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2012 United States Senate election in Minnesota

The 2012 United States Senate election in Minnesota took place on November 6, 2012, concurrently with the U.S. presidential election as well as other elections to the United States Senate and House of Representatives as well as various state and local elections. Incumbent Democratic–Farmer–Labor U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar faced Republican State Representative Kurt Bills. Klobuchar was reelected in a landslide, defeating Bills by almost one million votes and carrying all but two of the state's 87 counties by double digits.[1] This election marked the first time since 1996 that an incumbent Democratic senator was re-elected and the first time since 1976 that an incumbent Democratic senator was re-elected to this seat.

2012 United States Senate election in Minnesota

← 2006 November 6, 2012 2018 →
 
Nominee Amy Klobuchar Kurt Bills
Party Democratic (DFL) Republican
Popular vote 1,854,595 867,874
Percentage 65.2% 30.5%

Klobuchar:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Bills:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Tie:      40–50%      50%
     No votes

Background edit

Incumbent Amy Klobuchar was first elected in 2006 to succeed the retiring DFL incumbent Mark Dayton. She beat Republican nominee Mark Kennedy, 58% to 38%. Klobuchar served as Minnesota's only senator between January 3 and July 7, 2009, due to the contested results of Minnesota's senatorial election held the previous year, finally decided in favor of DFLer Al Franken.

DFL primary edit

The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party held its Senate primary on August 14, 2012.[2]

Candidates edit

Declared edit

  • Dick Franson, perennial candidate[3]
  • Amy Klobuchar, incumbent U.S. Senator
  • Jack Shepard, dentist, convicted felon, fugitive and perennial candidate[4][5]
  • Darryl Stanton

Results edit

Democratic–Farmer–Labor primary results[6]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Amy Klobuchar (incumbent) 183,702 90.79
Democratic (DFL) Dick Franson 6,832 3.38
Democratic (DFL) Jack Shepard 6,638 3.28
Democratic (DFL) Darryl Stanton 5,160 2.55
Total votes 202,332 100

Republican primary edit

The Republican Party of Minnesota held its nominating convention in May 2012 and held its Senate primary on August 14, 2012.[2]

Candidates edit

Declared edit

  • Kurt Bills, state representative; won May 2012 convention nomination[7]
  • David Carlson, former Marine Corps sergeant; candidate in August 2012 primary
  • Bob Carney Jr., inventor, independent businessman; finished 2nd in 2010 GOP primary for Governor of Minnesota, candidate in August 2012 primary[8]

Withdrew edit

  • Joe Arwood, St. Bonifacius city councilman; withdrew before May 2012 convention
  • Pete Hegseth, executive director of Vets for Freedom; withdrew after May 2012 convention
  • Anthony Hernandez, former state senate candidate; withdrew before May 2012 convention to run for Congress against Betty McCollum
  • Dan Severson, former state representative; withdrew after May 2012 convention

Results edit

 
Results by county:
Bills
  •   60–70%
  •   50–60%
  •   40–50%
Carlson
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
Republican primary results[6]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kurt Bills 63,380 51.12
Republican David Carlson 43,847 35.37
Republican Bob Carney, Jr. 16,755 13.51
Total votes 123,982 100

Independence primary edit

Campaign edit

The Independence Party of Minnesota did not plan to run a candidate in the general election. Party chairman Mark Jenkins said in November 2011 that he saw the Senate election as "a distraction from having our best and brightest engaged in state legislative races".[9] At the party's convention in June 2012, neither candidate was endorsed. Williams won a majority of the votes and came within two votes of the required 60% needed for the party's endorsement. He proceeded with his run for the Senate but the party focused its attention on state legislative races.[10]

Candidates edit

Results edit

Independence Party primary results[6]
Party Candidate Votes %
Independence Stephen Williams 3,068 59.67
Independence Glen R. Anderson Menze 2,074 40.33
Total votes 5,142 100

General election edit

Candidates edit

Debates edit

On August 29 Klobuchar and Bills held their second debate at the State Fair, sponsored by MPR News. Their third debate, on September 16 in Duluth, was about the nation's struggle with deficit spending and unemployment. The audience was assembled by the Duluth Area Chamber of Commerce and Duluth News Tribune.[12]

External links
  • Complete video at Minnesota Public Radio, second debate, August 29, 2012
  • Audio from Minnesota Public Radio, third debate, September 18, 2012

Fundraising edit

Candidate (party) Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand Debt Current Through
Amy Klobuchar (D) $6,301,413 $2,530,567 $5,393,798 $0 July 25, 2012
Kurt Bills (R) $394,547 $388,720 $5,841 $0 July 25, 2012
Source: Federal Election Commission[13]

Top contributors edit

This section lists the top contributors by employer. These organizations themselves didn't donate, but these numbers include donations from their PACs, members, employees, owners, and their immediate families.

Amy Klobuchar Contribution Kurt Bills Contribution
Dorsey & Whitney $61,100 Liberty PAC $10,000
Target Corp $56,050 Craw $10,000
General Mills $51,750 Primera Technology $10,000
U.S. Bancorp $51,139 Minnesota Limited Pipeline $7,500
Robins, Kaplan, Miller & Ciresi $49,150 Ameriprise Financial $5,000
Medtronic Inc. $41,025 Bachmann for Congress $5,000
Toys R Us $36,500 Exactdrive $5,000
Leonard, Street & Deinard $34,350 New Spark Holdings $5,000
Comcast Corp $33,623 TACPAC $5,000
Wells Fargo $32,400 Twin City Fan Companies $5,000
Source: OpenSecrets,[14] Current through: March 9, 2012

Top industries edit

Amy Klobuchar Contribution Kurt Bills Contribution
Lawyers/Law Firms $989,929 Leadership PACs $17,850
Retired $447,082 Republican/Conservative $13,750
Leadership PACs $302,150 Financial Institutions $13,250
Lobbyists $282,430 Real Estate $12,550
Financial Institutions $269,033 Retired $10,350
Entertainment industry $256,711 Energy Industry $10,250
Women's Issues $196,866 Electronics Manufacturing $10,000
Retail industry $181,850 Misc. Business $9,450
Commercial Banks $159,139 Manufacturing & Distributing $7,850
Pharmaceuticals/Health Products $149,725 Computers/Internet $7,350
Source: OpenSecrets,[15] Current through: March 9, 2012

Predictions edit

Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[16] Solid D November 1, 2012
Sabato's Crystal Ball[17] Safe D November 5, 2012
Rothenberg Political Report[18] Safe D November 2, 2012
Real Clear Politics[19] Safe D November 5, 2012

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Kurt
Bills (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling May 31 – June 3, 2012 973 ±3.1% 55% 29% 16%
Survey USA July 17–19, 2012 552 ±4.3% 55% 31% 5% 9%
KSTP/Survey USA September 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine September 6–9, 2012 551 ±4.2% 55% 34% 11%
Public Policy Polling September 10–11, 2012 824 ±3.4% 55% 36% 10%
Star Tribune/Mason-Dixon September 17–19, 2012 800 ±3.5% 57% 28% 7% 8%
Public Policy Polling October 5–8, 2012 937 ±3.2% 57% 31% 12%
SurveyUSA/KSTP October 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine October 12–14, 2012 550 ±4.2% 58% 30% 5% 7%
St. Cloud State U.[permanent dead link] October 15–21, 2012 600 ±5% 63% 36% 1%
Rasmussen Reports October 21, 2012 500 ±4.5% 56% 33% 2% 9%
Star Tribune/Mason-Dixon October 23–25, 2012 800 ±3.5% 65% 22% 13%
SurveyUSA October 26–28, 2012 574 ±4.1% 60% 29% 4% 7%
KSTP/SurveyUSA November 8, 2012, at the Wayback Machine November 1–3, 2012 556 ±4.2% 60% 30% 3% 7%
Public Policy Polling November 2–3, 2012 1,164 ±2.9% 62% 32% 6%
Hypothetical polling
Republican primary
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Michele
Bachmann
Laura
Brod
Norm
Coleman
Chip
Cravaack
Tom
Emmer
John
Kline
Erik
Paulsen
Tim
Pawlenty
Other/
Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–5, 2010 387 ±5.0% 36% 4% 14% 7% 6% 5% 2% 20% 6%
General election
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Joe
Arwood (R)
Other Undecided
Survey USA November 2–6, 2011 543 ±4.3% 56% 22% 22%
Public Policy Polling January 21–22, 2012 1,236 ±2.8% 55% 30% 15%
Survey USA January 31 – February 2, 2012 542 ±4.2% 59% 28% 14%
Public Policy Polling May 31 – June 3, 2012 973 ±3.1% 56% 29% 15%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Michele
Bachmann (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–5, 2010 949 ±3.2% 56% 39% 4%
Public Policy Polling May 27–30, 2011 1,179 ±2.9% 57% 37% 5%
Public Policy Polling January 21–22, 2012 1,236 ±2.8% 58% 35% 7%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Norm
Coleman (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–5, 2010 949 ±3.2% 54% 40% 6%
Survey USA November 2–6, 2011 543 ±4.3% 50% 37% 14%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Tom
Emmer (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–5, 2010 949 ±3.2% 56% 38% 6%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Pete
Hegseth (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling May 31 – June 3, 2012 973 ±3.1% 56% 28% 16%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Anthony
Hernandez (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling January 21–22, 2012 1,236 ±2.8% 55% 29% 16%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Erik
Paulsen (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–5, 2010 949 ±3.2% 52% 34% 14%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Tim
Pawlenty (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling December 4–5, 2010 949 ±3.2% 53% 43% 4%
Public Policy Polling May 27–30, 2011 1,179 ±2.9% 54% 41% 5%
Survey USA November 2–6, 2011 543 ±4.3% 49% 37% 14%
Public Policy Polling January 21–22, 2012 1,236 ±2.8% 54% 39% 7%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Dan
Severson (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling May 27–30, 2011 1,179 ±2.9% 56% 28% 16%
Survey USA November 2–6, 2011 543 ±4.3% 55% 23% 22%
Public Policy Polling January 21–22, 2012 1,236 ±2.8% 55% 32% 13%
Survey USA January 31 – February 2, 2012 542 ±4.3% 56% 29% 15%
Public Policy Polling May 31 – June 3, 2012 973 ±3.1% 55% 27% 19%
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Amy
Klobuchar (DFL)
Dave
Thompson (R)
Other Undecided
Public Policy Polling May 27–30, 2011 1,179 ±2.9% 55% 28% 17%

Results edit

United States Senate election in Minnesota, 2012[20]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic (DFL) Amy Klobuchar (incumbent) 1,854,595 65.23% +7.17%
Republican Kurt Bills 867,974 30.53% -7.41%
Independence Stephen Williams 73,539 2.59% -0.64%
Grassroots Tim Davis 30,531 1.07% N/A
Open Progressives Michael Cavlan 13,986 0.49% N/A
Write-in 2,582 0.09% +0.05%
Total votes 2,843,207 100.00% N/A
Democratic (DFL) hold

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit

Results by congressional district edit

Klobuchar won all 8 congressional districts, including three held by Republicans.[21]

District Klobuchar Billis Representative
1st 62.45% 32.22% Tim Walz
2nd 61.73% 34.4% John Kline
3rd 62.6% 34.33% Erik Paulsen
4th 71.26% 24.66% Betty McCollum
5th 78.71% 17.09% Keith Ellison
6th 58.59% 37.15% Michele Bachmann
7th 61.23% 34.15% Collin Peterson
8th 65.32% 30.64% Rick Nolan

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 2012 General Election for U.S. Senator February 11, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b . Archived from the original on July 13, 2012. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  3. ^ Grow, Doug (August 22, 2011). . MinnPost.com. Archived from the original on September 19, 2011. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  4. ^ "Convicted felon Jack Shepard, exiled in Italy, files again to run for U.S. Senate". MinnPost. June 1, 2012. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  5. ^ "Fugitive U.S. Senate candidate Shepard sues Huffington Post, says he's not an arsonist". MinnPost. June 27, 2012. Retrieved July 24, 2014.
  6. ^ a b c . Minnesota Secretary of State. August 15, 2012. Archived from the original on August 24, 2012. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  7. ^ "Bills wins GOP nod for U.S. Senate". Star Tribune.
  8. ^ Jr, Bob Carney. "OPINION EXCHANGE | Minnesota's cookie-cutter GOP". Star Tribune.
  9. ^ "Minn. Independence Party not in 2012 Senate race". Real Clear Politics. November 12, 2011. Retrieved November 15, 2011.
  10. ^ "Independence Party stays out of U.S. Senate race, opposes constitutional amendments". Politics in Minnesota. June 25, 2011. Retrieved July 17, 2011.
  11. ^ a b Condon, Patrick (June 6, 2012). "Minn. 3rd party gets contested Senate primary". Star Tribune. Associated Press. Retrieved June 11, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ "Klobuchar, Bills debate unemployment, deficit". MPR News. September 18, 2012.
  13. ^ . Summary Reports Search. July 25, 2012. Archived from the original on October 6, 2008. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  14. ^ "Top Contributors". OpenSecrets. September 3, 2012.
  15. ^ "Top Industries". OpenSecrets. September 3, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  16. ^ "2012 Senate Race Ratings for November 1, 2012". The Cook Political Report. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  17. ^ "2012 Senate". Sabato's Crystal Ball. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  18. ^ "2012 Senate Ratings". Senate Ratings. The Rothenberg Political Report. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  19. ^ "2012 Elections Map - Battle for the Senate 2012". Real Clear Politics. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
  20. ^ 2012 General Election Results April 29, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ "Daily Kos Elections' statewide election results by congressional and legislative districts". Daily Kos. Retrieved August 11, 2020.

External links edit

Official campaign websites (Archived)

2012, united, states, senate, election, minnesota, some, this, article, listed, sources, reliable, please, help, this, article, looking, better, more, reliable, sources, unreliable, citations, challenged, deleted, december, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, tem. Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 2012 United States Senate election in Minnesota took place on November 6 2012 concurrently with the U S presidential election as well as other elections to the United States Senate and House of Representatives as well as various state and local elections Incumbent Democratic Farmer Labor U S Senator Amy Klobuchar faced Republican State Representative Kurt Bills Klobuchar was reelected in a landslide defeating Bills by almost one million votes and carrying all but two of the state s 87 counties by double digits 1 This election marked the first time since 1996 that an incumbent Democratic senator was re elected and the first time since 1976 that an incumbent Democratic senator was re elected to this seat 2012 United States Senate election in Minnesota 2006 November 6 2012 2018 Nominee Amy Klobuchar Kurt BillsParty Democratic DFL RepublicanPopular vote 1 854 595 867 874Percentage 65 2 30 5 County resultsCongressional District resultsPrecinct resultsKlobuchar 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Bills 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 gt 90 Tie 40 50 50 No votesU S senator before electionAmy KlobucharDemocratic DFL Elected U S Senator Amy KlobucharDemocratic DFL Contents 1 Background 2 DFL primary 2 1 Candidates 2 1 1 Declared 2 2 Results 3 Republican primary 3 1 Candidates 3 1 1 Declared 3 1 2 Withdrew 3 2 Results 4 Independence primary 4 1 Campaign 4 2 Candidates 4 3 Results 5 General election 5 1 Candidates 5 2 Debates 5 3 Fundraising 5 3 1 Top contributors 5 3 2 Top industries 5 4 Predictions 5 5 Polling 5 6 Results 5 6 1 Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic 5 7 Results by congressional district 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground editIncumbent Amy Klobuchar was first elected in 2006 to succeed the retiring DFL incumbent Mark Dayton She beat Republican nominee Mark Kennedy 58 to 38 Klobuchar served as Minnesota s only senator between January 3 and July 7 2009 due to the contested results of Minnesota s senatorial election held the previous year finally decided in favor of DFLer Al Franken DFL primary editThe Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party held its Senate primary on August 14 2012 2 Candidates edit Declared edit Dick Franson perennial candidate 3 Amy Klobuchar incumbent U S Senator Jack Shepard dentist convicted felon fugitive and perennial candidate 4 5 Darryl StantonResults edit Democratic Farmer Labor primary results 6 Party Candidate Votes Democratic DFL Amy Klobuchar incumbent 183 702 90 79Democratic DFL Dick Franson 6 832 3 38Democratic DFL Jack Shepard 6 638 3 28Democratic DFL Darryl Stanton 5 160 2 55Total votes 202 332 100Republican primary editThe Republican Party of Minnesota held its nominating convention in May 2012 and held its Senate primary on August 14 2012 2 Candidates edit Declared edit Kurt Bills state representative won May 2012 convention nomination 7 David Carlson former Marine Corps sergeant candidate in August 2012 primary Bob Carney Jr inventor independent businessman finished 2nd in 2010 GOP primary for Governor of Minnesota candidate in August 2012 primary 8 Withdrew edit Joe Arwood St Bonifacius city councilman withdrew before May 2012 convention Pete Hegseth executive director of Vets for Freedom withdrew after May 2012 convention Anthony Hernandez former state senate candidate withdrew before May 2012 convention to run for Congress against Betty McCollum Dan Severson former state representative withdrew after May 2012 conventionResults edit nbsp Results by county Bills 60 70 50 60 40 50 Carlson 40 50 50 60 60 70 Republican primary results 6 Party Candidate Votes Republican Kurt Bills 63 380 51 12Republican David Carlson 43 847 35 37Republican Bob Carney Jr 16 755 13 51Total votes 123 982 100Independence primary editCampaign edit The Independence Party of Minnesota did not plan to run a candidate in the general election Party chairman Mark Jenkins said in November 2011 that he saw the Senate election as a distraction from having our best and brightest engaged in state legislative races 9 At the party s convention in June 2012 neither candidate was endorsed Williams won a majority of the votes and came within two votes of the required 60 needed for the party s endorsement He proceeded with his run for the Senate but the party focused its attention on state legislative races 10 Candidates edit Stephen Williams farmer and Independence Party endorsed candidate for the U S Senate in 2008 11 Glen R Anderson Menze accountant and Republican nominee in 2008 and Independence Party nominee in 2010 for the 7th congressional district 11 Results edit Independence Party primary results 6 Party Candidate Votes Independence Stephen Williams 3 068 59 67Independence Glen R Anderson Menze 2 074 40 33Total votes 5 142 100General election editCandidates edit Amy Klobuchar DFL incumbent U S Senator Kurt Bills Republican State Representative Stephen Williams Archived November 9 2012 at the Wayback Machine Independence Farmer Michael Cavlan Minnesota Open Progressives Registered Nurse Tim Davis Grassroots Environmental ActivistDebates edit On August 29 Klobuchar and Bills held their second debate at the State Fair sponsored by MPR News Their third debate on September 16 in Duluth was about the nation s struggle with deficit spending and unemployment The audience was assembled by the Duluth Area Chamber of Commerce and Duluth News Tribune 12 External linksComplete video at Minnesota Public Radio second debate August 29 2012 Audio from Minnesota Public Radio third debate September 18 2012Fundraising edit Candidate party Receipts Disbursements Cash on hand Debt Current ThroughAmy Klobuchar D 6 301 413 2 530 567 5 393 798 0 July 25 2012Kurt Bills R 394 547 388 720 5 841 0 July 25 2012Source Federal Election Commission 13 Top contributors edit This section lists the top contributors by employer These organizations themselves didn t donate but these numbers include donations from their PACs members employees owners and their immediate families Amy Klobuchar Contribution Kurt Bills ContributionDorsey amp Whitney 61 100 Liberty PAC 10 000Target Corp 56 050 Craw 10 000General Mills 51 750 Primera Technology 10 000U S Bancorp 51 139 Minnesota Limited Pipeline 7 500Robins Kaplan Miller amp Ciresi 49 150 Ameriprise Financial 5 000Medtronic Inc 41 025 Bachmann for Congress 5 000Toys R Us 36 500 Exactdrive 5 000Leonard Street amp Deinard 34 350 New Spark Holdings 5 000Comcast Corp 33 623 TACPAC 5 000Wells Fargo 32 400 Twin City Fan Companies 5 000Source OpenSecrets 14 Current through March 9 2012Top industries edit Amy Klobuchar Contribution Kurt Bills ContributionLawyers Law Firms 989 929 Leadership PACs 17 850Retired 447 082 Republican Conservative 13 750Leadership PACs 302 150 Financial Institutions 13 250Lobbyists 282 430 Real Estate 12 550Financial Institutions 269 033 Retired 10 350Entertainment industry 256 711 Energy Industry 10 250Women s Issues 196 866 Electronics Manufacturing 10 000Retail industry 181 850 Misc Business 9 450Commercial Banks 159 139 Manufacturing amp Distributing 7 850Pharmaceuticals Health Products 149 725 Computers Internet 7 350Source OpenSecrets 15 Current through March 9 2012Predictions edit Source Ranking As ofThe Cook Political Report 16 Solid D November 1 2012Sabato s Crystal Ball 17 Safe D November 5 2012Rothenberg Political Report 18 Safe D November 2 2012Real Clear Politics 19 Safe D November 5 2012Polling edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL KurtBills R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling May 31 June 3 2012 973 3 1 55 29 16 Survey USA July 17 19 2012 552 4 3 55 31 5 9 KSTP Survey USA Archived September 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine September 6 9 2012 551 4 2 55 34 11 Public Policy Polling September 10 11 2012 824 3 4 55 36 10 Star Tribune Mason Dixon September 17 19 2012 800 3 5 57 28 7 8 Public Policy Polling October 5 8 2012 937 3 2 57 31 12 SurveyUSA KSTP Archived October 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine October 12 14 2012 550 4 2 58 30 5 7 St Cloud State U permanent dead link October 15 21 2012 600 5 63 36 1 Rasmussen Reports October 21 2012 500 4 5 56 33 2 9 Star Tribune Mason Dixon October 23 25 2012 800 3 5 65 22 13 SurveyUSA October 26 28 2012 574 4 1 60 29 4 7 KSTP SurveyUSA Archived November 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine November 1 3 2012 556 4 2 60 30 3 7 Public Policy Polling November 2 3 2012 1 164 2 9 62 32 6 Hypothetical pollingRepublican primaryPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror MicheleBachmann LauraBrod NormColeman ChipCravaack TomEmmer JohnKline ErikPaulsen TimPawlenty Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 5 2010 387 5 0 36 4 14 7 6 5 2 20 6 General electionPoll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL JoeArwood R Other UndecidedSurvey USA November 2 6 2011 543 4 3 56 22 22 Public Policy Polling January 21 22 2012 1 236 2 8 55 30 15 Survey USA January 31 February 2 2012 542 4 2 59 28 14 Public Policy Polling May 31 June 3 2012 973 3 1 56 29 15 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL MicheleBachmann R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 5 2010 949 3 2 56 39 4 Public Policy Polling May 27 30 2011 1 179 2 9 57 37 5 Public Policy Polling January 21 22 2012 1 236 2 8 58 35 7 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL NormColeman R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 5 2010 949 3 2 54 40 6 Survey USA November 2 6 2011 543 4 3 50 37 14 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL TomEmmer R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 5 2010 949 3 2 56 38 6 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL PeteHegseth R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling May 31 June 3 2012 973 3 1 56 28 16 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL AnthonyHernandez R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling January 21 22 2012 1 236 2 8 55 29 16 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL ErikPaulsen R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 5 2010 949 3 2 52 34 14 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL TimPawlenty R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling December 4 5 2010 949 3 2 53 43 4 Public Policy Polling May 27 30 2011 1 179 2 9 54 41 5 Survey USA November 2 6 2011 543 4 3 49 37 14 Public Policy Polling January 21 22 2012 1 236 2 8 54 39 7 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL DanSeverson R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling May 27 30 2011 1 179 2 9 56 28 16 Survey USA November 2 6 2011 543 4 3 55 23 22 Public Policy Polling January 21 22 2012 1 236 2 8 55 32 13 Survey USA January 31 February 2 2012 542 4 3 56 29 15 Public Policy Polling May 31 June 3 2012 973 3 1 55 27 19 Poll source Date s administered Samplesize Margin oferror AmyKlobuchar DFL DaveThompson R Other UndecidedPublic Policy Polling May 27 30 2011 1 179 2 9 55 28 17 Results edit United States Senate election in Minnesota 2012 20 Party Candidate Votes Democratic DFL Amy Klobuchar incumbent 1 854 595 65 23 7 17 Republican Kurt Bills 867 974 30 53 7 41 Independence Stephen Williams 73 539 2 59 0 64 Grassroots Tim Davis 30 531 1 07 N AOpen Progressives Michael Cavlan 13 986 0 49 N AWrite in 2 582 0 09 0 05 Total votes 2 843 207 100 00 N ADemocratic DFL holdCounties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit Carver Largest city Chaska Redwood largest city Redwood Falls Wright Largest city Otsego Sherburne Largest city Elk River Otter Tail Largest city Fergus Falls Wadena Largest city Wadena Results by congressional district edit Klobuchar won all 8 congressional districts including three held by Republicans 21 District Klobuchar Billis Representative1st 62 45 32 22 Tim Walz2nd 61 73 34 4 John Kline3rd 62 6 34 33 Erik Paulsen4th 71 26 24 66 Betty McCollum5th 78 71 17 09 Keith Ellison6th 58 59 37 15 Michele Bachmann7th 61 23 34 15 Collin Peterson8th 65 32 30 64 Rick NolanSee also edit2012 United States Senate elections 2012 United States House of Representatives elections in MinnesotaReferences edit 2012 General Election for U S Senator Archived February 11 2019 at the Wayback Machine a b Minnesota Office of the Secretary of State Important General Election Dates Archived from the original on July 13 2012 Retrieved June 20 2012 Grow Doug August 22 2011 GOP ready to go after Sen Klobuchar but has a problem no first tier candidate MinnPost com Archived from the original on September 19 2011 Retrieved August 26 2011 Convicted felon Jack Shepard exiled in Italy files again to run for U S Senate MinnPost June 1 2012 Retrieved July 24 2014 Fugitive U S Senate candidate Shepard sues Huffington Post says he s not an arsonist MinnPost June 27 2012 Retrieved July 24 2014 a b c Statewide Results for U S Senator Minnesota Secretary of State August 15 2012 Archived from the original on August 24 2012 Retrieved August 15 2012 Bills wins GOP nod for U S Senate Star Tribune Jr Bob Carney OPINION EXCHANGE Minnesota s cookie cutter GOP Star Tribune Minn Independence Party not in 2012 Senate race Real Clear Politics November 12 2011 Retrieved November 15 2011 Independence Party stays out of U S Senate race opposes constitutional amendments Politics in Minnesota June 25 2011 Retrieved July 17 2011 a b Condon Patrick June 6 2012 Minn 3rd party gets contested Senate primary Star Tribune Associated Press Retrieved June 11 2012 permanent dead link Klobuchar Bills debate unemployment deficit MPR News September 18 2012 Federal Election Commission Summary Reports Search July 25 2012 Archived from the original on October 6 2008 Retrieved October 6 2012 Top Contributors OpenSecrets September 3 2012 Top Industries OpenSecrets September 3 2012 Retrieved October 6 2012 2012 Senate Race Ratings for November 1 2012 The Cook Political Report Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 Senate Sabato s Crystal Ball Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 Senate Ratings Senate Ratings The Rothenberg Political Report Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 Elections Map Battle for the Senate 2012 Real Clear Politics Retrieved September 20 2018 2012 General Election Results Archived April 29 2016 at the Wayback Machine Daily Kos Elections statewide election results by congressional and legislative districts Daily Kos Retrieved August 11 2020 External links editElection Center from the Minnesota Secretary of State Campaign contributions at OpenSecrets org Outside spending at the Sunlight Foundation Candidate issue positions at On the Issues U S Senate election coverage at Minnesota Public RadioOfficial campaign websites Archived Kurt Bills for U S Senate Amy Klobuchar for U S Senate Stephen Williams for U S Senate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2012 United States Senate election in Minnesota amp oldid 1188613404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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