*EPF308 11/06/2002
Election '02 Campaign Spotlight No. 9
(A Newsletter on American Politics) (2180)
Issue No. 9 November 2002
This newsletter is provided by the U.S. Department of State's Office of International Information Programs in an effort to explain the "how" and "why" in addition to the "who," "what" and "when" of the 2002 election campaign in the United States. The next newsletter will be issued on November 13. Previous 2002 newsletters are available on our website at http://usinfo.state.gov/topical/rights/democracy/spot.htm
This issue includes:
-- Republicans Regain Control of Congress
-- Latest Senate Results
-- Latest Gubernatorial Results
Republicans Regain Control of Congress
By Stuart Gorin
Campaign Spotlight Editor
Republicans regained control of the U.S. Senate, retained and added to their lead in the House of Representatives and claimed a majority of state governorships that were at stake November 5, following extensive mid-term election campaigning by President Bush.
Even though the president was not on the ballot this year, he hand-picked candidates to run for open seats in state races, traveled numerous times to dozens of states to encourage voters on their behalf, and raised millions of dollars in campaign funds.
According to the latest vote figures that are still being tallied ����- especially the mail-in and absentee ballots ����- Republicans will hold at least 51 seats in the 100-member Senate, at least 227 in the 435-member House ����- a pickup of at least five -- and half of the 50 governorships.
The midterm elections broke a historical trend in the United States, since traditionally the party of the president loses seats when he is not running.
Just days before the election, political observers were saying the results of the Senate races were just too close to call. Crediting Bush's involvement for the victories, Senate Minority Leader Trent Lott, who is expected to return to majority leader status, said he believed the election was a referendum on the president's leadership, "and he really showed that he was committed ����- that he was willing to put his prestige on the line."
Lott's counterpart, current Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, said Bush's action "resonated." Election night was "tough," Daschle added, saying Democratic candidates were trying to speak about the shaky economy in the country, but their remarks were drowned out by what the Republicans were saying about their issues -- the war on terrorism and the prospect of war with Iraq.
Control of the Senate also means control of the committees, so the chairmanships of those important groups will revert to the Republicans, who lost them last year when Vermont Senator Jim Jeffords defected from the party and broke a 50-50 tie.
In the Senate races, there were four open seats vacated by retiring Republicans, and their party retained all four: Jesse Helms' seat in North Carolina was won by former Labor Secretary Elizabeth Dole; 99-year-old Strom Thurmond's seat in South Carolina went to Republican Congressman Lindsey Graham; Phil Graham's seat in Texas went to State Attorney General John Cornyn; and Fred Thompson's seat in Tennessee was won by former Governor Lamar Alexander.
Much of the media's interest focused on the race in Minnesota, where Democratic Senator Paul Wellstone was killed in a plane crash eleven days before the election and was replaced on the ballot by former Senator and Vice President Walter Mondale.
Wellstone had been locked in a close battle with Republican former St. Paul Mayor Norm Coleman, who edged Mondale in the election by two percentage points. Prior to the election, Minnesota's independent Governor Jesse Ventura appointed independent businessman and attorney Dean Barkley to fill Wellstone's unexpired term. Barkley was sworn into office on November 5 but it was unclear how long he would actually serve.
In addition to picking up the Minnesota seat, Republicans also defeated Democratic incumbents ����- Georgia's Max Cleland and Missouri's Jean Carnahan. Democrats gained a seat in Arkansas, defeating Republican incumbent Tim Hutchinson, and also held onto an open seat in New Jersey, with former Senator Frank Lautenberg winning the one vacated several weeks before by Democrat Robert Torricelli, who dropped out of the race after his campaign was damaged by allegations he had improperly accepted gifts from a contributor.
Democrats also retained the heavily contested South Dakota seat. Incumbent Senator Tim Johnson defeated his Republican opponent, Congressman John Thune, by only 527 votes out of more than 334,000 cast. Daschle campaigned heavily for Johnson, his counterpart in the state, and Bush did the same for Thune, whom he recruited for the contest. Under state law, Thune has an option to request a recount.
In Louisiana, the winner will not be known until December 7, when there will be a runoff election between the Democratic incumbent, Mary Landrieu, and her closest Republican challenger, State Elections Commissioner Suzanne Terrell. Landrieu received 46 percent of the vote, Terrell 27 percent. Louisiana law requires a runoff between the top two candidates when the leading candidate receives less than 50 percent of the total.
At least seven incumbents in the House of Representatives lost, four of them because of redistricting. In those contests, Republican Nancy Johnson defeated Democrat Jim Maloney in Connecticut, Republican John Shimkus defeated Democrat David Phelps in Illinois, Republican Chip Pickering defeated Democrat Ronnie Shows in Mississippi, and Democrat Tim Holden defeated Republican George Gekas in Pennsylvania.
The other defeated incumbents were Republican Connie Morella in Maryland, Democrat Karen Thurman in Florida and Democrat Bill Luther in Minnesota.
Three congressional races were deemed too close to call.
There were a lot of party changes in gubernatorial races. Democrats gained seats in Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Maine, while losing Alaska, New Hampshire, Hawaii, Georgia, Maryland and South Carolina to the Republicans, who also gained the independently held seat in Minnesota.
Among the better-known victorious gubernatorial incumbents were Florida Republican Jeb Bush, the president's brother; California Democrat Gray Davis and New York Republican George Pataki. Losing incumbents were Democrat Roy Barnes in Georgia, Democrat Jim Hodges in South Carolina and Republican Scott McCallum in Wisconsin.
In Vermont, Republican State Treasurer Jim Douglas finished first but failed to win 50 percent of the vote, and under state rules the legislature will meet to pick the new governor. Douglas' victory is all but guaranteed, however, because the Democratic candidate who came in a close second conceded the race.
Final tallies were still pending in races in Alabama, Arizona and Oregon.
Latest Senate Results
Statistics provided by the New York Times:
(w): winner; (i): incumbent
ALASKA (98 percent of votes counted)
(w) Ted Stevens, Rep (i) 153,945 (79%)
Frank Vondersaar, Dem 20,233 (10%)
ALABAMA (98 percent)
(w) Jeff Sessions, Rep (i) 780,214 (59%)
Susan Parker, Dem 531,909 (40%)
ARKANSAS (96 percent)
(w) Mark Pryor, Dem 413,513 (54%)
Tim Hutchinson, Rep (i) 353,498 (46%)
COLORADO (98 percent)
(w) Wayne Allard, Rep (i) 663,029 (51%)
Tom Strickland, Dem 588,527 (45%)
DELAWARE (100 percent)
(w) Joseph Biden, Dem (i)135,170 (58%)
Raymond Clatworthy, Rep 94,716 (41%)
GEORGIA (99 percent)
(w) Saxby Chambliss, Rep 1,043,682 (53%)
Max Cleland, Dem (i) 899,350 (46%)
IOWA (99 percent)
(w) Tom Harkin, Dem (i) 545,371 (54%)
Greg Ganske, Rep 443,026 (44%)
IDAHO (97 percent)
(w) Larry Craig, Rep (i) 263,384 (65%)
Alan Blinken, Dem 131,808 (33%)
ILLINOIS (99 percent)
(w) Richard Durbin, Dem (i)2,073,743 (60%)
Jim Durkin, Rep 1,315,586 (38%)
KANSAS (99 percent)
(w) Pat Roberts, Rep (i) 630,310 (83%)
Steven Rosile, Libertarian 69,306 (9%)
KENTUCKY (99 percent)
(w) Mitch McConnell, Rep (i) 721,379 (64%)
Lois Combs Weinberg, Dem 399,143 (36%)
LOUISIANA (100 percent)
Mary Landrieu, Dem (i) 572,681 (46%)
Suzanne Terrell, Rep 339,045 (27%)
John Cooksey, Rep 172,051 (14%)
Tony Perkins, Rep 119,743 (10%)
MASSACHUSETTS (99 percent)
(w) John Kerry, Dem (i) 1,577,803 (81%)
Michael Cloud, Libertarian 363,793 (19%)
MAINE (83 percent)
(w) Susan Collins, Rep (i) 239,152 (58%)
Chellie Pingree, Dem 170,505 (42%)
MICHIGAN (97 percent)
(w) Carl Levin, Dem (i) 1,849,582 (60%)
Andrew Raczkowski, Rep 1,161,306 (38%)
MINNESOTA (89 percent)
(w) Norm Coleman, Rep 911,152 (50%)
Walter Mondale, Dem 867,899 (48%)
MISSOURI (99 percent)
(w) Jim Talent, Rep 931,059 (50%)
Jean Carnahan, Dem (i)907,658 (49%)
MISSISSIPPI (99 percent)
(w) Thad Cochran, Rep (i) 521,482 (85%)
Shawn O'Hara, Reform Party 94,096 (15%)
MONTANA (98 percent)
(w) Max Baucus, Dem (i) 198,170 (63%)
Mike Taylor, Rep 99,027 (31%)
NORTH CAROLINA (99 percent)
(w) Elizabeth Dole, Rep 1,216,496 (54%)
Erskine Bowles, Dem 1,020,473 (45%)
NEBRASKA (97 percent)
(w) Chuck Hagel, GOP (i) 377,571 (83%)
Charlie Matulka, Dem 66,702 (15%)
NEW HAMPSHIRE (97 percent)
John Sununu, Rep 223,529 (51%)
Jeanne Shaheen, Dem 204,992 (47%)
NEW JERSEY (97 percent)
(w) Frank Lautenberg, Dem 1,078,389 (54%)
Douglas Forrester, Rep 882,292 (44%)
NEW MEXICO (99 percent)
(w) Pete Domenici, Rep (i) 281,464 (64%)
Gloria Tristani, Dem 156,457 (36%)
OKLAHOMA (100 percent)
(w) James Inhofe, Rep (i) 578,579 (57%)
David Walters, Dem 369,789 (36%)
OREGON (76 percent)
(w) Gordon Smith, Rep (i) 599,011 (58%)
Bill Bradbury, Dem 398,267 (38%)
RHODE ISLAND (99 percent)
(w) John Reed, Dem (i) 241,315 (78%)
Robert Tingle, Rep 66,613 (22%)
SOUTH CAROLINA (99 percent)
(w) Lindsey Graham, Rep 595,626 (55%)
Alex Sanders, Dem 482,642 (44%)
SOUTH DAKOTA (99 percent)
John Thune, Rep 166,588 (50%)
Tim Johnson, Dem (i) 165,639 (49%)
TENNESSEE (100 percent)
(w) Lamar Alexander, Rep 901,019 (54%)
Bob Clement, Dem 731,735 (44%)
TEXAS (86 percent)
(w) John Cornyn, Rep 2,299,205 (55%)
Ron Kirk, Dem 1,807,101 (43%)
VIRGINIA (100 percent)
(w) John Warner, Rep (i) 1,298,843 (84%)
Nancy Spannaus, Independent 143,653 (9%)
WEST VIRGINIA (100 percent)
(w) Jay Rockefeller, Dem (i) 269,621 (63%)
Jay Wolfe, Rep 157,032 (37%)
WYOMING (95 percent)
(w) Michael Enzi, Rep (i) 125,003 (73%)
Joyce Corcoran, Dem 47,063 (27%)
Latest Governor Results
Statistics provided by the New York Times:
(w): winner; (i): incumbent
ALASKA (98 percent of votes counted)
(w) Frank Murkowski, Rep 110,816 (56%)
Fran Ulmer, Dem 80,490 (41%)
ALABAMA (100 percent)
Donald Siegelman, Dem (i) 674,052 (49%)
Bob Riley, Rep 670,913 (49%)
ARKANSAS (97 percent)
(w) Mike Huckabee, Rep (i) 415,323 (53%)
Jimmie Lou Fisher, Dem 362,409 (47%)
ARIZONA (100 percent)
Janet Napolitano, Dem 472,197 (47%)
Matt Salmon, Rep 446,913 (44%)
CALIFORNIA (99 percent)
(w) Gray Davis, Dem (i) 3,141,470 (47%)
Bill Simon, Rep 2,812,874 (42%)
COLORADO (97 percent)
(w) Bill Owens, Rep (i) 813,627 (63%)
Rollie Heath, Dem 433,453 (33%)
CONNECTICUT (99 percent)
(w) John Rowland, Rep (i) 572,495 (56%)
Bill Curry, Dem 447,346 (44%)
FLORIDA (99 percent)
(w) John Ellis "Jeb" Bush, Rep (i) 2,783,346 (56%)
Bill McBride, Dem 2,132,185 (43%)
GEORGIA (99 percent)
(w) Sonny Perdue, Rep 1,019,972 (52%)
Roy Barnes, Dem (i) 906,321 (46%)
HAWAII (100 percent)
(w) Linda Lingle, Rep 194,338 (52%)
Mazie Hirono, Dem 177,186 (47%)
IOWA (99 percent)
(w) Tom Vilsack, Dem (i) 531,905 (53%)
Doug Gross, Rep 451,007 (45%)
IDAHO (99 percent)
(w) Dirk Kempthorne, Rep (i) 229,244 (56%)
Jerry Brady, Dem 170,034 (42%)
ILLINOIS (99 percent)
(w) Rod Blagojevich, Dem 1,818,823 (52%)
Jim Ryan, Rep 1,582,604 (45%)
KANSAS (100 percent)
(w) Kathleen Sebelius, Dem 435,462 (53%)
Tim Shallenburger, Rep 371,325 (45%)
MASSACHUSETTS (99 percent)
(w) Mitt Romney, Rep 1,087,903 (50%)
Shannon O'Brien, Dem 980,526 (45%)
MARYLAND (99 percent)
(w) Robert Ehrlich Jr., Rep 842,075 (51%)
Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, Dem 784,454 (48%)
MAINE (90 percent)
(w) John Baldacci, Dem 214,374 (47%)
Peter Cianchette, Rep 186,358 (41%)
MICHIGAN (99 percent)
(w) Jennifer Granholm, Dem 1,629,956 (51%)
Dick Posthumus, Rep 1,503,671 (47%)
MINNESOTA (98 percent)
(w) Tim Pawlenty, Rep 980,895 (44%)
Roger Moe, Dem 802,557 (36%)
Timothy Penny, Independent 357,445 (16%)
NEBRASKA (98 percent)
(w) Mike Johanns, Rep (i) 318,373 (69%)
Stormy Dean, Dem 126,763 (27%)
NEW HAMPSHIRE (100 percent)
(w) Craig Benson, Rep 257,386 (59%)
Mark Fernald, Dem 167,458 (38%)
NEW MEXICO (99 percent)
(w) Bill Richardson, Dem 247,896 (57%)
John Sanchez, Rep 167,692 (38%)
NEVADA (100 percent)
(w) Kenny Guinn, Rep (i) 343,859 (68%)
Joe Neal, Dem 110,930 (22%)
NEW YORK (99 percent)
(w) George Pataki, Rep (i) 2,163,821 (49%)
Carl McCall, Dem 1,449,527 (33%)
Thomas Golisano, Independent 631,706 (14%)
OHIO (99 percent)
(w) Bob Taft, Rep (i) 1,836,123 (58%)
Timothy Hagan, Dem 1,213,967 (38%)
OKLAHOMA (100 percent)
(w) Brad Henry, Dem 448,133 (43%)
Steve Largent, Rep 441,776 (43%)
OREGON (76 percent)
Ted Kulongoski, Dem 493,385 (48%)
Kevin Mannix, Rep 490,745 (48%)
PENNSYLVANIA (99 percent)
(w) Ed Rendell, Dem 1,898,214 (53%)
Mike Fisher, Rep 1,584,566 (44%)
RHODE ISLAND (99 percent)
(w) Donald Carcieri, Rep 173,545 (55%)
Myrth York, Dem 143,750 (45%)
SOUTH CAROLINA (99 percent)
(w) Mark Sanford, Rep 581,430 (53%)
Jim Hodges, Dem (i) 517,046 (47%)
SOUTH DAKOTA (100 percent)
(w) Mike Rounds, Rep 189,899 (57%)
Jim Abbott, Dem 140,260 (42%)
TENNESSEE (100 percent)
(w) Phil Bredesen, Dem 843,476 (51%)
Van Hilleary, Rep 796,943 (48%)
TEXAS (89 percent)
(w) Rick Perry, Rep (i) 2,481,725 (58%)
Tony Sanchez, Dem 1,713,275 (40%)
VERMONT (99 percent)
Jim Douglas, Rep 101,738 (45%)
Doug Racine, Dem 95,370 (42%)
WISCONSIN (99 percent)
(w) Jim Doyle, Dem 794,063 (45%)
Scott McCallum, Rep (i) 726,577 (41%)
Ed Thompson, Libertarian 183,352 (10%)
WYOMING (95 percent)
(w) Dave Freudenthal, Dem 88,018 (51%)
Eli Bebout, Rep 82,294 (47%)
Newsletter Editor: Stuart Gorin, IIP/T/DHR
Fax: 202-619-6520, E-mail: [email protected]
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
Return to Public File Main Page
Return to Public Table of Contents