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1996 United States presidential election in California

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FieldValue
election_name1996 United States presidential election in California
countryCalifornia
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1992 United States presidential election in California
previous_year1992
next_election2000 United States presidential election in California
next_year2000
turnout65.53% (of registered voters) 9.79 pp
52.56% (of eligible voters) 1.96 pp
election_dateNovember 5, 1996
image_size160x160px
image1Bill Clinton.jpg
nominee1Bill Clinton
party1Democratic Party (United States)
home_state1Arkansas
running_mate1Al Gore
electoral_vote154
popular_vote15,119,835
percentage151.10%
image2Ks 1996 dole (cropped).jpg
nominee2Bob Dole
party2Republican Party (United States)
home_state2Kansas
running_mate2Jack Kemp
electoral_vote20
popular_vote23,828,380
percentage238.21%
image3RossPerotColor.jpg
nominee3Ross Perot
party3Reform Party of the United States of America
home_state3Texas
running_mate3James Campbell
electoral_vote30
popular_vote3697,847
percentage36.96%
map_image{{Switcher
map_caption
titlePresident
before_electionBill Clinton
before_partyDemocratic Party (United States)
after_electionBill Clinton
after_partyDemocratic Party (United States)

Main article: 1996 United States presidential election

52.56% (of eligible voters) 1.96 pp | [[File:California Presidential Election Results 1996.svg|320px]] |County results |Congressional district results -- Clinton Dole The 1996 United States presidential election in California took place on November 5, 1996, as part of the 1996 United States presidential election. Voters chose 54 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. California, was won by Incumbent President Bill Clinton (D) over Senator Bob Dole (R), with Clinton winning 51.1% to 38.21% by a margin of 12.89%. Billionaire businessman Ross Perot (Reform Party) finished in third, with 6.96% of the popular vote.

California had grown increasingly Democratic relative to the rest of the nation in the prior three elections, culminating in Bill Clinton's becoming the first Democrat to carry California in 1992 since Lyndon Johnson's 1964 landslide. In 1996, Clinton carried California once again by double digits, representing the first time California had voted Democratic in back-to-back elections since 1948. This was also the first time since 1964 that a Democrat won a majority of the vote in California. Nevertheless, Clinton's margin of victory shrank from 13.40% to 12.89%, even as his national margin swelled by 3%. Dole reclaimed eleven counties for the GOP: San Diego, Riverside, Fresno, San Luis Obispo, Butte, Tehama, Tuolumne, Siskiyou, Del Norte, Plumas, and Mariposa. He also carried Trinity County, the one county in the state in which Ross Perot had won a plurality in 1992. Of these counties, San Diego, Riverside, Fresno, and San Luis Obispo cast over 100,000 votes; and San Diego County was the largest county in the country to switch parties in 1996.

In contrast, Clinton flipped no counties in the state from red to blue, making this the first election since 1980 in which no red counties in the state turned blue. Clinton became the first Democrat to win the White House without carrying Fresno County since the county's founding in 1856, and remains the only one to have done so as of 2020. He also became the first Democrat since Woodrow Wilson in 1912 to win the White House without carrying Plumas County. Nevertheless, Clinton retained seven counties that he had been the first Democrat to carry since 1964 in 1992: San Bernardino, Ventura, San Joaquin, Santa Barbara, Monterey, Imperial, and San Benito, of which all save Imperial and San Benito cast over 100,000 votes. He also retained all the counties that had voted Democratic in 1988, including a number of sizeable ones that had voted Republican in 1976, such as Santa Clara, Contra Costa, San Mateo, and Sonoma. This was the last election in which California voted to the right of Arkansas, Michigan, Minnesota, or West Virginia. This was also the first election since 1912 in which California voted differently than nearby Montana.

Late in the 1996 campaign, Dole had made an upset victory over Clinton in California central to his strategy. Dole hoped to capitalize on two issues that had been figuring prominently in California politics under Governor Pete Wilson, illegal immigration & affirmative action. California is one of 13 states where on the election ballot, James Campbell of California, Perot's former boss at IBM, was listed as a stand-in vice-presidential candidate. The Reform Party successfully conducted a drive to qualify as a party in California over the course of eighteen days in 1995.

Results

1996 United States presidential election in CaliforniaPartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticWilliam Jefferson Clinton (Incumbent)Albert Arnold Gore Jr. (Incumbent)5,119,83551.10%54
RepublicanRobert Joseph DoleJack French Kemp3,828,38038.21%0
ReformHenry Ross PerotJames Campbell697,8476.96%0
GreenRalph NaderWinona LaDuke237,0162.37%0
LibertarianHarry BrowneJo Jorgensen73,6000.73%0
Peace and FreedomMarsha FeinlandKate McClatchy25,3320.25%0
Taxpayers’Howard PhillipsHerbert Titus21,2020.21%0
Natural LawJohn HagelinDr. V. Tompkins15,4030.15%0
Write-inCharles Collins7650.01%0
Write-inJames Harris770.00%0
Write-inJoel Neuberg130.00%0
Write-inWillie Carter120.00%0
Write-inIsabell Masters20.00%0
Invalid or blank votes242,1552.36%
Totals10,261,639100.0%54
Voter turnout65.53%

By county

CountyBill Clinton
DemocraticBob Dole
RepublicanRoss Perot
ReformRalph Nader
GreenVarious candidates
Other partiesMarginTotal votes cast#%#%#%#%#%#%Total5,119,83551.10%3,828,38038.21%697,8476.96%237,0162.37%136,4061.36%1,291,45512.89%10,019,484
Alameda303,90365.77%106,58123.07%24,2705.25%20,4324.42%6,8581.48%197,32242.70%462,044
Alpine25842.02%26443.00%6310.26%193.09%101.63%-6-0.98%614
Amador5,86840.60%6,87047.54%1,2678.77%2641.83%1831.27%-1,002-6.94%14,452
Butte30,65138.53%38,96148.98%6,3938.04%2,4093.03%1,1361.43%-8,310-10.45%79,550
Calaveras6,64638.63%8,27948.12%1,6129.37%3381.96%3311.92%-1,633-9.49%17,206
Colusa2,05436.60%3,04754.29%4047.20%420.75%651.16%-993-17.69%5,612
Contra Costa196,51255.73%123,95435.15%20,4165.79%7,3342.08%4,3861.24%72,55820.58%352,602
Del Norte3,65241.08%3,67041.29%1,22513.78%1992.24%1431.61%-18-0.21%8,889
El Dorado22,95736.33%32,75951.84%5,0778.03%1,4392.28%9641.53%-9,802-15.51%63,196
Fresno94,44845.32%98,81347.42%10,9625.26%2,5231.21%1,6470.79%-4,365-2.10%208,393
Glenn2,84132.04%5,04156.86%7888.89%850.96%1111.25%-2,200-24.82%8,866
Humboldt24,62844.17%19,80335.52%5,81110.42%4,6518.34%8641.55%4,8258.65%55,757
Imperial14,59155.27%9,70536.76%1,7786.73%1540.58%1720.65%4,88618.51%26,400
Inyo2,60134.36%3,92451.84%81110.71%1271.68%1061.40%-1,323-17.48%7,569
Kern62,65836.56%92,15153.77%13,4527.85%1,2890.75%1,8411.07%-29,493-17.21%171,391
Kings11,25443.59%12,36847.91%1,7456.76%2050.79%2430.94%-1,114-4.32%25,815
Lake10,43248.90%7,45834.96%2,53911.90%5832.73%3231.51%2,97413.94%21,335
Lassen3,31833.60%5,19452.60%1,08010.94%1311.33%1521.54%-1,876-19.00%9,875
Los Angeles1,430,62959.34%746,54430.96%157,7526.54%45,9771.91%30,1121.25%684,08528.38%2,411,014
Madera11,25436.70%16,51053.85%2,1927.15%3761.23%3301.08%-5,256-17.15%30,662
Marin67,40658.04%32,71428.17%6,5595.65%7,3606.34%2,1011.81%34,69229.87%116,140
Mariposa2,92036.73%3,97650.02%7299.17%1922.42%1321.66%-1,056-13.29%7,949
Mendocino14,95245.74%9,76529.87%3,68511.27%3,60811.04%6822.09%5,18715.87%32,692
Merced21,78646.41%20,84744.41%3,4277.30%4620.98%4160.89%9392.00%46,938
Modoc1,36831.79%2,28553.10%52812.27%491.14%731.70%-917-21.31%4,303
Mono1,58038.62%1,88246.00%44710.93%962.35%862.10%-302-7.38%4,091
Monterey57,70053.15%39,79436.66%7,2406.67%2,3912.20%1,4331.32%17,90616.49%108,558
Napa24,58850.89%17,43936.09%4,2548.80%1,2422.57%7961.65%7,14914.80%48,319
Nevada15,36935.56%21,78450.40%3,3307.70%2,0974.85%6391.48%-6,415-14.84%43,219
Orange327,48537.88%446,71751.67%66,1957.66%11,8421.37%12,3371.43%-119,232-13.79%864,576
Placer34,98137.05%49,80852.75%6,5426.93%1,8751.99%1,2211.29%-14,827-15.70%94,427
Plumas3,54036.31%4,90550.31%9199.43%2142.19%1721.76%-1,365-14.00%9,750
Riverside168,57943.05%178,61145.61%35,4819.06%4,8141.23%4,1281.05%-10,032-2.56%391,613
Sacramento203,01949.83%166,04940.76%23,8565.86%9,1422.24%5,3481.31%36,9709.07%407,414
San Benito7,03050.55%5,38438.72%1,0447.51%2361.70%2121.52%1,64611.83%13,906
San Bernardino183,37244.36%180,13543.58%39,3309.51%5,1501.25%5,3681.30%3,2370.78%413,355
San Diego389,96444.11%402,87645.57%63,0377.13%15,8581.79%12,4161.40%-12,912-1.46%884,151
San Francisco209,77772.24%45,47915.66%9,6593.33%21,4717.39%3,9991.38%164,29856.58%290,385
San Joaquin67,25346.34%65,13144.87%9,6926.68%1,5011.03%1,5631.08%2,1221.47%145,140
San Luis Obispo40,39540.19%46,73346.50%8,2048.16%3,8543.83%1,3141.31%-6,338-6.31%100,500
San Mateo152,30460.55%73,50829.22%15,0475.98%7,3362.92%3,3371.33%78,79631.33%251,532
Santa Barbara70,65046.87%63,91542.40%9,4576.27%4,7743.17%1,9491.29%6,7354.47%150,745
Santa Clara297,63956.88%168,29132.16%34,9086.67%12,3122.35%10,1411.94%129,34824.72%523,291
Santa Cruz58,25056.52%27,76626.94%6,5556.36%7,8037.57%2,6882.61%30,48429.58%103,062
Shasta20,84833.11%34,73655.17%5,8759.33%6751.07%8271.31%-13,888-22.06%62,961
Sierra57333.57%87751.38%1709.96%402.34%472.75%-304-17.81%1,707
Siskiyou7,02238.39%8,65347.30%1,87910.27%3722.03%3672.01%-1,631-8.91%18,293
Solano64,64455.12%40,74234.74%8,6827.40%1,8681.59%1,3431.15%23,90220.38%117,279
Sonoma100,73855.57%53,55529.54%13,8627.65%9,5475.27%3,5951.98%47,18326.03%181,297
Stanislaus53,73845.93%52,40344.79%8,3607.14%1,1721.00%1,3341.14%1,3351.14%117,007
Sutter8,50434.37%14,26457.64%1,5336.20%2080.84%2360.95%-5,760-23.27%24,745
Tehama7,29035.66%10,29250.34%2,32511.37%2451.20%2911.42%-3,002-14.68%20,443
Trinity2,20337.38%2,53042.93%85614.53%1592.70%1452.46%-327-5.55%5,893
Tulare32,66938.06%46,27253.90%5,1065.95%7370.86%1,0621.24%-13,603-15.84%85,846
Tuolumne8,95040.73%10,38647.27%1,9258.76%4271.94%2841.29%-1,436-6.54%21,972
Ventura110,77244.10%109,20243.47%23,0549.18%4,7321.88%3,4341.37%1,5700.63%251,194
Yolo33,03356.88%18,80732.38%3,1505.42%2,3774.09%7121.23%14,22624.50%58,079
Yuba5,78937.42%7,97151.53%1,3088.46%2011.30%2011.30%-2,182-14.11%15,470

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Butte
  • Del Norte
  • Fresno
  • Mariposa
  • Plumas
  • Riverside
  • San Diego
  • San Luis Obispo
  • Siskiyou
  • Tehama
  • Tuolumne

Counties that flipped from Independent to Republican

  • Trinity

By congressional district

Clinton won 36 of 52 congressional districts, including eight held by Republicans, with the remaining 16 going to Dole, including one held by a Democrat.

DistrictClintonDolePerotRepresentative
48%35%10%Frank Riggs
36%51%9%Wally Herger
45%44%7%Vic Fazio
38%51%8%John Doolittle
57%34%5%Bob Matsui
57%29%7%Lynn Woolsey
65%25%6%George Miller
66%18%4%Nancy Pelosi
75%13%3%Ron Dellums
48%43%6%Bill Baker
Ellen Tauscher
46%45%7%Richard Pombo
70%21%4%Tom Lantos
62%28%7%Pete Stark
58%31%6%Anna Eshoo
53%35%7%Tom Campbell
61%29%6%Zoe Lofgren
55%32%6%Sam Farr
46%45%7%Gary Condit
40%52%6%George Radanovich
52%41%6%Cal Dooley
34%56%8%Bill Thomas
44.0%44.2%7%Andrea Seastrand
Walter Capps
46%42%9%Elton Gallegly
52%37%7%Anthony Beilenson
Brad Sherman
41%47%9%Buck McKeon
65%25%7%Howard Berman
49%41%7%Carlos Moorhead
Jim Rogan
45%44%8%David Dreier
67%24%5%Henry Waxman
71%20%5%Xavier Becerra
65%26%7%Matthew G. Martínez
81%12%4%Julian Dixon
80%14%4%Lucille Roybal-Allard
64%27%7%Esteban Torres
84%11%4%Maxine Waters
47%41%8%Jane Harman
82%13%4%Walter R. Tucker III
Juanita Millender-McDonald
53%36%8%Steve Horn
41%48%8%Ed Royce
38%49%11%Jerry Lewis
43%47%8%Jay Kim
54%36%9%George Brown Jr.
43%46%9%Ken Calvert
44%45%9%Sonny Bono
38%51%8%Dana Rohrabacher
49%41%8%Bob Dornan
Loretta Sánchez
36%54%7%Christopher Cox
34%56%8%Ron Packard
49%40%7%Brian Bilbray
60%32%6%Bob Filner
39%52%7%Duke Cunningham
41%48%8%Duncan Hunter

Notes

References

References

  1. "Historical Voter Registration and Participation in Statewide General Elections 1910-2018".
  2. [http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?year=1996&fips=6&f=1&off=0&elect=0 Dave Leip's Atlas of United States Presidential Election Results - 1996 California Results]
  3. "County winners, 1836-2016".
  4. Ayres, B. Drummond Jr.. (1996-10-31). "Behind Dole's California Strategy: A Bid to Save His Campaign (Published 1996)". The New York Times.
  5. "Perot Names Stand-in Veep Candidate".
  6. (November 16, 1995). "Registration Drive". [[Ballot Access News]].
  7. [http://sos.ca.gov/elections/sov/1996_general/sov_nov96.pdf Statement of Vote November 5, 1996, Prepared by Bill Jones California Secretary of State] {{webarchive. link. (July 31, 2008 (access date 2012-02-05))
  8. (5 November 1996). "Counties by Congressional Districts".
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