The 1996 United States presidential election in New Mexico took place on November 5, 1996. All fifty states and the District of Columbia, were part of the 1996 United States presidential election. State voters chose five electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.
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County Results
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New Mexico was won by incumbent United States President Bill Clinton of Arkansas, who was running against Kansas Senator Bob Dole. Clinton ran a second time with former Tennessee Senator Al Gore as Vice President, and Dole ran with former New York Congressman Jack Kemp.[1]
New Mexico weighed in for this election as 1% more Republican than the national average. The presidential election of 1996 was a very multi-partisan election for New Mexico, with nearly ten percent of the electorate voting for third-party candidates, and two third-party candidates receiving more than 1% of the vote. The majority of counties in New Mexico turned out for Clinton, including the highly populated areas of Doña Ana County, Santa Fe County and Albuquerque’s Bernalillo County. In his second bid for the presidency, Ross Perot led the newly reformed Reform Party to gain over five percent of the votes in New Mexico, and to pull in support nationally as the most popular third-party candidate to run for United States Presidency in recent times.
As of the 2020 presidential election[update], this is the last election in which the following counties voted for a Democratic presidential candidate: Sierra, Eddy, and De Baca.[2]
Results
editParty | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic |
|
273,495 | 49.18% | +3.28 | |
Republican | 232,751 | 41.86% | +4.52 | ||
Reform | 32,257 | 5.80% | −10.32 | ||
Green | 13,218 | 2.38% | N/A | ||
Libertarian | 2,996 | 0.54% | +0.26 | ||
U.S. Taxpayers' | 713 | 0.13% | +0.02 | ||
Natural Law | 644 | 0.12% | +0.02 | ||
Total votes | 556,074 | 100.00% | |||
Democratic win |
Results by county
editCounty | Bill Clinton Democratic |
Bob Dole Republican |
Ross Perot[3] Reform |
Ralph Nader[3] Green |
Various candidates[3] Other parties |
Margin | Total votes cast | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Bernalillo | 88,140 | 48.28% | 78,832 | 43.19% | 8,708 | 4.77% | 5,269 | 2.89% | 1,594 | 0.87% | 9,308 | 5.09% | 182,543 |
Catron | 423 | 27.76% | 923 | 60.56% | 114 | 7.48% | 29 | 1.90% | 35 | 2.30% | -500 | -32.80% | 1,524 |
Chaves | 7,014 | 37.87% | 9,991 | 53.95% | 1,271 | 6.86% | 123 | 0.66% | 120 | 0.65% | -2,977 | -16.08% | 18,519 |
Cibola | 4,030 | 58.58% | 2,245 | 32.63% | 488 | 7.09% | 85 | 1.24% | 32 | 0.47% | 1,785 | 25.95% | 6,880 |
Colfax | 2,659 | 51.47% | 1,975 | 38.23% | 411 | 7.96% | 90 | 1.74% | 31 | 0.60% | 684 | 13.24% | 5,166 |
Curry | 4,116 | 33.07% | 7,378 | 59.28% | 842 | 6.76% | 61 | 0.49% | 50 | 0.40% | -3,262 | -26.21% | 12,447 |
De Baca | 509 | 46.57% | 489 | 44.74% | 86 | 7.87% | 4 | 0.37% | 5 | 0.46% | 20 | 1.83% | 1,093 |
Dona Ana | 22,766 | 52.26% | 17,541 | 40.26% | 2,269 | 5.21% | 635 | 1.46% | 353 | 0.81% | 5,225 | 12.00% | 43,564 |
Eddy | 8,959 | 47.16% | 8,534 | 44.92% | 1,297 | 6.83% | 101 | 0.53% | 107 | 0.56% | 425 | 2.24% | 18,998 |
Grant | 5,860 | 53.62% | 3,993 | 36.54% | 778 | 7.12% | 205 | 1.88% | 92 | 0.84% | 1,867 | 17.08% | 10,928 |
Guadalupe | 1,208 | 69.59% | 436 | 25.12% | 79 | 4.55% | 9 | 0.52% | 4 | 0.23% | 772 | 44.47% | 1,736 |
Harding | 264 | 42.86% | 321 | 52.11% | 28 | 4.55% | 3 | 0.49% | 0 | 0.00% | -57 | -9.25% | 616 |
Hidalgo | 943 | 48.31% | 789 | 40.42% | 209 | 10.71% | 5 | 0.26% | 6 | 0.31% | 154 | 7.89% | 1,952 |
Lea | 5,393 | 36.77% | 7,661 | 52.24% | 1,465 | 9.99% | 54 | 0.37% | 93 | 0.63% | -2,268 | -15.47% | 14,666 |
Lincoln | 2,209 | 34.46% | 3,396 | 52.97% | 666 | 10.39% | 78 | 1.22% | 62 | 0.97% | -1,187 | -18.51% | 6,411 |
Los Alamos | 3,983 | 40.10% | 4,999 | 50.33% | 560 | 5.64% | 247 | 2.49% | 143 | 1.44% | -1,016 | -10.23% | 9,932 |
Luna | 3,001 | 47.44% | 2,616 | 41.35% | 598 | 9.45% | 63 | 1.00% | 48 | 0.76% | 385 | 6.09% | 6,326 |
McKinley | 10,124 | 65.21% | 4,470 | 28.79% | 650 | 4.19% | 196 | 1.26% | 86 | 0.55% | 5,654 | 36.42% | 15,526 |
Mora | 1,646 | 68.76% | 561 | 23.43% | 131 | 5.47% | 39 | 1.63% | 17 | 0.71% | 1,085 | 45.33% | 2,394 |
Otero | 5,938 | 36.35% | 9,065 | 55.49% | 1,096 | 6.71% | 131 | 0.80% | 107 | 0.65% | -3,127 | -19.14% | 16,337 |
Quay | 1,830 | 43.82% | 1,943 | 46.53% | 377 | 9.03% | 14 | 0.34% | 12 | 0.29% | -113 | -2.71% | 4,176 |
Rio Arriba | 7,965 | 70.46% | 2,551 | 22.57% | 469 | 4.15% | 268 | 2.37% | 52 | 0.46% | 5,414 | 47.89% | 11,305 |
Roosevelt | 2,097 | 35.73% | 3,245 | 55.29% | 467 | 7.96% | 28 | 0.48% | 32 | 0.55% | -1,148 | -19.56% | 5,869 |
San Juan | 12,070 | 37.08% | 17,478 | 53.69% | 2,355 | 7.23% | 399 | 1.23% | 251 | 0.77% | -5,408 | -16.61% | 32,553 |
San Miguel | 6,995 | 72.51% | 1,938 | 20.09% | 405 | 4.20% | 250 | 2.59% | 59 | 0.61% | 5,057 | 52.42% | 9,647 |
Sandoval | 13,081 | 49.46% | 11,015 | 41.65% | 1,482 | 5.60% | 618 | 2.34% | 252 | 0.95% | 2,066 | 7.81% | 26,448 |
Santa Fe | 26,349 | 62.08% | 10,857 | 25.58% | 1,846 | 4.35% | 3,018 | 7.11% | 376 | 0.89% | 15,492 | 36.50% | 42,446 |
Sierra | 2,154 | 44.83% | 2,140 | 44.54% | 431 | 8.97% | 50 | 1.04% | 30 | 0.62% | 14 | 0.29% | 4,805 |
Socorro | 3,374 | 53.02% | 2,315 | 36.38% | 455 | 7.15% | 135 | 2.12% | 85 | 1.34% | 1,059 | 16.64% | 6,364 |
Taos | 6,635 | 66.00% | 2,126 | 21.15% | 545 | 5.42% | 660 | 6.57% | 87 | 0.87% | 4,509 | 44.85% | 10,053 |
Torrance | 2,072 | 44.51% | 2,154 | 46.27% | 332 | 7.13% | 64 | 1.37% | 33 | 0.71% | -82 | -1.76% | 4,655 |
Union | 519 | 31.45% | 995 | 60.30% | 125 | 7.58% | 5 | 0.30% | 6 | 0.36% | -476 | -28.85% | 1,650 |
Valencia | 9,169 | 49.44% | 7,779 | 41.95% | 1,222 | 6.59% | 282 | 1.52% | 93 | 0.50% | 1,390 | 7.49% | 18,545 |
Totals | 273,495 | 49.18% | 232,751 | 41.86% | 32,257 | 5.80% | 13,218 | 2.38% | 4,353 | 0.78% | 40,744 | 7.32% | 556,074 |
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ "1996 Presidential General Election Results – New Mexico". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
- ^ Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
- ^ a b c Our Campaigns; NM US President 1996