Electoral history of Al Gore
Al Gore, was the 45th Vice President of the United States (1993–2001); United States Senator (1985–1993) and United States Representative (1977–1985) from Tennessee.
House
Tennessee's 4th congressional district, 1976 (Democratic primary):[1]
- Al Gore – 37,860 (32.11%)
- Stanley Rogers – 34,121 (28.94%)
- T. Tommy Cutrer – 19,856 (16.84%)
- Ben H. McFarlin – 13,917 (11.80%)
- Larry S. Irby – 5,359 (4.55%)
- Sarah King – 3,667 (3.11%)
- William H. Long – 1,456 (1.24%)
- Robert Paulk – 875 (0.74%)
- William J. Kelton – 795 (0.67%)
Tennessee's 4th congressional district, 1976:[1]
- Al Gore (D) – 115,392 (94.04%)
- William McGlamery (I) – 7,320 (5.97%)
Tennessee's 4th congressional district, 1978:[2]
- Al Gore (D) (inc.) – 108,695 (100.00%)
Tennessee's 4th congressional district, 1980:[3]
- Al Gore (D) (inc.) – 137,612 (79.29%)
- James B. Seigneur (R) – 35,954 (20.72%)
Tennessee's 6th congressional district, 1982:[4]
- Al Gore (D) – 104,094 (100.00%)
Senate
Tennessee United States Senate election, 1984:[5]
- Al Gore (D) – 1,000,607 (60.72%)
- Victor Ashe (R) – 557,016 (33.80%)
- Ed McAteer (I) conservative – 87,234 (5.29%)
- Khalil-Ullah Al-Muhaymin (I) – 3,179 (0.19%)
Tennessee United States Senate election, 1990:[6]
- Al Gore (D) (inc.) – 529,914 (67.72%)
- William R. Hawkins (R) – 233,324 (29.82%)
- Willie C. Jacox (I) – 11,172 (1.43%)
- Charles Gordon Vick (I) – 7,995 (1.02%)
- Write-ins – 109 (0.01%)
Presidential elections
Democratic Party presidential primaries, 1988:[7]
- Michael Dukakis – 9,898,750 (42.47%)
- Jesse Jackson – 6,788,991 (29.13%)
- Al Gore – 3,185,806 (13.67%)
- Dick Gephardt – 1,399,041 (6.00%)
- Paul M. Simon – 1,082,960 (4.65%)
- Gary Hart – 415,716 (1.78%)
- Unpledged delegates – 250,307 (1.07%)
- Bruce Babbitt – 77,780 (0.33%)
- Lyndon LaRouche – 70,938 (0.30%)
- David Duke – 45,289 (0.19%)
- James Traficant – 30,879 (0.13%)
- Douglas Applegate – 25,068 (0.11%)
1992 Democratic National Convention (Presidential tally):[8]
- Bill Clinton – 3,372 (80.27%)
- Jerry Brown – 596 (14.19%)
- Paul Tsongas – 209 (4.98%)
- Robert P. Casey – 10 (0.24%)
- Patricia Schroeder – 8 (0.19%)
- Larry Agran – 3 (0.07%)
- Ron Daniels – 1 (0.02%)
- Al Gore – 1 (0.02%)
- Joe Simonetta – 1 (0.02%)
1992 Democratic National Convention (Vice Presidential tally):[9]
- Al Gore – 4,288 (100.00%)
United States presidential election, 1992
- Bill Clinton/Al Gore (D) – 44,909,806 (43.0%) and 370 electoral votes (32 states and D.C. carried)
- George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle (R) (inc.) – 39,104,550 (37.4%) and 168 electoral votes (18 states carried)
- Ross Perot/James Stockdale (I) – 19,743,821 (18.9%)
- Andre Marrou/Nancy Lord (Libertarian) – 290,087 (0.03%)
- Bo Gritz/Cy Minett (Populist) – 106,152 (0.01%)
- Lenora Fulani/Maria Munoz (New Alliance) – 73,622 (0.07%)
- Howard Phillips/Albion Knight, Jr. (Taxpayers) – 43,369 (0.04%)
New Hampshire Democratic Vice Presidential primary, 1996:[10]
All candidates were write-in
- Al Gore (inc.) – 16,410 (91.02%)
- Colin Powell – 312 (1.73%)
- Pat Buchanan – 219 (1.22%)
- Bob Dole – 171 (0.95%)
- Bill Clinton – 152 (0.84%)
- Lamar Alexander – 148 (0.82%)
- Alan Keyes – 139 (0.77%)
- Steve Forbes – 119 (0.66%)
1996 Democratic National Convention (Vice Presidential tally):[11]
- Al Gore (inc.) – 4,289 (100.00%)
United States presidential election, 1996
- Bill Clinton/Al Gore (D) (inc.) – 47,400,125 (49.3%) and 379 electoral votes (31 states and D.C. carried)
- Bob Dole/Jack Kemp (R) – 39,198,755 (40.7%) and 159 electoral votes (19 states carried)
- Ross Perot/Pat Choate (Reform) – 8,085,402 (8.4%)
- Ralph Nader (Green) – 685,297 (0.7%)
- Harry Browne/Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian) – 485,798 (0.5%)
- Howard Phillips/Herb Titus (Taxpayers) – 184,820 (0.1%)
- John Hagelin/Michael Tompkins (Natural Law) – 113,670 (0.1%)
- Others – 121,534 (0.01%)
Democratic Party presidential primaries, 2000:[12]
- Al Gore – 10,626,568 (75.80%)
- Bill Bradley – 2,798,281 (19.96%)
- Lyndon LaRouche – 323,014 (2.30%)
- Unpledged delegates – 238,870 (1.70%)
- Angus Wheeler McDonald – 19,374 (0.14%)
- Randy Crow – 5,126 (0.04%)
2000 Democratic National Convention (Presidential tally):[13]
- Al Gore – 4,328 (99.79%)
- Abstaining – 9 (0.21%)
United States presidential election, 2000:
- George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (R) – 50,456,002 (47.9%) and 271 electoral votes (30 states carried)
- Al Gore/Joe Lieberman (D) – 50,999,897 (48.4%) and 266 electoral votes (20 states and D.C. carried)
- Abstaining – 1 electoral vote (D.C. faithless elector)
- Ralph Nader/Winona LaDuke (Green) – 2,882,955 (2.7%)
- Pat Buchanan/Ezola B. Foster (Reform) – 448,895 (0.4%)
- Harry Browne/Art Olivier (Libertarian) – 384,431 (0.4%)
- Howard Phillips/Curtis Frazier (Taxpayers) – 98,020 (0.1%)
- John Hagelin/Nat Goldhaber (Natural Law) – 83,714 (0.1%)
References
- 1 2 Our Campaigns – TN District 04 – D Primary Race – Aug 5, 1976
- ↑ Our Campaigns – TN District 4 Race – Nov 7, 1978
- ↑ Our Campaigns – TN District 4 Race – Nov 4, 1980
- ↑ Our Campaigns – TN District 6 Race – Nov 2, 1982
- ↑ Our Campaigns – TN US Senate Race – Nov 6, 1984
- ↑ Our Campaigns – TN US Senate Race – Nov 6, 1990
- ↑ Our Campaigns – US President – D Primaries Race – Feb 1, 1988
- ↑ Our Campaigns – US President – D Convention Race – Jul 13, 1992
- ↑ Our Campaigns – US Vice President – D Convention Race – Jul 13, 1992
- ↑ Our Campaigns – NH US Vice President – D Primary Race – Feb 20, 1996
- ↑ Our Campaigns – US Vice President – D Convention Race – Aug 26, 1996
- ↑ Our Campaigns – US President – D Primaries Race – Feb 1, 2000
- ↑ Our Campaigns – US President – D Convention Race – Aug 14, 2000