of 1996 in Counting the Votes at the Wayback Machine archived April 4 2016 Documentary about the 1996 Vice Presidential Candidates Running Mate 1996 10 01 The Walter J Brown Media Archives amp Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia American Archive of Public Broadcasting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1996 United States presidential election amp oldid 1186000027, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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