1988 United States presidential election in Wisconsin

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1988 United States presidential election in Wisconsin
Flag of Wisconsin.svg
  1984 November 8, 1988 1992  
  Dukakis campaign portrait 3x4.jpg VP George Bush crop.jpg
Nominee Michael Dukakis George H. W. Bush
Party Democratic Republican
Home state Massachusetts Texas
Running mate Lloyd Bentsen Dan Quayle
Electoral vote110
Popular vote1,126,7941,047,499
Percentage51.41%47.80%

Wisconsin Presidential Election Results 1988.svg
1988 Wisconsin pres.svg

President before election

Ronald Reagan
Republican

Elected President

George H. W. Bush
Republican

The 1988 United States presidential election in Wisconsin took place on November 8, 1988. All 50 states and the District of Columbia, were part of the 1988 United States presidential election. State voters chose 11 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.

Contents

Wisconsin was won by Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis who was running against incumbent United States Vice President George H. W. Bush of Texas. Dukakis ran with Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen as Vice President, and Bush ran with Indiana Senator Dan Quayle. Dukakis won the election in Wisconsin with a four-point margin, likely due to the 1980s farm crisis which devastated rural areas of Wisconsin. The state has since consistently voted for the Democratic Party, until the victory of Republican Donald Trump in 2016 and 2024. This is also the last time Wisconsin would vote differently to fellow Rust Belt swing states Michigan and Pennsylvania, with all three states flipping simultaneously in 2016, 2020, and 2024 as well as the last time Wisconsin was the most Democratic leaning of the three Rust Belt swing states until 2024.

The election was very partisan, with over 99 percent of the electorate voting for either the Republican or Democratic parties, although five additional candidates were on the ballot. [1] Dukakis and Bush almost evenly split Wisconsin's seventy-two counties – Dukakis won 37 and Bush won 35. Dukakis won the large urban counties containing Madison (Dane County), Milwaukee, Racine and Kenosha, alongside almost entirely Native American Menominee County and the heavily unionized Scandinavian-American counties of the northwest. Bush won the suburban "WOW counties" and the more conservative, historically German Catholic, counties of the rural eastern half of the state. [2] Over the state as a whole, Dukakis did best, as usual, in Menominee County, and Bush did best in Ozaukee County.

Results

1988 United States presidential election in Wisconsin
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
Democratic Michael Stanley Dukakis 1,126,79451.41%11
Republican George Herbert Walker Bush 1,047,49947.80%0
Independent Ron Paul 5,1570.24%0
Independent David Duke 3,0560.14%0
Independent James Warren 2,574 [a] 0.12%0
Independent Lyndon LaRouche 2,302 [a] 0.11%0
Write-ins 2,273 [a] 0.10%0
Independent Lenora Fulani 1,953 [a] 0.09%0
Totals2,191,608100.0%11

Results by county

CountyMichael Dukakis
Democratic
George H.W. Bush
Republican
Ron Paul
Independent
David Duke
Independent
MarginTotal votes cast [3]
# %# %# %# %# %
Adams 3,59852.27%3,25847.33%80.12%190.28%3404.94%6,883
Ashland 4,52660.49%2,92639.11%100.13%200.27%1,60021.38%7,482
Barron 8,95150.94%8,52748.53%450.26%470.27%4242.41%17,570
Bayfield 4,32357.96%3,09541.50%120.16%280.38%1,22816.46%7,458
Brown 41,78848.62%43,62550.75%1960.23%3440.40%-1,837-2.13%85,953
Buffalo 3,48155.14%2,78344.08%230.36%260.41%69811.06%6,313
Burnett 3,53754.71%2,88444.61%110.17%330.51%65310.10%6,465
Calumet 6,48144.06%8,10755.12%210.14%990.67%-1,626-11.06%14,708
Chippewa 11,44753.61%9,75745.69%530.25%970.45%1,6907.92%21,354
Clark 6,64250.95%6,29648.30%190.15%790.61%3462.65%13,036
Columbia 9,13246.28%10,47553.09%450.23%780.40%-1,343-6.81%19,730
Crawford 3,60852.34%3,23846.98%220.32%250.36%3705.36%6,893
Dane 105,41459.92%69,14339.30%5430.31%8340.47%36,27120.62%175,934
Dodge 12,66342.31%17,00356.81%660.22%1950.65%-4,340-14.50%29,927
Door 5,42543.67%6,90755.60%200.16%700.56%-1,482-11.93%12,422
Douglas 13,90768.01%6,44031.49%340.17%680.33%7,46736.52%20,449
Dunn 9,20555.47%7,27343.83%370.22%790.48%1,93211.64%16,594
Eau Claire 21,15054.20%17,66445.27%600.15%1490.38%3,4868.93%39,023
Florence 1,01847.53%1,10651.63%40.19%140.65%-88-4.10%2,142
Fond du Lac 15,88741.62%21,98557.59%860.23%2170.57%-6,098-15.97%38,175
Forest 2,14253.43%1,84546.02%40.10%180.45%2977.41%4,009
Grant 9,42148.12%10,04951.32%440.22%660.34%-628-3.20%19,580
Green 5,15343.27%6,63655.73%410.34%780.66%-1,483-12.46%11,908
Green Lake 3,03336.55%5,20562.72%210.25%400.48%-2,172-26.17%8,299
Iowa 4,26849.93%4,24049.60%130.15%270.32%280.33%8,548
Iron 2,09056.26%1,59943.04%50.13%210.57%49113.22%3,715
Jackson 3,92452.20%3,55547.29%110.15%270.36%3694.91%7,517
Jefferson 11,81644.86%14,30954.32%740.28%1430.54%-2,493-9.46%26,342
Juneau 3,73443.11%4,86956.21%180.21%410.47%-1,135-13.10%8,662
Kenosha 30,08957.72%21,66141.55%1200.23%2590.50%8,42816.17%52,129
Kewaunee 4,78652.14%4,33047.17%80.09%550.60%4564.97%9,179
La Crosse 22,20450.39%21,54848.90%1000.23%2140.49%6561.49%44,066
Lafayette 3,52148.70%3,66550.69%150.21%290.40%-144-1.99%7,230
Langlade 4,25446.31%4,88453.17%160.17%320.35%-630-6.86%9,186
Lincoln 5,81952.06%5,25747.03%330.30%690.62%5625.03%11,178
Manitowoc 19,68054.69%16,02044.52%630.18%2240.62%3,66010.17%35,987
Marathon 24,65849.79%24,48249.44%1250.25%2560.52%1760.35%49,521
Marinette 8,03045.20%9,63754.25%260.15%710.40%-1,607-9.05%17,764
Marquette 2,46344.24%3,05954.95%150.27%300.54%-596-10.71%5,567
Menominee 1,02872.55%38126.89%00.00%80.56%64745.66%1,417
Milwaukee 268,28761.04%168,36338.30%1,0820.25%1,8130.41%99,92422.74%439,545
Monroe 6,43747.38%7,07352.06%290.21%460.34%-636-4.68%13,585
Oconto 6,54947.75%7,08451.65%230.17%600.44%-535-3.90%13,716
Oneida 7,41447.31%8,13051.88%550.35%710.45%-716-4.57%15,670
Outagamie 27,77145.32%33,11354.04%1030.17%2910.47%-5,342-8.72%61,278
Ozaukee 12,66135.35%22,89963.94%1070.30%1450.40%-10,238-28.59%35,812
Pepin 1,90658.68%1,31140.36%80.25%230.71%59518.32%3,248
Pierce 8,65958.55%6,04540.87%330.22%520.35%2,61417.68%14,789
Polk 8,98156.22%6,86642.98%430.27%850.53%2,11513.24%15,975
Portage 16,31757.18%12,05742.25%480.17%1130.40%4,26014.93%28,535
Price 3,98753.18%3,45046.02%120.16%480.64%5377.16%7,497
Racine 39,63151.72%36,34247.42%2130.28%4450.58%3,2894.30%76,631
Richland 3,64347.26%4,02652.23%160.21%230.30%-383-4.97%7,708
Rock 29,57650.83%28,17848.43%1580.27%2760.47%1,3982.40%58,188
Rusk 3,88855.51%3,06343.73%180.26%350.50%82511.78%7,004
Sauk 8,32444.54%10,22554.72%350.19%1030.55%-1,901-10.18%18,687
Sawyer 3,23149.43%3,26049.88%200.31%250.38%-29-0.45%6,536
Shawano 6,58743.78%8,36255.57%210.14%770.51%-1,775-11.79%15,047
Sheboygan 23,42949.66%23,47149.75%860.18%1910.40%-42-0.09%47,177
St. Croix 11,39252.90%9,96046.25%620.29%1190.55%1,4326.65%21,533
Taylor 3,78546.73%4,25452.52%150.19%460.57%-469-5.79%8,100
Trempealeau 6,21255.59%4,90243.87%160.14%450.40%1,31011.72%11,175
Vernon 5,75451.94%5,22647.17%350.32%630.57%5284.77%11,078
Vilas 3,78138.89%5,84260.09%210.22%780.80%-2,061-21.20%9,722
Walworth 12,20339.77%18,25959.50%910.30%1320.43%-6,056-19.73%30,685
Washburn 3,39352.15%3,07447.25%130.20%260.40%3194.90%6,506
Washington 15,90739.24%24,32860.01%1090.27%1950.48%-8,421-20.77%40,539
Waukesha 57,59838.68%90,46760.76%4020.27%4260.29%-32,869-22.08%148,893
Waupaca 7,07837.74%11,55961.62%300.16%900.48%-4,481-23.88%18,757
Waushara 3,53541.33%4,95357.91%180.21%470.55%-1,418-16.58%8,553
Winnebago 28,50844.54%35,08554.82%1190.19%2940.46%-6,577-10.28%64,006
Wood 16,07448.93%16,54950.38%520.16%1730.53%-475-1.45%32,848
Totals1,126,79451.41%1,047,49947.80%5,1570.24%3,0560.14%79,2953.61%2,191,608

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Analysis

Wisconsin weighed in for this election as 12 points more Democratic than the national average. As of 2024 , this is the last election in which Green County voted for a Republican presidential candidate, [4] in which the state would vote to the left of neighboring Illinois, and in which the Democratic candidate won Wisconsin while simultaneously losing Illinois. It was also the last election until 2016 in which both Wisconsin and Illinois voted differently. Additionally, it was the last election until 2024 in which Wisconsin voted to the left of both neighboring Michigan and fellow Rust Belt state Pennsylvania, as well as the most recent election where Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania all did not vote for the same candidate. [5]

It was also the first time since 1960 that Wisconsin would back the losing candidate in a presidential election. [6] It was also the first time since 1848 that the state would back a losing Democrat in a presidential election, and the first time ever that the state would back a Democrat while a Republican won the presidency. Conversely, this was the first time since 1924 that a Republican won without the state. Grant, Sauk, and Lafayette counties would not vote Republican again until 2016.

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Votes for this candidate were not separated by county but listed only as a statewide total. [3]

References

  1. "1988 Presidential General Election Results – Wisconsin". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 21, 2013.
  2. Phillips, Kevin P.; The Emerging Republican Majority, pp. 381-382, 414 ISBN   978-0-691-16324-6
  3. 1 2 "WI US President Race, November 08, 1988". Our Campaigns.
  4. Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  5. Brownstein, Ronald (September 16, 2024). "Why these three states are the most consistent tipping point in American politics". CNN. Retrieved September 16, 2024.
  6. "Presidential General Election Results Comparison – Wisconsin". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas.