2000 Wisconsin elections
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April 4, 2000
November 7, 2000 | |
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| Elections in Wisconsin |
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The 2000 Wisconsin Fall General Election was held in the U.S. state of Wisconsin on November 7, 2000. One of Wisconsin's U.S. Senate seats was up for election, as well as Wisconsin's nine seats in the United States House of Representatives, the sixteen even-numbered seats in the Wisconsin State Senate, and all 99 seats in the Wisconsin State Assembly. Voters also chose eleven electors to represent them in the Electoral College, which then participated in selecting the president of the United States. The 2000 Fall Partisan Primary was held on September 12, 2000.
In the Fall general election, the Democratic presidential candidate, Vice President Al Gore, narrowly won Wisconsin's eleven electoral votes, defeating Texas Governor George W. Bush by a mere 5,708 votes. All nine of Wisconsin's incumbent members of Congress were reelected. Democrats gained one seat in the Wisconsin Senate; Republicans gained one seat in the Wisconsin Assembly.[1]
The 2000 Wisconsin Spring Election was held April 4, 2000. This election featured a contested election for Wisconsin Supreme Court and the Presidential preference primary for both major political parties, as well as various nonpartisan local and judicial offices.[2] The 2000 Wisconsin Spring Primary was held on February 15, 2000.
Wisconsin Republicans celebrated the results of the April election with the victory of their preferred candidate in the Wisconsin Supreme Court election. The Presidential preference primary was not seriously contested on either the Democratic or Republican side, as most candidates had already dropped out before Wisconsin's vote.
U.S. President
Incumbent Democratic President Bill Clinton was term-limited and was not a candidate for reelection. In Wisconsin, voters chose Clinton's vice president, Al Gore, over Texas Governor George W. Bush.[1]: 1 Vice President Gore received Wisconsin's eleven electoral votes, but did not win the national electoral vote.
Results
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General Election, November 7, 2000 | |||||
| Democratic | Al Gore / Joe Lieberman |
1,242,987 | 47.83% | −1.03% | |
| Republican | George W. Bush / Dick Cheney |
1,237,279 | 47.61% | +9.09% | |
| Green | Ralph Nader / Winona LaDuke |
94,070 | 3.62% | +2.31% | |
| Reform | Pat Buchanan / Ezola Foster |
11,471 | 0.44% | −9.92% | |
| Libertarian | Harry Browne / Art Olivier |
6,640 | 0.26% | −0.11% | |
| Constitution | Howard Phillips / J. Curtis Frazier |
2,042 | 0.08% | −0.32% | |
| Workers World | Monica Moorehead / Gloria La Riva |
1,063 | 0.04% | −0.02% | |
| Independent | John Hagelin / Nat Goldhaber |
853 | 0.03% | −0.03% | |
| Socialist Workers | James Harris / Margaret Trowe |
306 | 0.01% | −0.01% | |
| Scattering | 1,896 | 0.07% | |||
| Plurality | 5,708 | 0.22% | -10.12% | ||
| Total votes | 2,598,607 | 100.0% | +18.45% | ||
| Democratic hold | |||||
U.S. Senate
Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Herb Kohl was reelected to a third six-year term, defeating Republican John Gillespie.[1]: 2
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General Election, November 7, 2000 | |||||
| Democratic | Herb Kohl (incumbent) | 1,563,238 | 61.54% | +3.23% | |
| Republican | John Gillespie | 940,744 | 37.04% | −3.66% | |
| Libertarian | Tim Peterson | 21,348 | 0.84% | −0.15% | |
| Independent | Eugene A. Hem | 9,555 | 0.38% | ||
| Constitution | Robert R. Raymond | 4,296 | 0.17% | ||
| Scattering | 902 | 0.04% | |||
| Plurality | 622,494 | 24.51% | +6.89% | ||
| Total votes | 2,540,083 | 100.0% | +62.30% | ||
| Democratic hold | |||||
U.S. House
| District | Incumbent | Candidates | Results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Member | First elected | ||||
| Wisconsin 1 | Paul Ryan | 1998 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 2 | Tammy Baldwin | 1998 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 3 | Ron Kind | 1996 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 4 | Jerry Kleczka | 1984 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 5 | Tom Barrett | 1992 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 6 | Tom Petri | 1979 (Special) |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 7 | Dave Obey | 1969 (Special) |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 8 | Mark Andrew Green | 1998 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |
| Wisconsin 9 | Jim Sensenbrenner | 1978 |
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Incumbent re-elected. | |