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2020 Vermont elections

A general election was held in the U.S. state of Vermont on November 3, 2020. All of Vermont's executive officers will be up for election as well as Vermont's at-large seat in the United States House of Representatives. Primary elections were held on August 11, 2020.

2020 Vermont elections

← 2018
2022 →

United States House of Representatives Edit

The incumbent representative is Democrat Peter Welch.

Governor Edit

The incumbent governor is Republican Phil Scott. He beat Lieutenant Governor David Zuckerman in the general election.[1]

Lieutenant governor Edit

2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial election
 
← 2018 November 3, 2020 2022 →
     
Nominee Molly Gray Scott Milne
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 182,820 157,065
Percentage 51.3% 44.1%

 
County results
Gray:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
Milne:      50–60%      60–70%

Lieutenant Governor before election

Dave Zuckerman
Progressive/Democratic

Elected Lieutenant Governor

Molly Gray
Democratic

Incumbent Progressive/Democratic lieutenant governor Dave Zuckerman (since 2017) declined to run for a third term, and instead ran for governor.

Democratic primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Nominee Edit
Eliminated in primary Edit
Declined Edit

Results Edit

Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Molly Gray 47,636 46.0
Democratic Tim Ashe 35,954 34.7
Democratic Brenda Siegel 9,945 9.6
Democratic Debbie Ingram 9,466 9.1
Write-in Write-ins 568 0.5
Total votes 103,645 100.0

Republican primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Nominee Edit
Eliminated in primary Edit
Declined Edit
  • Don H. Turner Jr., nominee for lieutenant governor in 2018, former minority leader of the Vermont House of Representatives

Results Edit

Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Scott Milne 26,817 51.5
Republican Meg Hansen 16,875 32.4
Republican Dwayne Tucker 3,066 5.9
Republican Dana Colson 2,736 5.2
Republican Jim Hogue 1,944 3.7
Write-in Write-ins 680 1.3
Total votes 52,118 100.0

Progressive primary Edit

Incumbent Progressive lieutenant governor David Zuckerman is not running for a third term.

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit
Declined Edit

Results Edit

Progressive primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Progressive Cris Ericson 438 57.5
Write-in Write-ins 324 42.5
Total votes 762 100.0

General election Edit

Debate Edit

2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial debate
No. Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Republican Progressive Independent Stop the F35s
Key:
 P  Participant   A  Absent   N  Not invited   I  Invited  W  Withdrawn
Molly Gray Scott Milne Cris Ericson Wayne Billado III Ralph Corbo
1 Sep. 23, 2022 Town Meeting TV Stephanie Lahar YouTube P P N N P

Polling Edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Molly
Gray (D)
Scott
Milne (R)
Other Undecided
co/efficient/Scott Milne for Lt. Governor[A] October 19–29, 2020 584 (LV) ± 4.05% 43% 37% 7% 13%
Braun Research/VPR September 3–15, 2020 582 (LV) ± 4% 35% 31% 34%[b]

Results Edit

2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial election
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Molly Gray 182,820 51.3
Republican Scott Milne 157,065 44.1
Progressive Cris Ericson 7,862 2.2
Independent Wayne Billado III 5,101 1.4
Stop the F35s Ralph Corbo 2,289 0.6
Write-in Write-ins 1,097 0.3
Total votes 356,234 100.0

Secretary of state Edit

2020 Vermont secretary of state election
 
← 2018 November 3, 2020 2022 →
     
Nominee Jim Condos H. Brooke Paige Pamala Smith
Party Democratic Republican Independent
Popular vote 214,666 99,564 21,210
Percentage 57.87 26.84 5.72

Secretary of State before election

Jim Condos
Democratic

Elected Secretary of State

Jim Condos
Democratic

The incumbent secretary of state is Democrat Jim Condos.

Democratic primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit
  • Jim Condos, incumbent secretary of state

Republican primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit
  • H. Brooke Paige, perennial candidate.

Treasurer Edit

2020 Vermont treasurer election
 
← 2018 November 3, 2020 2022 →
   
Nominee Beth Pearce Carolyn Whitney Branagan
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 197,255 114,177
Percentage 53.17 30.78

Treasurer before election

Beth Pearce
Democratic

Elected Treasurer

Beth Pearce
Democratic

The incumbent treasurer is Democrat Beth Pearce.

Democratic primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit

Republican primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit
  • Carolyn Whitney Branagan, former state representative to Franklin-1 (2003–2017) and former state senator to Franklin (2017–2019)

Attorney general Edit

2020 Vermont Attorney General election
 
← 2018 November 3, 2020 2022 →
     
Nominee T. J. Donovan H. Brooke Paige
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 234,081 94,892
Percentage 63.10 25.58

 
County results
Donovan:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

Attorney General before election

T. J. Donovan
Democratic

Elected Attorney General

T. J. Donovan
Democratic

The incumbent attorney general is Democrat T. J. Donovan.

Democratic primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit

Republican primary Edit

The Republican nominee is H. Brooke Paige.

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit

Progressive primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit

Auditor Edit

2020 Vermont Auditor election
 
← 2018 November 3, 2020 2022 →
     
Nominee Doug Hoffer Cris Ericson
Party Democratic Progressive
Alliance Progressive
Republican
Marijuana
Popular vote 266,445 48,731
Percentage 71.82 13.14

Auditor before election

Doug Hoffer
Democratic

Elected Auditor

Doug Hoffer
Democratic

The incumbent auditor is Democrat/Progressive Doug Hoffer.

Democratic primary Edit

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit
  • Doug Hoffer, incumbent auditor (also ran in Progressive primary)
  • Linda Joy Sullivan, state representative

Republican primary Edit

No candidates filed for the Republican primary. Doug Hoffer won the nomination via write-in.

Progressive primary Edit

Incumbent Democratic/Progressive Auditor Doug Hoffer also ran in the Progressive primary. Perennial candidate Cris Ericson ran for the Progressive nomination for auditor, as well as several other statewide offices.

Candidates Edit

Declared Edit

General election Edit

Candidates Edit

(*Hoffer won the Democratic and Republican nominations. Ericson, who is not a member of the Progressive Party, won the primary election, however the Progressive state committee endorsed Hoffer for reelection. Hoffer had previously been nominated by both the Democratic and Progressive Parties in elections from 2010 to 2018.)

State Legislature Edit

All 30 seats in the Vermont Senate and all 150 seats of the Vermont House of Representatives were up for election. The balance of political power remained the same in each chamber with Democrats having large majorities in both, however Republicans made very small gains in both chambers. While those gains were small, they allowed Republicans to break the Democrat/Progressive supermajority in the state house. This could potentially lead to any veto from Governor Phil Scott being upheld under these new circumstances.

County offices Edit

Some county level offices will be up for election. The balance of political power before and after the elections for each office was:[16]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^ "Other/not sure/no opinion" with 24%; Ericson (Progressive) and "No one/not voting on this item" with 4%; Billado (I) with 2%; Cordo (Banish the F35s) with 0%
Partisan clients
  1. ^ Poll sponsored by Milne's campaign in the 2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial election

References Edit

  1. ^ Heintz, Paul. "Scott's Victory Lap: Gov Wins Third Term, Gray Elected LG, Speaker Johnson Falls Short". Seven Days.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "General Election Candidates". sos.vermont.gov. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  3. ^ Flanders, Colin. "Molly Gray Announces Bid to Become Lieutenant Governor of Vermont". Seven Days. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  4. ^ X; L, er; en; Jan 8 2020January 13, Kit Norton; Footnotes, 2020 | 15 Reader (January 8, 2020). "Senate leader Tim Ashe to run for open lieutenant governor post". VTDigger. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  5. ^ "Tim Ashe officially announces run for lieutenant governor seat". WPTZ. January 14, 2020. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  6. ^ WCAX. "Brenda Siegel officially running for Vermont lieutenant governor". www.wcax.com. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  7. ^ Jan 15 2020January 15, Kit Norton; Footnotes, 2020 | 3 Reader (January 15, 2020). "Sen. Debbie Ingram enters race for lieutenant governor". VTDigger. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  8. ^ Bradley, Pat (February 20, 2020). "Two-Term Vermont State Senator Discusses Her Campaign For Lieutenant Governor". www.wamc.org. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  9. ^ May 28 2020May 29, Elizabeth Hewitt; Footnotes, 2020 | 10 Reader (May 28, 2020). "Milne joins race for lieutenant governor". VTDigger. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  10. ^ Jan 6 2020January 7, Grace Elletson; Footnotes, 2020 | 12 Reader (January 6, 2020). "'Agri-publican' candidates look to broaden appeal of Republican ticket". VTDigger. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  11. ^ Cutler, Calvin. "'Agripublicans' announce candidacies for Vermont offices". www.wcax.com. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  12. ^ "Republican Lieutenant Governor Primary Race 2020: Dwayne Tucker". August 5, 2020.
  13. ^ Dec 17 2019December 18, Ellie French; Footnotes, 2019 | 29 Reader (December 17, 2019). "Republican Meg Hansen enters race for lieutenant governor". VTDigger. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  14. ^ 2ndvtrepublic (May 13, 2017). "Secede – From What? US of Empire and Plan 'V" for a 2VR (INDY RADIO)". Vermont Independent. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
  15. ^ a b Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Progressive Party State Committee Meeting". YouTube.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on August 17, 2019. Retrieved January 18, 2020.

External links Edit

2020, vermont, elections, general, election, held, state, vermont, november, 2020, vermont, executive, officers, will, election, well, vermont, large, seat, united, states, house, representatives, primary, elections, were, held, august, 2020, 20182022, content. A general election was held in the U S state of Vermont on November 3 2020 All of Vermont s executive officers will be up for election as well as Vermont s at large seat in the United States House of Representatives Primary elections were held on August 11 2020 2020 Vermont elections 20182022 Contents 1 United States House of Representatives 2 Governor 3 Lieutenant governor 3 1 Democratic primary 3 1 1 Candidates 3 1 1 1 Nominee 3 1 1 2 Eliminated in primary 3 1 1 3 Declined 3 1 2 Results 3 2 Republican primary 3 2 1 Candidates 3 2 1 1 Nominee 3 2 1 2 Eliminated in primary 3 2 1 3 Declined 3 2 2 Results 3 3 Progressive primary 3 3 1 Candidates 3 3 1 1 Declared 3 3 1 2 Declined 3 3 2 Results 3 4 General election 3 4 1 Debate 3 4 2 Polling 3 4 3 Results 4 Secretary of state 4 1 Democratic primary 4 1 1 Candidates 4 1 1 1 Declared 4 2 Republican primary 4 2 1 Candidates 4 2 1 1 Declared 5 Treasurer 5 1 Democratic primary 5 1 1 Candidates 5 1 1 1 Declared 5 2 Republican primary 5 2 1 Candidates 5 2 1 1 Declared 6 Attorney general 6 1 Democratic primary 6 1 1 Candidates 6 1 1 1 Declared 6 2 Republican primary 6 2 1 Candidates 6 2 1 1 Declared 6 3 Progressive primary 6 3 1 Candidates 6 3 1 1 Declared 7 Auditor 7 1 Democratic primary 7 1 1 Candidates 7 1 1 1 Declared 7 2 Republican primary 7 3 Progressive primary 7 3 1 Candidates 7 3 1 1 Declared 7 4 General election 7 4 1 Candidates 8 State Legislature 8 1 State senate 8 2 House of Representatives 9 County offices 9 1 Addison County 9 2 Bennington County 9 3 Caledonia County 9 4 Chittenden County 9 5 Essex County 9 6 Franklin County 9 7 Grand Isle County 9 8 Lamoille County 9 9 Orange County 9 10 Orleans County 9 11 Rutland County 9 12 Washington County 9 13 Windham County 9 14 Windsor County 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksUnited States House of Representatives EditMain article 2020 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont The incumbent representative is Democrat Peter Welch Governor EditMain article 2020 Vermont gubernatorial election The incumbent governor is Republican Phil Scott He beat Lieutenant Governor David Zuckerman in the general election 1 Lieutenant governor Edit2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial election nbsp 2018 November 3 2020 2022 nbsp nbsp Nominee Molly Gray Scott MilneParty Democratic RepublicanPopular vote 182 820 157 065Percentage 51 3 44 1 nbsp County resultsGray 40 50 50 60 60 70 Milne 50 60 60 70 Lieutenant Governor before electionDave ZuckermanProgressive Democratic Elected Lieutenant Governor Molly GrayDemocraticIncumbent Progressive Democratic lieutenant governor Dave Zuckerman since 2017 declined to run for a third term and instead ran for governor Democratic primary Edit Candidates Edit Nominee Edit Molly Gray Vermont Assistant Attorney General 2 3 Eliminated in primary Edit Tim Ashe President pro tempore of the Vermont Senate also ran in Progressive primary 2 4 5 Brenda Siegel candidate for governor in 2018 opioid epidemic and Brattleboro hurricane relief activist southern Vermont nonprofit founder and executive director also ran in Progressive primary 2 6 Debbie Ingram Chittenden County State Senator 2 7 8 Declined Edit Shap Smith former Speaker of the Vermont House of Representatives candidate for lieutenant governor in 2016 attorney David Zuckerman incumbent lieutenant governor ran for Governor Results Edit Democratic primary results Party Candidate Votes Democratic Molly Gray 47 636 46 0Democratic Tim Ashe 35 954 34 7Democratic Brenda Siegel 9 945 9 6Democratic Debbie Ingram 9 466 9 1Write in Write ins 568 0 5Total votes 103 645 100 0Republican primary Edit Candidates Edit Nominee Edit Scott Milne Republican nominee for Governor in 2014 Republican nominee for US Senate in 2016 businessman 2 9 Eliminated in primary Edit Dana Colson Jr 2 10 11 Dwayne Tucker Contractor and Civil Engineer 12 Meg Hansen former executive director of Vermonters for Healthcare Freedom 2 13 Jim Hogue Vermont secession activist 2 14 Declined Edit Don H Turner Jr nominee for lieutenant governor in 2018 former minority leader of the Vermont House of RepresentativesResults Edit Republican primary results Party Candidate Votes Republican Scott Milne 26 817 51 5Republican Meg Hansen 16 875 32 4Republican Dwayne Tucker 3 066 5 9Republican Dana Colson 2 736 5 2Republican Jim Hogue 1 944 3 7Write in Write ins 680 1 3Total votes 52 118 100 0Progressive primary Edit Incumbent Progressive lieutenant governor David Zuckerman is not running for a third term Candidates Edit Declared Edit Tim Ashe President pro tempore of the Vermont Senate 15 Brenda Siegel candidate for governor in 2018 opioid epidemic and Brattleboro hurricane relief activist southern Vermont nonprofit founder and executive director 15 Cris Ericson perennial candidateDeclined Edit David Zuckerman incumbent lieutenant governor running for governor Results Edit Progressive primary results Party Candidate Votes Progressive Cris Ericson 438 57 5Write in Write ins 324 42 5Total votes 762 100 0General election Edit Debate Edit 2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial debate No Date Host Moderator Link Democratic Republican Progressive Independent Stop the F35sKey P Participant A Absent N Not invited I Invited W WithdrawnMolly Gray Scott Milne Cris Ericson Wayne Billado III Ralph Corbo1 Sep 23 2022 Town Meeting TV Stephanie Lahar YouTube P P N N PPolling Edit Poll source Date s administered Samplesize a Marginof error MollyGray D ScottMilne R Other Undecidedco efficient Scott Milne for Lt Governor A October 19 29 2020 584 LV 4 05 43 37 7 13 Braun Research VPR September 3 15 2020 582 LV 4 35 31 34 b Results Edit 2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial election Party Candidate Votes Democratic Molly Gray 182 820 51 3Republican Scott Milne 157 065 44 1Progressive Cris Ericson 7 862 2 2Independent Wayne Billado III 5 101 1 4Stop the F35s Ralph Corbo 2 289 0 6Write in Write ins 1 097 0 3Total votes 356 234 100 0Secretary of state Edit2020 Vermont secretary of state election nbsp 2018 November 3 2020 2022 nbsp nbsp Nominee Jim Condos H Brooke Paige Pamala SmithParty Democratic Republican IndependentPopular vote 214 666 99 564 21 210Percentage 57 87 26 84 5 72Secretary of State before electionJim CondosDemocratic Elected Secretary of State Jim CondosDemocraticThe incumbent secretary of state is Democrat Jim Condos Democratic primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit Jim Condos incumbent secretary of stateRepublican primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit H Brooke Paige perennial candidate Treasurer Edit2020 Vermont treasurer election nbsp 2018 November 3 2020 2022 nbsp Nominee Beth Pearce Carolyn Whitney BranaganParty Democratic RepublicanPopular vote 197 255 114 177Percentage 53 17 30 78Treasurer before electionBeth PearceDemocratic Elected Treasurer Beth PearceDemocraticThe incumbent treasurer is Democrat Beth Pearce Democratic primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit Beth Pearce incumbent treasurerRepublican primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit Carolyn Whitney Branagan former state representative to Franklin 1 2003 2017 and former state senator to Franklin 2017 2019 Attorney general Edit2020 Vermont Attorney General election nbsp 2018 November 3 2020 2022 nbsp nbsp Nominee T J Donovan H Brooke PaigeParty Democratic RepublicanPopular vote 234 081 94 892Percentage 63 10 25 58 nbsp County resultsDonovan 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 Attorney General before electionT J DonovanDemocratic Elected Attorney General T J DonovanDemocraticThe incumbent attorney general is Democrat T J Donovan Democratic primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit T J Donovan incumbent attorney generalRepublican primary Edit The Republican nominee is H Brooke Paige Candidates Edit Declared Edit H Brooke Paige perennial candidate Emily Peyton candidate for governor in 2018Progressive primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit Cris Ericson perennial candidate running for other statewide offices as wellAuditor Edit2020 Vermont Auditor election nbsp 2018 November 3 2020 2022 nbsp nbsp Nominee Doug Hoffer Cris EricsonParty Democratic ProgressiveAlliance ProgressiveRepublican MarijuanaPopular vote 266 445 48 731Percentage 71 82 13 14Auditor before electionDoug HofferDemocratic Elected Auditor Doug HofferDemocraticThe incumbent auditor is Democrat Progressive Doug Hoffer Democratic primary Edit Candidates Edit Declared Edit Doug Hoffer incumbent auditor also ran in Progressive primary Linda Joy Sullivan state representativeRepublican primary Edit No candidates filed for the Republican primary Doug Hoffer won the nomination via write in Progressive primary Edit Incumbent Democratic Progressive Auditor Doug Hoffer also ran in the Progressive primary Perennial candidate Cris Ericson ran for the Progressive nomination for auditor as well as several other statewide offices Candidates Edit Declared Edit Doug Hoffer incumbent auditor also ran in Democratic primary Cris Ericson perennial candidateGeneral election Edit Candidates Edit Doug Hoffer D P R incumbent auditor Cris Ericson P perennial candidate Hoffer won the Democratic and Republican nominations Ericson who is not a member of the Progressive Party won the primary election however the Progressive state committee endorsed Hoffer for reelection Hoffer had previously been nominated by both the Democratic and Progressive Parties in elections from 2010 to 2018 State Legislature EditAll 30 seats in the Vermont Senate and all 150 seats of the Vermont House of Representatives were up for election The balance of political power remained the same in each chamber with Democrats having large majorities in both however Republicans made very small gains in both chambers While those gains were small they allowed Republicans to break the Democrat Progressive supermajority in the state house This could potentially lead to any veto from Governor Phil Scott being upheld under these new circumstances State senate Edit Party of seats before election of seats after election Net changeDemocratic 22 21 nbsp 1Republican 6 7 nbsp 1Progressive 2 2 nbsp Independent 0 0 nbsp House of Representatives Edit Party of seats before election of seats after election Net changeDemocratic 95 92 nbsp 3Republican 43 46 nbsp 3Progressive 7 7 nbsp Independent 5 5 nbsp County offices EditSome county level offices will be up for election The balance of political power before and after the elections for each office was 16 Addison County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Dennis Wygmans DemocraticAssistant Judge Patricia Ross DemocraticJacqueline Mclean DemocraticProbate Judge Eleanor Smith DemocraticSheriff Peter Dorey Newton DemocraticHigh Bailiff Charles S Clark Jr Rep DemBennington County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Erica Albin Marthage DemocraticAssistant Judge James H Colvin DemocraticWesley L Mook DemocraticProbate Judge D Justine Scanlon DemocraticSheriff Chad D Schmidt Dem RepHigh Bailiff Frederick C Gilbar DemocraticCaledonia County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Lisa A Warren Dem RepAssistant Judge John S Hall Rep DemRoy C Vance Dem RepProbate Judge William W Cobb DemocraticSheriff Dean Shatney Dem RepHigh Bailiff Stephen Bunnell Rep DemChittenden County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Sarah F George DemocraticAssistant Judge Suzanne Brown Dem RepConnie Cain Ramsey DemocraticProbate Judge Gregory J Glennon DemocraticSheriff Kevin M McLaughlin Dem RepHigh Bailiff Daniel L Gamelin Dem Prog RepEssex County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Vincent Illuzzi Prog Rep Dem LibAssistant Judge Calvin Colby RepublicanAllen D Hodgdon RepublicanProbate Judge RepublicanSheriff Trevor Colby Rep ProgHigh Bailiff Vacant N AFranklin County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney James A Hughes DemocraticAssistant Judge Kelly Gosselin DemocraticRobert Johnson Dem RepProbate Judge Vaughn Comeau RepublicanSheriff Roger Langevin DemocraticHigh Bailiff Roberta Allard DemocraticGrand Isle County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Douglas Disabito DemocraticAssistant Judge Sherri Potvin DemocraticJoanne R Batchelder Rep DemProbate Judge George Ned Spear DemocraticSheriff Ray C Allen Dem Prog RepHigh Bailiff Kevin G Winch IndependentLamoille County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Todd A Shove DemocraticAssistant Judge Joel W Page DemocraticMadeline M Motta DemocraticProbate Judge James Dean R Mahoney IndependentSheriff Roger M Marcoux Jr Dem RepHigh Bailiff Claude D Ammons Jr DemocraticOrange County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney William J Porter DemocraticAssistant Judge Joyce McKeeman DemocraticVictoria Weiss DemocraticProbate Judge Kathryn C A Kennedy DemocraticSheriff Bill Bohnyak DemocraticHigh Bailiff George Contois DemocraticOrleans County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Jennifer Barrett Dem RepAssistant Judge Benjamin Batchelder Dem RepCurtis A Hardy DemocraticProbate Judge Robert B Chimileski IndependentSheriff Kirk J Martin RepublicanHigh Bailiff Philip Brooks RepublicanRutland County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Rose Kennedy DemocraticAssistant Judge Jean H Colourtti Dem RepDavid W Lewis Dem RepProbate Judge Karl C Anderson RepublicanSheriff Stephen P Benard Sr Dem RepHigh Bailiff David Fox DemocraticWashington County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Rory T Thibault DemocraticAssistant Judge Miriam Conlon DemocraticOtto Kinzel Trautz Dem RepProbate Judge Jeffrey P Kilgore DemocraticSheriff W Samuel Hill Dem RepHigh Bailiff Marc Poulin DemocraticWindham County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney Tracy Kelly Shriver DemocraticAssistant Judge Patricia W Duff DemocraticLamont Barnett DemocraticProbate Judge Jodi P French DemocraticSheriff Keith D Clark DemocraticHigh Bailiff Mark Anderson DemocraticWindsor County Edit Office Name PartyStates Attorney David Cahill DemocraticAssistant Judge Jack W Anderson DemocraticEleen Terie DemocraticProbate Judge Frederick M Glover DemocraticSheriff Michael Chamberlain DemocraticHigh Bailiff Michael E Manley DemocraticNotes Edit Key A all adultsRV registered votersLV likely votersV unclear Other not sure no opinion with 24 Ericson Progressive and No one not voting on this item with 4 Billado I with 2 Cordo Banish the F35s with 0 Partisan clients Poll sponsored by Milne s campaign in the 2020 Vermont lieutenant gubernatorial electionReferences Edit Heintz Paul Scott s Victory Lap Gov Wins Third Term Gray Elected LG Speaker Johnson Falls Short Seven Days a b c d e f g h General Election Candidates sos vermont gov Retrieved June 21 2020 Flanders Colin Molly Gray Announces Bid to Become Lieutenant Governor of Vermont Seven Days Retrieved June 21 2020 X L er en Jan 8 2020January 13 Kit Norton Footnotes 2020 15 Reader January 8 2020 Senate leader Tim Ashe to run for open lieutenant governor post VTDigger Retrieved June 21 2020 Tim Ashe officially announces run for lieutenant governor seat WPTZ January 14 2020 Retrieved June 21 2020 WCAX Brenda Siegel officially running for Vermont lieutenant governor www wcax com Retrieved June 21 2020 Jan 15 2020January 15 Kit Norton Footnotes 2020 3 Reader January 15 2020 Sen Debbie Ingram enters race for lieutenant governor VTDigger Retrieved June 21 2020 Bradley Pat February 20 2020 Two Term Vermont State Senator Discusses Her Campaign For Lieutenant Governor www wamc org Retrieved June 21 2020 May 28 2020May 29 Elizabeth Hewitt Footnotes 2020 10 Reader May 28 2020 Milne joins race for lieutenant governor VTDigger Retrieved June 9 2020 Jan 6 2020January 7 Grace Elletson Footnotes 2020 12 Reader January 6 2020 Agri publican candidates look to broaden appeal of Republican ticket VTDigger Retrieved June 21 2020 Cutler Calvin Agripublicans announce candidacies for Vermont offices www wcax com Retrieved June 21 2020 Republican Lieutenant Governor Primary Race 2020 Dwayne Tucker August 5 2020 Dec 17 2019December 18 Ellie French Footnotes 2019 29 Reader December 17 2019 Republican Meg Hansen enters race for lieutenant governor VTDigger Retrieved June 21 2020 2ndvtrepublic May 13 2017 Secede From What US of Empire and Plan V for a 2VR INDY RADIO Vermont Independent Retrieved June 21 2020 a b Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Progressive Party State Committee Meeting YouTube VT Elections Database Vermont Election Statistics Archived from the original on August 17 2019 Retrieved January 18 2020 External links EditCandidates at Vote Smart Candidates at Ballotpedia Government Documents Round Table of the American Library Association Vermont Voting amp Elections Toolkits Vermont Election Tools Deadlines Dates Rules and Links Vote org Oakland CA League of Women Voters of Vermont State affiliate of the U S League of Women Voters State Elections Legislation Database Ncsl org Washington D C National Conference of State Legislatures State legislation related to the administration of elections introduced in 2011 through this year 2020 Results at The Indianapolis Star Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2020 Vermont elections amp oldid 1175954460 Lieutenant Governor, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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