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Politics of Oregon

Like many other U.S. states, the politics of Oregon largely concerns regional issues.[1] Oregon leans Democratic as a state, with both U.S. senators from the Democratic party,[2] as well as four out of Oregon's six U.S. Representatives.[3] The Democratic candidate for president has won in Oregon in every election since 1988.[4] Both houses of Oregon's legislative assembly have been under Democratic control since the 2012 elections.[5]

For most of its existence, Oregon was the most consistently Republican west coast state.[6] Between 1860 and 1984, the state voted Democratic just six times, in 1868, 1912, 1932, 1936, 1940, and 1964.

In 1954, the upset of incumbent Republican Senator Guy Cordon by Democrat Richard L. Neuberger, along with Democratic wins in the U.S. House and statewide races and pickups of fourteen and two seats in the state House and Senate, respectively, signaled the beginning of a shift towards the Democratic Party.[6] The last Republican governor of Oregon was Victor G. Atiyeh, who served from 1979 to 1987.[7][8] Since 1988, Oregon voters have consistently favored Democratic candidates for most major elected positions, including the U.S. presidency.

History edit

United States presidential election results for Oregon[9]
Year Republican Democratic Third party
No.  % No.  % No.  %
2020 958,448 40.37% 1,340,383 56.45% 75,490 3.18%
2016 782,403 39.09% 1,002,106 50.07% 216,827 10.83%
2012 754,175 42.15% 970,488 54.24% 64,607 3.61%
2008 738,475 40.40% 1,037,291 56.75% 52,098 2.85%
2004 866,831 47.19% 943,163 51.35% 26,788 1.46%
2000 713,577 46.52% 720,342 46.96% 100,049 6.52%
1996 538,152 39.06% 649,641 47.15% 189,967 13.79%
1992 475,757 32.53% 621,314 42.48% 365,572 24.99%
1988 560,126 46.61% 616,206 51.28% 25,362 2.11%
1984 685,700 55.91% 536,479 43.74% 4,348 0.35%
1980 571,044 48.33% 456,890 38.67% 153,582 13.00%
1976 492,120 47.78% 490,407 47.62% 47,349 4.60%
1972 486,686 52.45% 392,760 42.33% 48,500 5.23%
1968 408,433 49.83% 358,866 43.78% 52,323 6.38%
1964 282,779 35.96% 501,017 63.72% 2,509 0.32%
1960 408,060 52.56% 367,402 47.32% 959 0.12%
1956 406,393 55.25% 329,204 44.75% 0 0.00%
1952 420,815 60.54% 270,579 38.93% 3,665 0.53%
1948 260,904 49.78% 243,147 46.40% 20,029 3.82%
1944 225,365 46.94% 248,635 51.78% 6,147 1.28%
1940 219,555 45.62% 258,415 53.70% 3,270 0.68%
1936 122,706 29.64% 266,733 64.42% 24,582 5.94%
1932 136,019 36.88% 213,871 57.99% 18,918 5.13%
1928 205,341 64.18% 109,223 34.14% 5,378 1.68%
1924 142,579 51.01% 67,589 24.18% 69,320 24.80%
1920 143,592 60.20% 80,019 33.55% 14,911 6.25%
1916 126,813 48.47% 120,087 45.90% 14,750 5.64%
1912 34,673 25.30% 47,064 34.34% 55,303 40.36%
1908 62,530 56.39% 38,049 34.31% 10,310 9.30%
1904 60,455 67.06% 17,521 19.43% 12,178 13.51%
1900 46,172 55.46% 32,810 39.41% 4,269 5.13%
1896 48,779 50.07% 46,739 47.98% 1,896 1.95%
1892 35,002 44.59% 14,243 18.15% 29,246 37.26%
1888 33,291 53.82% 26,522 42.88% 2,040 3.30%
1884 26,860 50.99% 24,604 46.70% 1,218 2.31%
1880 20,619 50.51% 19,955 48.88% 249 0.61%
1876 15,214 50.92% 14,157 47.38% 510 1.71%
1872 11,818 58.66% 7,742 38.43% 587 2.91%
1868 10,961 49.63% 11,125 50.37% 0 0.00%
1864 9,888 53.90% 8,457 46.10% 0 0.00%
1860 5,344 36.20% 4,131 27.99% 5,286 35.81%
Gubernatorial election results[10]
Year Democratic Republican
1950 34.0% 171,750 66.0% 334,160
1954 43.1% 244,170 56.9% 322,522
1958 44.7% 267,934 55.3% 331,900
1962 41.6% 265,359 54.2% 345,497
1966 44.7% 305,008 55.3% 377,346
1970 44.2% 293,892 55.6% 369,964
1974 57.7% 444,812 42.1% 324,751
1978 45.1% 409,411 54.9% 498,452
1982 35.9% 374,316 61.4% 639,841
1986 51.9% 549,456 47.9% 506,989
1990 45.7% 508,749 40.0% 444,646
1994 51.0% 622,083 42.4% 517,874
1998 64.4% 717,061 30.0% 334,001
2002 49.0% 618,004 46.2% 581,785
2006 50.7% 699,786 42.8% 589,748
2010 49.3% 716,525 47.8% 694,287
2014 49.9% 733,230 44.1% 648,542
2016 50.6% 985,027 43.4% 845,609
2018 50.1% 934,498 43.7% 814,988
2022 47.0% 917,074 43.5% 850,347

The longest-serving governor in Oregon history is John Kitzhaber, who served two consecutive terms as governor, then left office before returning to win a third term in 2010 ahead of Republican and former Portland Trail Blazer Chris Dudley and the 2014 election against Republican Dennis Richardson. Kitzhaber resigned in February 2015 after allegations of financial impropriety involving his partner and girlfriend, Cylvia Hayes, and certain lobbying efforts.[11][12][13]

The state is broken up into two main geographically separate political areas: the generally liberal cities of the Willamette Valley and the rest of the state, whose voters are typically conservative or right wing.[1][14] While about 47% of the population of Oregon lives in the Portland metropolitan area as of 2013,[15][16] the rest of the state has a rural population with generally conservative views on state taxes. Because of the greater population living in the liberal Willamette Valley cities compared to the rest of Oregon, the state has very liberal laws, including on public health care,[17][18] recreational and medical marijuana,[19] assisted dying,[20] and environmental protections.[21]

In the 2016 presidential election, Democrat Hillary Clinton received 50.07% of the vote, while Republican candidate Donald Trump received 39.09%. Trump performed best in Lake County, winning 77% of the 5,400 registered voters. Hillary Clinton performed best in Multnomah County, where she received 73% of the vote. Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson performed best in Gilliam County, where he received 8% of the vote. Columbia and Tillamook counties in the far northwest of Oregon are among 181 pivot counties out of more than 3,000 counties nationwide that Barack Obama carried in 2008 and 2012, but flipped to Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020.[22]

Political geography edit

Oregon's politics are largely divided by the Cascade Mountains, with much of western Oregon leaning Democratic and eastern Oregon leaning Republican.[23] The rapidly-growing area around Bend in Central Oregon has created Democratic voter registration majorities in Deschutes County.[24] Republicans have some strongholds in the western part of the state outside of larger cities.[25] Linn County, between the liberal cities of Eugene and Salem, has voted for the Republican presidential candidate in every election since 1980.[26] Southern Oregon is also a Republican stronghold, except in Jackson County, which frequently votes for both Republican and Democratic candidates.

In the 1998 gubernatorial election, the only county won by Republican candidate Bill Sizemore was Malheur County. Because of the concentration of population in Portland and the Willamette Valley, Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, won the 2018 election despite carrying only 7 of Oregon's 36 counties.

Based on voting data from the 2012 presidential election, Ontario in Malheur County was rated as the most Republican in the state.[27] Gresham in Multnomah County was rated as the most Democratic.[28]

The last time a Democrat won every county in the state in a presidential election was in 1936, when Franklin D. Roosevelt carried all counties. The last time a Republican accomplished this feat was in 1928, when every county was won by Herbert Hoover. The last time a third-party candidate won any county was in 1912, when Theodore Roosevelt carried Clatsop, Columbia, Jackson, and Washington counties on the Progressive ticket. Independent candidate Ross Perot won 24.7% of the 1992 presidential vote in Oregon, but carried no counties.

Ideology edit

Similar to the West Coast states of California and Washington, Oregon has a high percentage of people who identify as liberals. A 2013 Gallup poll that surveyed the political ideology of residents in every state found that people in Oregon identified as:[29]

A 2008 analysis by political statistician Nate Silver on states' political ideology noted that the state's conservatives were the most conservative of any state (more so than Utah or Tennessee) and that the state's liberals were more liberal than any state (more so than Vermont or D.C.).[30]

Political parties edit

 
Party registration by county (October 2018):
  •   Democrat >= 30%
  •   Democrat >= 40%
  •   Democrat >= 50%
  •   Republican >= 30%
  •   Republican >= 40%
  •   Republican >= 50%
  •   Unaffiliated >= 30%

According to the state's election agency, as of September 2022, there were 2,995,364 registered voters in Oregon.

Party registration as of December 2023[31]
Party Number of voters Percentage
Non-affiliated 1,085,064 36.16%
Democratic 994,777 33.15%
Republican 718,800 23.96%
Independent 141,869 4.73%
Libertarian 20,416 0.68%
Working Families 8,330 0.28%
Pacific Green 7,881 0.26%
Constitution 3,867 0.13%
Progressive 3,651 0.12%
No Labels 1,532 0.05%
Other 14,422 0.48%
Total 3,000,609 100%

Federal representation edit

Oregon currently has 6 House districts In the 118th Congress, 4 of Oregon's seats are held by Democrats and 2 are held by Republicans. There are as follows:

Oregon's two United States Senators are Democrats Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, serving since 1996 and 2009, respectively.

Oregon is part of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon in the federal judiciary. The district's cases are appealed to the San Francisco-based United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cohen, Micah (August 16, 2012). "Oregon, Sitting at the Border of Safe and In Play". FiveThirtyEight. Retrieved August 6, 2014.
  2. ^ "Oregon's United States Senators". Oregon Blue Book. Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  3. ^ "Oregon's United States Representatives". Oregon Blue Book. Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  4. ^ "Votes Cast in Oregon for U.S. President 1860-2016" (PDF). Oregon Blue Book. Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  5. ^ "2012 Election Results: Oregon Legislature". OregonLive.com. Retrieved November 7, 2012.
  6. ^ a b Swarthout, John M. (December 1954). "The 1954 Election in Oregon". The Western Political Quarterly. 7 (4): 620–625. doi:10.2307/442815. JSTOR 442815.
  7. ^ "Governor Victor G. Atiyeh's Administration: Biographical Note". Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  8. ^ Turner, Wallace (May 18, 1982). "Oregon's Governor Leading 6 in Polls". The New York Times. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  9. ^ Leip, David. "Presidential General Election Results Comparison – Oregon". US Election Atlas. Retrieved October 29, 2022.
  10. ^ Leip, David. "General Election Results—Oregon". United States Election Atlas. from the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved November 18, 2016.
  11. ^ "Governor's Records Guides - Governor John Kitzhaber". Oregon State Archives. Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  12. ^ Kaplan, Thomas (August 2, 2010). "Candidate's Platform: Jobs. Experience: N.B.A." The New York Times. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
  13. ^ Nakamura, Beth. "Governor John Kitzhaber announces his resignation". The Oregonian. Retrieved February 13, 2015.
  14. ^ Yardley, William (May 19, 2008). "A Shift in Voters, but Oregon Still Embraces the Unconventional". The New York Times. Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  15. ^ . U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on February 24, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  16. ^ "Update of Statistical Area Definitions and Guidance on Their Uses" (PDF). Office of Management and Budget. November 20, 2007. p. 45. Retrieved July 27, 2014 – via National Archives.
  17. ^ "Oregon Health Plan". State of Oregon. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  18. ^ Vekshin, Alison (May 19, 2014). . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on August 8, 2014. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  19. ^ "Oregon Medical Marijuana Program (OMMP)". Oregon Health Authority. State of Oregon. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  20. ^ Oregon Death with Dignity Act
  21. ^ McCaulou, Lily Raff (December 10, 2012). "Oregon's political divide". The Bulletin. Bend, Oregon. Retrieved July 27, 2014.
  22. ^ Bureau, Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital. "Voting surges as campaigns head to finish line". www.mailtribune.com. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  23. ^ Cohen, Micah (August 16, 2012). "Oregon, Sitting at the Border of Safe and In Play". FiveThirtyEight. The New York Times. Retrieved January 3, 2016. Oregon, like Wisconsin, is an ideologically polarized state. The Cascade Mountains are a convenient dividing line, politically and geographically.
  24. ^ Bureau, Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital. "Big turnout, big spending as election finish line looms". The Bulletin. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  25. ^ "Oregon Election Results 2016: President Live Map by County, Real-Time Voting Updates". Election Hub. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  26. ^ Presidential Election of 1976 by County
  27. ^ White, Carrie (June 14, 2016). "These Are The 10 Most Conservative Cities In Oregon". RoadSnacks. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  28. ^ White, Carrie (June 14, 2016). "These Are The 10 Most Liberal Cities In Oregon". RoadSnacks. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  29. ^ Swift, Art (January 31, 2014). "Wyoming Residents Most Conservative, D.C. Most Liberal". Gallup. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  30. ^ Silver, Nate (May 17, 2008). "Oregon: Swing State or latte-drinking, Prius-driving lesbian commune?". FiveThirtyEight.com. Retrieved February 24, 2010.
  31. ^ "Oregon Voter Registration Statistics" (PDF). sos.oregon.gov. Retrieved September 20, 2023.

External links edit

politics, oregon, like, many, other, states, politics, oregon, largely, concerns, regional, issues, oregon, leans, democratic, state, with, both, senators, from, democratic, party, well, four, oregon, representatives, democratic, candidate, president, oregon, . Like many other U S states the politics of Oregon largely concerns regional issues 1 Oregon leans Democratic as a state with both U S senators from the Democratic party 2 as well as four out of Oregon s six U S Representatives 3 The Democratic candidate for president has won in Oregon in every election since 1988 4 Both houses of Oregon s legislative assembly have been under Democratic control since the 2012 elections 5 For most of its existence Oregon was the most consistently Republican west coast state 6 Between 1860 and 1984 the state voted Democratic just six times in 1868 1912 1932 1936 1940 and 1964 In 1954 the upset of incumbent Republican Senator Guy Cordon by Democrat Richard L Neuberger along with Democratic wins in the U S House and statewide races and pickups of fourteen and two seats in the state House and Senate respectively signaled the beginning of a shift towards the Democratic Party 6 The last Republican governor of Oregon was Victor G Atiyeh who served from 1979 to 1987 7 8 Since 1988 Oregon voters have consistently favored Democratic candidates for most major elected positions including the U S presidency Contents 1 History 2 Political geography 2 1 Ideology 3 Political parties 4 Federal representation 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editUnited States presidential election results for Oregon 9 Year Republican Democratic Third party No No No 2020 958 448 40 37 1 340 383 56 45 75 490 3 18 2016 782 403 39 09 1 002 106 50 07 216 827 10 83 2012 754 175 42 15 970 488 54 24 64 607 3 61 2008 738 475 40 40 1 037 291 56 75 52 098 2 85 2004 866 831 47 19 943 163 51 35 26 788 1 46 2000 713 577 46 52 720 342 46 96 100 049 6 52 1996 538 152 39 06 649 641 47 15 189 967 13 79 1992 475 757 32 53 621 314 42 48 365 572 24 99 1988 560 126 46 61 616 206 51 28 25 362 2 11 1984 685 700 55 91 536 479 43 74 4 348 0 35 1980 571 044 48 33 456 890 38 67 153 582 13 00 1976 492 120 47 78 490 407 47 62 47 349 4 60 1972 486 686 52 45 392 760 42 33 48 500 5 23 1968 408 433 49 83 358 866 43 78 52 323 6 38 1964 282 779 35 96 501 017 63 72 2 509 0 32 1960 408 060 52 56 367 402 47 32 959 0 12 1956 406 393 55 25 329 204 44 75 0 0 00 1952 420 815 60 54 270 579 38 93 3 665 0 53 1948 260 904 49 78 243 147 46 40 20 029 3 82 1944 225 365 46 94 248 635 51 78 6 147 1 28 1940 219 555 45 62 258 415 53 70 3 270 0 68 1936 122 706 29 64 266 733 64 42 24 582 5 94 1932 136 019 36 88 213 871 57 99 18 918 5 13 1928 205 341 64 18 109 223 34 14 5 378 1 68 1924 142 579 51 01 67 589 24 18 69 320 24 80 1920 143 592 60 20 80 019 33 55 14 911 6 25 1916 126 813 48 47 120 087 45 90 14 750 5 64 1912 34 673 25 30 47 064 34 34 55 303 40 36 1908 62 530 56 39 38 049 34 31 10 310 9 30 1904 60 455 67 06 17 521 19 43 12 178 13 51 1900 46 172 55 46 32 810 39 41 4 269 5 13 1896 48 779 50 07 46 739 47 98 1 896 1 95 1892 35 002 44 59 14 243 18 15 29 246 37 26 1888 33 291 53 82 26 522 42 88 2 040 3 30 1884 26 860 50 99 24 604 46 70 1 218 2 31 1880 20 619 50 51 19 955 48 88 249 0 61 1876 15 214 50 92 14 157 47 38 510 1 71 1872 11 818 58 66 7 742 38 43 587 2 91 1868 10 961 49 63 11 125 50 37 0 0 00 1864 9 888 53 90 8 457 46 10 0 0 00 1860 5 344 36 20 4 131 27 99 5 286 35 81 Gubernatorial election results 10 Year Democratic Republican 1950 34 0 171 750 66 0 334 160 1954 43 1 244 170 56 9 322 522 1958 44 7 267 934 55 3 331 900 1962 41 6 265 359 54 2 345 497 1966 44 7 305 008 55 3 377 346 1970 44 2 293 892 55 6 369 964 1974 57 7 444 812 42 1 324 751 1978 45 1 409 411 54 9 498 452 1982 35 9 374 316 61 4 639 841 1986 51 9 549 456 47 9 506 989 1990 45 7 508 749 40 0 444 646 1994 51 0 622 083 42 4 517 874 1998 64 4 717 061 30 0 334 001 2002 49 0 618 004 46 2 581 785 2006 50 7 699 786 42 8 589 748 2010 49 3 716 525 47 8 694 287 2014 49 9 733 230 44 1 648 542 2016 50 6 985 027 43 4 845 609 2018 50 1 934 498 43 7 814 988 2022 47 0 917 074 43 5 850 347 The longest serving governor in Oregon history is John Kitzhaber who served two consecutive terms as governor then left office before returning to win a third term in 2010 ahead of Republican and former Portland Trail Blazer Chris Dudley and the 2014 election against Republican Dennis Richardson Kitzhaber resigned in February 2015 after allegations of financial impropriety involving his partner and girlfriend Cylvia Hayes and certain lobbying efforts 11 12 13 The state is broken up into two main geographically separate political areas the generally liberal cities of the Willamette Valley and the rest of the state whose voters are typically conservative or right wing 1 14 While about 47 of the population of Oregon lives in the Portland metropolitan area as of 2013 15 16 the rest of the state has a rural population with generally conservative views on state taxes Because of the greater population living in the liberal Willamette Valley cities compared to the rest of Oregon the state has very liberal laws including on public health care 17 18 recreational and medical marijuana 19 assisted dying 20 and environmental protections 21 In the 2016 presidential election Democrat Hillary Clinton received 50 07 of the vote while Republican candidate Donald Trump received 39 09 Trump performed best in Lake County winning 77 of the 5 400 registered voters Hillary Clinton performed best in Multnomah County where she received 73 of the vote Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson performed best in Gilliam County where he received 8 of the vote Columbia and Tillamook counties in the far northwest of Oregon are among 181 pivot counties out of more than 3 000 counties nationwide that Barack Obama carried in 2008 and 2012 but flipped to Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020 22 Political geography editOregon s politics are largely divided by the Cascade Mountains with much of western Oregon leaning Democratic and eastern Oregon leaning Republican 23 The rapidly growing area around Bend in Central Oregon has created Democratic voter registration majorities in Deschutes County 24 Republicans have some strongholds in the western part of the state outside of larger cities 25 Linn County between the liberal cities of Eugene and Salem has voted for the Republican presidential candidate in every election since 1980 26 Southern Oregon is also a Republican stronghold except in Jackson County which frequently votes for both Republican and Democratic candidates In the 1998 gubernatorial election the only county won by Republican candidate Bill Sizemore was Malheur County Because of the concentration of population in Portland and the Willamette Valley Gov Kate Brown a Democrat won the 2018 election despite carrying only 7 of Oregon s 36 counties Based on voting data from the 2012 presidential election Ontario in Malheur County was rated as the most Republican in the state 27 Gresham in Multnomah County was rated as the most Democratic 28 The last time a Democrat won every county in the state in a presidential election was in 1936 when Franklin D Roosevelt carried all counties The last time a Republican accomplished this feat was in 1928 when every county was won by Herbert Hoover The last time a third party candidate won any county was in 1912 when Theodore Roosevelt carried Clatsop Columbia Jackson and Washington counties on the Progressive ticket Independent candidate Ross Perot won 24 7 of the 1992 presidential vote in Oregon but carried no counties Ideology edit Similar to the West Coast states of California and Washington Oregon has a high percentage of people who identify as liberals A 2013 Gallup poll that surveyed the political ideology of residents in every state found that people in Oregon identified as 29 34 8 moderate 33 6 conservative 27 9 liberal A 2008 analysis by political statistician Nate Silver on states political ideology noted that the state s conservatives were the most conservative of any state more so than Utah or Tennessee and that the state s liberals were more liberal than any state more so than Vermont or D C 30 Political parties editMain article List of political parties in Oregon nbsp Party registration by county October 2018 Democrat gt 30 Democrat gt 40 Democrat gt 50 Republican gt 30 Republican gt 40 Republican gt 50 Unaffiliated gt 30 According to the state s election agency as of September 2022 there were 2 995 364 registered voters in Oregon Party registration as of December 2023 31 Party Number of voters Percentage Non affiliated 1 085 064 36 16 Democratic 994 777 33 15 Republican 718 800 23 96 Independent 141 869 4 73 Libertarian 20 416 0 68 Working Families 8 330 0 28 Pacific Green 7 881 0 26 Constitution 3 867 0 13 Progressive 3 651 0 12 No Labels 1 532 0 05 Other 14 422 0 48 Total 3 000 609 100 Federal representation editMain article Oregon s congressional districts Oregon currently has 6 House districts In the 118th Congress 4 of Oregon s seats are held by Democrats and 2 are held by Republicans There are as follows Oregon s 1st congressional district represented by Suzanne Bonamici D Oregon s 2nd congressional district represented by Cliff Bentz R Oregon s 3rd congressional district represented by Earl Blumenauer D Oregon s 4th congressional district represented by Val Hoyle D Oregon s 5th congressional district represented by Lori Chavez DeRemer R Oregon s 6th congressional district represented by Andrea Salinas D Oregon s two United States Senators are Democrats Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley serving since 1996 and 2009 respectively Oregon is part of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon in the federal judiciary The district s cases are appealed to the San Francisco based United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit See also editPolitical party strength in OregonReferences edit a b Cohen Micah August 16 2012 Oregon Sitting at the Border of Safe and In Play FiveThirtyEight Retrieved August 6 2014 Oregon s United States Senators Oregon Blue Book Oregon Secretary of State Retrieved July 31 2014 Oregon s United States Representatives Oregon Blue Book Oregon Secretary of State Retrieved July 31 2014 Votes Cast in Oregon for U S President 1860 2016 PDF Oregon Blue Book Oregon Secretary of State Retrieved July 31 2014 2012 Election Results Oregon Legislature OregonLive com Retrieved November 7 2012 a b Swarthout John M December 1954 The 1954 Election in Oregon The Western Political Quarterly 7 4 620 625 doi 10 2307 442815 JSTOR 442815 Governor Victor G Atiyeh s Administration Biographical Note Oregon Secretary of State Retrieved July 31 2014 Turner Wallace May 18 1982 Oregon s Governor Leading 6 in Polls The New York Times Retrieved July 31 2014 Leip David Presidential General Election Results Comparison Oregon US Election Atlas Retrieved October 29 2022 Leip David General Election Results Oregon United States Election Atlas Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved November 18 2016 Governor s Records Guides Governor John Kitzhaber Oregon State Archives Oregon Secretary of State Retrieved July 31 2014 Kaplan Thomas August 2 2010 Candidate s Platform Jobs Experience N B A The New York Times Retrieved July 31 2010 Nakamura Beth Governor John Kitzhaber announces his resignation The Oregonian Retrieved February 13 2015 Yardley William May 19 2008 A Shift in Voters but Oregon Still Embraces the Unconventional The New York Times Retrieved July 27 2014 State amp County QuickFacts Oregon U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 24 2016 Retrieved July 27 2014 Update of Statistical Area Definitions and Guidance on Their Uses PDF Office of Management and Budget November 20 2007 p 45 Retrieved July 27 2014 via National Archives Oregon Health Plan State of Oregon Retrieved July 31 2014 Vekshin Alison May 19 2014 Doctor Governor Kitzhaber Imperiled by Oregon Insurance Failure Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on August 8 2014 Retrieved July 31 2014 Oregon Medical Marijuana Program OMMP Oregon Health Authority State of Oregon Retrieved July 31 2014 Oregon Death with Dignity Act McCaulou Lily Raff December 10 2012 Oregon s political divide The Bulletin Bend Oregon Retrieved July 27 2014 Bureau Gary A Warner Oregon Capital Voting surges as campaigns head to finish line www mailtribune com Retrieved 2021 12 23 Cohen Micah August 16 2012 Oregon Sitting at the Border of Safe and In Play FiveThirtyEight The New York Times Retrieved January 3 2016 Oregon like Wisconsin is an ideologically polarized state The Cascade Mountains are a convenient dividing line politically and geographically Bureau Gary A Warner Oregon Capital Big turnout big spending as election finish line looms The Bulletin Retrieved 2020 10 30 Oregon Election Results 2016 President Live Map by County Real Time Voting Updates Election Hub Retrieved 2020 10 30 Presidential Election of 1976 by County White Carrie June 14 2016 These Are The 10 Most Conservative Cities In Oregon RoadSnacks Retrieved January 7 2017 White Carrie June 14 2016 These Are The 10 Most Liberal Cities In Oregon RoadSnacks Retrieved January 7 2017 Swift Art January 31 2014 Wyoming Residents Most Conservative D C Most Liberal Gallup Retrieved July 31 2014 Silver Nate May 17 2008 Oregon Swing State or latte drinking Prius driving lesbian commune FiveThirtyEight com Retrieved February 24 2010 Oregon Voter Registration Statistics PDF sos oregon gov Retrieved September 20 2023 External links editPolitics of Oregon at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of Oregon amp oldid 1219779449, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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