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1988 United States presidential election in California

The 1988 United States presidential election in California took place on November 8, 1988, and was part of the 1988 United States presidential election. Voters chose 47 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1988 United States presidential election in California

← 1984 November 8, 1988 1992 →
Turnout72.81% (of registered voters) 2.12 pp
53.51% (of eligible voters) 5.57 pp[1]
 
Nominee George H. W. Bush Michael Dukakis
Party Republican Democratic
Home state Texas Massachusetts
Running mate Dan Quayle Lloyd Bentsen
Electoral vote 47 0
Popular vote 5,054,917 4,702,233
Percentage 51.13% 47.56%

County Results

President before election

Ronald Reagan
Republican

Elected President

George H. W. Bush
Republican

Bush campaigning in San Francisco on September 14, 1988
Dukakis holds an election eve rally at the Pauley Pavilion

California voted for the Republican nominee, Vice President George H. W. Bush, over the Democratic nominee, Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis by a margin of 3.57 percent. Bush won forty-four of the state's fifty-eight counties, but the election was kept close by Dukakis’ strong performance in the Bay Area and his victory in Los Angeles, the state's most populated county. Also, Dukakis won at least 31% of the vote in every county and at least 40 percent in forty of them. Much like Vermont in the same year, California was seen by observers as a swing state in this year's presidential election cycle due to fairly close polling.

California weighed in for this election as 4.2% more Democratic than the nation at large. To date, this is the last presidential election in which the state of California was carried by a Republican candidate. From the next election onwards, California would, like the other two states on the West Coast, transition from being swing states to voting consistently for Democratic candidates (Oregon and Washington even voted for Dukakis in 1988), forming a "blue wall" of sorts over the next three decades. In fact, this is the only time since 1948 that Oregon and California voted for different candidates. Bush is also the last Republican to carry the following counties in a presidential election: Imperial, Monterey, Napa, Sacramento, San Benito and Santa Barbara, the last Republican to win any county in the Bay Area (Napa), the last Republican to secure at least one-quarter of the vote in San Francisco, and the last Republican to secure at least 40% of the vote in Los Angeles County.

Bush became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Sonoma County, a Republican stronghold for most of the 20th century,[2] since Benjamin Harrison in 1888, as well as the first to do so without carrying Los Angeles County, a bellwether county from 1920 to 1984, since Rutherford Hayes in 1876. Due to Bush's victory in California, this was also the most recent presidential election when the state of Texas would not be the biggest electoral vote prize won by the Republican candidate, and likewise for the Democratic nominee in regards to California, which instead was New York.

Analysis

California voted Republican in 1988 for the ninth time out of ten elections from 1952 on, confirming its status as a Republican electoral bulwark during this period.[3] However, George H. W. Bush won California by only 3.57% even as he won nationally by 7.72%; and Florida displaced it as the state providing the Republican with his biggest raw-vote margin in the nation. Signs of the phenomena that would come to make California a 'Blue Wall' state from 1992 on emerged in this election; for the first time since 1916, Los Angeles County voted for the loser of the national election. Bush was also nearly swept out of the Bay Area, losing populous former Republican strongholds such as Santa Clara, San Mateo, Sonoma, and Marin Counties (as well as Santa Cruz County, the northernmost Central Coast county). While Bush continued to do well in San Diego, Orange, and Ventura Counties (and, to a lesser extent, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Monterey Counties, as well as in relatively thinly populated Napa County), this represented a significant erosion of the Republican Party's traditional base along the length of California's coast.[4] By 2016 and 2020, this process was complete, as every coastal county in the state save Del Norte voted Democratic two elections in a row.

On the other hand, in contrast to the 1976, 1968, 1960, and 1948 elections in California, all of which had been close (and which had been won by the Democrat in 1948), Dukakis carried little of inland California, which had traditionally been the Democratic base in the state.[4] Counties that had voted Democratic in all four of those elections, but voted Republican in 1988, included Sacramento, Fresno, Placer, Merced, Shasta, Madera, Amador, Lassen, Plumas, Trinity, and Sierra Counties. Apart from Sacramento, Fresno, and Merced Counties, these have continued to remain as Republican strongholds in the state even as overall it has become increasingly blue in the 21st century. Comparing 1988 directly with what at the time was the most recent close election in California, 1976, Dukakis carried only nine of the 27 counties Carter carried in the state. Three of these (Shasta, Plumas, and Sierra) had even voted for McGovern in the disastrous Democratic defeat of 1972.

Results

1988 United States presidential election in California[5]
Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Republican George Herbert Walker Bush 5,054,917 51.13% 47
Democratic Michael Stanley Dukakis 4,702,233 47.56% 0
Libertarian Ron Paul 70,105 0.71% 0
Independent Lenora Fulani 31,180 0.32% 0
American Independent James C. Griffin 27,818 0.28% 0
No party David Duke (write-in) 483 0.00% 0
No party Eugene McCarthy (write-in) 234 0.00% 0
No party Herbert G. Lewin (write-in) 58 0.00% 0
No party Write-in 25 0.00% 0
No party Larry Holmes (write-in) 11 0.00% 0
Invalid or blank votes
Totals 9,887,064 100.00% 47
Voter turnout

By county

County Bush Votes Dukakis Votes Others Votes
Orange 67.75% 586,230 31.09% 269,013 1.16% 10,064
Sutter 67.47% 14,100 31.09% 6,557 1.15% 241
Inyo 64.34% 5,042 33.85% 2,653 1.81% 142
Modoc 62.68% 2,518 35.25% 1,416 2.07% 83
Glenn 62.06% 4,944 36.33% 2,894 1.61% 128
Ventura 61.64% 147,604 37.19% 89,065 1.17% 2,804
Kern 61.48% 90,550 37.40% 55,083 1.13% 1,660
Mono 61.38% 2,177 36.20% 1,284 2.42% 86
Yuba 61.37% 8,937 37.38% 5,444 1.25% 182
San Diego 60.19% 523,143 38.34% 333,264 1.47% 12,788
San Bernardino 59.99% 235,167 38.55% 151,118 1.46% 5,723
Tulare 59.61% 46,891 39.04% 30,711 1.36% 1,067
Placer 59.59% 42,096 38.95% 27,516 1.46% 1,030
Colusa 59.49% 3,077 39.10% 2,022 1.41% 73
Riverside 59.46% 199,979 39.58% 133,122 0.97% 3,247
Shasta 59.36% 32,402 38.79% 21,171 1.85% 1,012
El Dorado 59.33% 30,021 39.13% 19,801 1.54% 781
Lassen 58.59% 5,157 39.15% 3,446 2.26% 199
Nevada 57.76% 21,383 40.46% 14,980 1.78% 660
Tehama 56.52% 9,854 41.37% 7,213 2.11% 367
Kings 56.41% 12,118 42.56% 9,142 1.03% 222
Calaveras 56.28% 7,640 41.80% 5,674 1.92% 260
Butte 56.04% 40,143 42.45% 30,406 1.51% 1,082
Amador 55.87% 6,893 42.12% 5,197 2.01% 248
San Luis Obispo 55.85% 46,613 42.73% 35,667 1.42% 1,187
Alpine 55.43% 306 41.67% 230 2.90% 16
Imperial 55.16% 12,889 43.84% 10,243 1.00% 233
Trinity 54.63% 3,267 42.11% 2,518 3.26% 195
Madera 54.59% 13,255 43.83% 10,642 1.58% 384
Mariposa 54.53% 3,768 43.39% 2,998 2.08% 144
San Joaquin 54.39% 75,309 44.56% 61,699 1.04% 1,445
Santa Barbara 54.24% 77,524 44.48% 63,586 1.28% 1,830
San Benito 54.11% 5,578 44.23% 4,559 1.66% 171
Tuolumne 54.00% 10,646 44.22% 8,717 1.79% 352
Stanislaus 53.07% 51,648 45.92% 44,685 1.01% 982
Merced 51.20% 21,717 47.40% 20,105 1.40% 592
Plumas 51.06% 4,603 47.15% 4,251 1.79% 161
Sacramento 51.01% 201,832 47.65% 188,557 1.34% 5,301
Siskiyou 50.88% 9,056 47.00% 8,365 2.11% 376
Sierra 50.71% 860 46.64% 791 2.65% 45
Napa 50.19% 23,235 48.14% 22,283 1.67% 772
Fresno 49.95% 94,835 48.79% 92,635 1.26% 2,400
Monterey 49.83% 50,022 48.81% 48,998 1.36% 1,361
Del Norte 49.73% 3,714 48.03% 3,587 2.24% 167
Lake 48.03% 9,366 50.39% 9,828 1.58% 308
Contra Costa 47.86% 158,652 51.10% 169,411 1.04% 3,448
Solano 47.43% 50,314 51.23% 54,344 1.35% 1,430
Santa Clara 46.99% 254,442 51.30% 277,810 1.71% 9,276
Los Angeles 46.88% 1,239,716 51.89% 1,372,352 1.23% 32,603
San Mateo 42.94% 109,261 55.74% 141,859 1.32% 3,360
Mendocino 41.94% 12,979 55.42% 17,152 2.64% 816
Sonoma 41.91% 67,725 56.48% 91,262 1.61% 2,596
Yolo 41.89% 22,358 57.01% 30,429 1.10% 585
Humboldt 41.15% 21,460 57.11% 29,781 1.74% 905
Marin 39.73% 46,855 58.85% 69,394 1.42% 1,671
Santa Cruz 36.77% 37,728 61.53% 63,133 1.71% 1,750
Alameda 33.99% 162,815 64.78% 310,283 1.23% 5,899
San Francisco 26.14% 72,503 72.78% 201,887 1.08% 3,004

By congressional district

Bush won 23 of the 45 congressional districts, including five held by Democrats

District Bush Dukakis Representative
1st 43.9% 56.1% Douglas H. Bosco (D)
2nd 59.0% 41.0% Wally Herger (R)
3rd 50.4% 49.6% Bob Matsui (D)
4th 51.5% 48.5% Vic Fazio (D)
5th 28.0% 72.0% Nancy Pelosi (D)
6th 35.2% 64.8% Barbara Boxer (D)
7th 46.1% 53.9% George Miller (D)
8th 29.4% 70.6% Ron Dellums (D)
9th 42.4% 57.6% Pete Stark (D)
10th 44.2% 55.8% Don Edwards (D)
11th 41.3% 58.7% Tom Lantos (D)
12th 50.1% 49.9% Tom Campbell (R)
13th 49.8% 50.2% Norman Mineta (D)
14th 59.8% 40.2% Norman D. Shumway (R)
15th 52.8% 47.2% Tony Coelho (D)
16th 45.0% 55.0% Leon Panetta (D)
17th 59.4% 40.6% Chip Pashayan (R)
18th 46.5% 53.5% Richard Lehman (D)
19th 54.7% 45.3% Bob Lagomarsino (R)
20th 65.3% 34.7% Bill Thomas (R)
21st 65.1% 34.9% Elton Gallegly (R)
22nd 64.7% 35.3% Carlos Moorhead (R)
23rd 43.5% 56.5% Anthony Beilenson (D)
24th 34.3% 65.7% Henry Waxman (D)
25th 32.1% 67.9% Edward Roybal (D)
26th 44.1% 55.9% Howard Berman (D)
27th 44.8% 55.2% Mel Levine (D)
28th 26.4% 73.6% Julian Dixon (D)
29th 19.3% 80.7% Augustus Hawkins (D)
30th 46.6% 53.4% Matthew Martinez (D)
31st 34.8% 65.2% Mervyn Dymally (D)
32nd 50.4% 49.6% Glenn Anderson (D)
33rd 63.1% 36.9% David Dreier (R)
34th 49.1% 50.9% Ed Torres (D)
35th 66.2% 33.8% Jerry Lewis (R)
36th 52.0% 48.0% George Brown (D)
37th 61.5% 38.5% Al McCandless (R)
38th 61.7% 38.3% Bob Dornan (R)
39th 71.5% 28.5% William Dannemeyer (R)
40th 68.7% 31.3% Christopher Cox (R)
41st 59.1% 40.9% Bill Lowery (R)
42nd 65.7% 34.3% Dana Rohrabacher (R)
43rd 68.8% 31.2% Ron Packard (R)
44th 47.9% 52.1% Jim Bates (D)
45th 66.8% 33.2% Duncan Hunter (R)

References

  1. ^ "Historical Voter Registration and Participation in Statewide General Elections 1910-2018" (PDF). California Secretary of State. Retrieved 2022-05-05.
  2. ^ "Opinion: The GOP's Long Slide into Irrelevance in California". Times of San Diego. 2018-07-03. Retrieved 2021-05-31.
  3. ^ "Red States and Blue States Are a Myth". National Review. 2016-12-01. Retrieved 2020-12-31.
  4. ^ a b "The California Republican Party's long slide into irrelevance". Orange County Register. 2018-07-02. Retrieved 2020-12-31.
  5. ^ "1988 Presidential General Election Results - California". Dave Leip's U.S. Election Atlas. Retrieved 2008-08-25.

1988, united, states, presidential, election, california, main, article, 1988, united, states, presidential, election, took, place, november, 1988, part, 1988, united, states, presidential, election, voters, chose, representatives, electors, electoral, college. Main article 1988 United States presidential election The 1988 United States presidential election in California took place on November 8 1988 and was part of the 1988 United States presidential election Voters chose 47 representatives or electors to the Electoral College who voted for president and vice president 1988 United States presidential election in California 1984 November 8 1988 1992 Turnout72 81 of registered voters 2 12 pp 53 51 of eligible voters 5 57 pp 1 Nominee George H W Bush Michael DukakisParty Republican DemocraticHome state Texas MassachusettsRunning mate Dan Quayle Lloyd BentsenElectoral vote 47 0Popular vote 5 054 917 4 702 233Percentage 51 13 47 56 County Results Bush 40 50 50 60 60 70 Dukakis 50 60 60 70 70 80 President before electionRonald ReaganRepublican Elected President George H W BushRepublicanBush campaigning in San Francisco on September 14 1988 Dukakis holds an election eve rally at the Pauley Pavilion California voted for the Republican nominee Vice President George H W Bush over the Democratic nominee Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis by a margin of 3 57 percent Bush won forty four of the state s fifty eight counties but the election was kept close by Dukakis strong performance in the Bay Area and his victory in Los Angeles the state s most populated county Also Dukakis won at least 31 of the vote in every county and at least 40 percent in forty of them Much like Vermont in the same year California was seen by observers as a swing state in this year s presidential election cycle due to fairly close polling California weighed in for this election as 4 2 more Democratic than the nation at large To date this is the last presidential election in which the state of California was carried by a Republican candidate From the next election onwards California would like the other two states on the West Coast transition from being swing states to voting consistently for Democratic candidates Oregon and Washington even voted for Dukakis in 1988 forming a blue wall of sorts over the next three decades In fact this is the only time since 1948 that Oregon and California voted for different candidates Bush is also the last Republican to carry the following counties in a presidential election Imperial Monterey Napa Sacramento San Benito and Santa Barbara the last Republican to win any county in the Bay Area Napa the last Republican to secure at least one quarter of the vote in San Francisco and the last Republican to secure at least 40 of the vote in Los Angeles County Bush became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Sonoma County a Republican stronghold for most of the 20th century 2 since Benjamin Harrison in 1888 as well as the first to do so without carrying Los Angeles County a bellwether county from 1920 to 1984 since Rutherford Hayes in 1876 Due to Bush s victory in California this was also the most recent presidential election when the state of Texas would not be the biggest electoral vote prize won by the Republican candidate and likewise for the Democratic nominee in regards to California which instead was New York Contents 1 Analysis 2 Results 2 1 By county 2 2 By congressional district 3 ReferencesAnalysis EditCalifornia voted Republican in 1988 for the ninth time out of ten elections from 1952 on confirming its status as a Republican electoral bulwark during this period 3 However George H W Bush won California by only 3 57 even as he won nationally by 7 72 and Florida displaced it as the state providing the Republican with his biggest raw vote margin in the nation Signs of the phenomena that would come to make California a Blue Wall state from 1992 on emerged in this election for the first time since 1916 Los Angeles County voted for the loser of the national election Bush was also nearly swept out of the Bay Area losing populous former Republican strongholds such as Santa Clara San Mateo Sonoma and Marin Counties as well as Santa Cruz County the northernmost Central Coast county While Bush continued to do well in San Diego Orange and Ventura Counties and to a lesser extent Santa Barbara San Luis Obispo and Monterey Counties as well as in relatively thinly populated Napa County this represented a significant erosion of the Republican Party s traditional base along the length of California s coast 4 By 2016 and 2020 this process was complete as every coastal county in the state save Del Norte voted Democratic two elections in a row On the other hand in contrast to the 1976 1968 1960 and 1948 elections in California all of which had been close and which had been won by the Democrat in 1948 Dukakis carried little of inland California which had traditionally been the Democratic base in the state 4 Counties that had voted Democratic in all four of those elections but voted Republican in 1988 included Sacramento Fresno Placer Merced Shasta Madera Amador Lassen Plumas Trinity and Sierra Counties Apart from Sacramento Fresno and Merced Counties these have continued to remain as Republican strongholds in the state even as overall it has become increasingly blue in the 21st century Comparing 1988 directly with what at the time was the most recent close election in California 1976 Dukakis carried only nine of the 27 counties Carter carried in the state Three of these Shasta Plumas and Sierra had even voted for McGovern in the disastrous Democratic defeat of 1972 Results Edit1988 United States presidential election in California 5 Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votesRepublican George Herbert Walker Bush 5 054 917 51 13 47Democratic Michael Stanley Dukakis 4 702 233 47 56 0Libertarian Ron Paul 70 105 0 71 0Independent Lenora Fulani 31 180 0 32 0American Independent James C Griffin 27 818 0 28 0No party David Duke write in 483 0 00 0No party Eugene McCarthy write in 234 0 00 0No party Herbert G Lewin write in 58 0 00 0No party Write in 25 0 00 0No party Larry Holmes write in 11 0 00 0Invalid or blank votes Totals 9 887 064 100 00 47Voter turnout By county Edit County Bush Votes Dukakis Votes Others VotesOrange 67 75 586 230 31 09 269 013 1 16 10 064Sutter 67 47 14 100 31 09 6 557 1 15 241Inyo 64 34 5 042 33 85 2 653 1 81 142Modoc 62 68 2 518 35 25 1 416 2 07 83Glenn 62 06 4 944 36 33 2 894 1 61 128Ventura 61 64 147 604 37 19 89 065 1 17 2 804Kern 61 48 90 550 37 40 55 083 1 13 1 660Mono 61 38 2 177 36 20 1 284 2 42 86Yuba 61 37 8 937 37 38 5 444 1 25 182San Diego 60 19 523 143 38 34 333 264 1 47 12 788San Bernardino 59 99 235 167 38 55 151 118 1 46 5 723Tulare 59 61 46 891 39 04 30 711 1 36 1 067Placer 59 59 42 096 38 95 27 516 1 46 1 030Colusa 59 49 3 077 39 10 2 022 1 41 73Riverside 59 46 199 979 39 58 133 122 0 97 3 247Shasta 59 36 32 402 38 79 21 171 1 85 1 012El Dorado 59 33 30 021 39 13 19 801 1 54 781Lassen 58 59 5 157 39 15 3 446 2 26 199Nevada 57 76 21 383 40 46 14 980 1 78 660Tehama 56 52 9 854 41 37 7 213 2 11 367Kings 56 41 12 118 42 56 9 142 1 03 222Calaveras 56 28 7 640 41 80 5 674 1 92 260Butte 56 04 40 143 42 45 30 406 1 51 1 082Amador 55 87 6 893 42 12 5 197 2 01 248San Luis Obispo 55 85 46 613 42 73 35 667 1 42 1 187Alpine 55 43 306 41 67 230 2 90 16Imperial 55 16 12 889 43 84 10 243 1 00 233Trinity 54 63 3 267 42 11 2 518 3 26 195Madera 54 59 13 255 43 83 10 642 1 58 384Mariposa 54 53 3 768 43 39 2 998 2 08 144San Joaquin 54 39 75 309 44 56 61 699 1 04 1 445Santa Barbara 54 24 77 524 44 48 63 586 1 28 1 830San Benito 54 11 5 578 44 23 4 559 1 66 171Tuolumne 54 00 10 646 44 22 8 717 1 79 352Stanislaus 53 07 51 648 45 92 44 685 1 01 982Merced 51 20 21 717 47 40 20 105 1 40 592Plumas 51 06 4 603 47 15 4 251 1 79 161Sacramento 51 01 201 832 47 65 188 557 1 34 5 301Siskiyou 50 88 9 056 47 00 8 365 2 11 376Sierra 50 71 860 46 64 791 2 65 45Napa 50 19 23 235 48 14 22 283 1 67 772Fresno 49 95 94 835 48 79 92 635 1 26 2 400Monterey 49 83 50 022 48 81 48 998 1 36 1 361Del Norte 49 73 3 714 48 03 3 587 2 24 167Lake 48 03 9 366 50 39 9 828 1 58 308Contra Costa 47 86 158 652 51 10 169 411 1 04 3 448Solano 47 43 50 314 51 23 54 344 1 35 1 430Santa Clara 46 99 254 442 51 30 277 810 1 71 9 276Los Angeles 46 88 1 239 716 51 89 1 372 352 1 23 32 603San Mateo 42 94 109 261 55 74 141 859 1 32 3 360Mendocino 41 94 12 979 55 42 17 152 2 64 816Sonoma 41 91 67 725 56 48 91 262 1 61 2 596Yolo 41 89 22 358 57 01 30 429 1 10 585Humboldt 41 15 21 460 57 11 29 781 1 74 905Marin 39 73 46 855 58 85 69 394 1 42 1 671Santa Cruz 36 77 37 728 61 53 63 133 1 71 1 750Alameda 33 99 162 815 64 78 310 283 1 23 5 899San Francisco 26 14 72 503 72 78 201 887 1 08 3 004By congressional district Edit Bush won 23 of the 45 congressional districts including five held by Democrats District Bush Dukakis Representative1st 43 9 56 1 Douglas H Bosco D 2nd 59 0 41 0 Wally Herger R 3rd 50 4 49 6 Bob Matsui D 4th 51 5 48 5 Vic Fazio D 5th 28 0 72 0 Nancy Pelosi D 6th 35 2 64 8 Barbara Boxer D 7th 46 1 53 9 George Miller D 8th 29 4 70 6 Ron Dellums D 9th 42 4 57 6 Pete Stark D 10th 44 2 55 8 Don Edwards D 11th 41 3 58 7 Tom Lantos D 12th 50 1 49 9 Tom Campbell R 13th 49 8 50 2 Norman Mineta D 14th 59 8 40 2 Norman D Shumway R 15th 52 8 47 2 Tony Coelho D 16th 45 0 55 0 Leon Panetta D 17th 59 4 40 6 Chip Pashayan R 18th 46 5 53 5 Richard Lehman D 19th 54 7 45 3 Bob Lagomarsino R 20th 65 3 34 7 Bill Thomas R 21st 65 1 34 9 Elton Gallegly R 22nd 64 7 35 3 Carlos Moorhead R 23rd 43 5 56 5 Anthony Beilenson D 24th 34 3 65 7 Henry Waxman D 25th 32 1 67 9 Edward Roybal D 26th 44 1 55 9 Howard Berman D 27th 44 8 55 2 Mel Levine D 28th 26 4 73 6 Julian Dixon D 29th 19 3 80 7 Augustus Hawkins D 30th 46 6 53 4 Matthew Martinez D 31st 34 8 65 2 Mervyn Dymally D 32nd 50 4 49 6 Glenn Anderson D 33rd 63 1 36 9 David Dreier R 34th 49 1 50 9 Ed Torres D 35th 66 2 33 8 Jerry Lewis R 36th 52 0 48 0 George Brown D 37th 61 5 38 5 Al McCandless R 38th 61 7 38 3 Bob Dornan R 39th 71 5 28 5 William Dannemeyer R 40th 68 7 31 3 Christopher Cox R 41st 59 1 40 9 Bill Lowery R 42nd 65 7 34 3 Dana Rohrabacher R 43rd 68 8 31 2 Ron Packard R 44th 47 9 52 1 Jim Bates D 45th 66 8 33 2 Duncan Hunter R References Edit Historical Voter Registration and Participation in Statewide General Elections 1910 2018 PDF California Secretary of State Retrieved 2022 05 05 Opinion The GOP s Long Slide into Irrelevance in California Times of San Diego 2018 07 03 Retrieved 2021 05 31 Red States and Blue States Are a Myth National Review 2016 12 01 Retrieved 2020 12 31 a b The California Republican Party s long slide into irrelevance Orange County Register 2018 07 02 Retrieved 2020 12 31 1988 Presidential General Election Results California Dave Leip s U S Election Atlas Retrieved 2008 08 25 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1988 United States presidential election in California amp oldid 1141197130, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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