1996 United States presidential election in California

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1996 United States presidential election in California
Flag of California.svg
  1992 November 5, 1996 2000  
Turnout65.53% (of registered voters) Decrease2.svg 9.79 pp
52.56% (of eligible voters) Decrease2.svg 1.96 pp [1]
  Bill Clinton.jpg Bob Dole, PCCWW photo portrait.JPG RossPerotColor.jpg
Nominee Bill Clinton Bob Dole Ross Perot
Party Democratic Republican Reform
Home state Arkansas Kansas Texas
Running mate Al Gore Jack Kemp Pat Choate
Electoral vote5400
Popular vote5,119,8353,828,380697,847
Percentage51.10%38.21%6.96%

California Presidential Election Results 1996.svg
County Results

President before election

Bill Clinton
Democratic

Elected President

Bill Clinton
Democratic

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. [2]

Contents

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. [3] He also became the first Democrat since Woodrow Wilson in 1912 to win the White House without carrying Plumas County. [3] 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. [4] Dole hoped to capitalize on two issues that had been figuring prominently in California politics under Governor Pete Wilson, illegal immigration and affirmative action. [4]

California is one of thirteen 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. [2] [5]

Results

1996 United States presidential election in California [2] [6]
PartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
Democratic William Jefferson Clinton (Incumbent) Albert Arnold Gore Jr. (Incumbent)5,119,83551.10%54
Republican Robert Joseph Dole Jack French Kemp 3,828,38038.21%0
Reform Henry Ross Perot James Campbell697,8476.96%0
Green Ralph Nader Winona LaDuke 237,0162.37%0
Libertarian Harry Browne Jo Jorgensen 73,6000.73%0
Peace and Freedom Marsha Feinland Kate McClatchy 25,3320.25%0
Taxpayers’ Howard Phillips Herbert Titus 21,2020.21%0
Natural Law John Hagelin Dr. V. Tompkins 15,4030.15%0
Write-in Charles Collins 7650.01%0
Write-in James Harris 770.00%0
Write-inJoel Neuberg130.00%0
Write-inWillie Carter120.00%0
Write-in Isabell Masters 20.00%0
Invalid or blank votes242,1552.36%
Totals10,261,639100.0%54
Voter turnout65.53%

By county

CountyBill Clinton
Democratic
Bob Dole
Republican
Ross Perot
Reform
Ralph Nader
Green
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
# %# %# %# %# %# %
Alameda 303,90365.77%106,58123.07%24,2705.25%20,4324.42%6,8581.48%197,32242.70%462,044
Alpine 25842.02%26443.00%6310.26%193.09%101.63%-6-0.98%614
Amador 5,86840.60%6,87047.54%1,2678.77%2641.83%1831.27%-1,002-6.94%14,452
Butte 30,65138.53%38,96148.98%6,3938.04%2,4093.03%1,1361.43%-8,310-10.45%79,550
Calaveras 6,64638.63%8,27948.12%1,6129.37%3381.96%3311.92%-1,633-9.49%17,206
Colusa 2,05436.60%3,04754.29%4047.20%420.75%651.16%-993-17.69%5,612
Contra Costa 196,51255.73%123,95435.15%20,4165.79%7,3342.08%4,3861.24%72,55820.58%352,602
Del Norte 3,65241.08%3,67041.29%1,22513.78%1992.24%1431.61%-18-0.21%8,889
El Dorado 22,95736.33%32,75951.84%5,0778.03%1,4392.28%9641.53%-9,802-15.51%63,196
Fresno 94,44845.32%98,81347.42%10,9625.26%2,5231.21%1,6470.79%-4,365-2.10%208,393
Glenn 2,84132.04%5,04156.86%7888.89%850.96%1111.25%-2,200-24.82%8,866
Humboldt 24,62844.17%19,80335.52%5,81110.42%4,6518.34%8641.55%4,8258.65%55,757
Imperial 14,59155.27%9,70536.76%1,7786.73%1540.58%1720.65%4,88618.51%26,400
Inyo 2,60134.36%3,92451.84%81110.71%1271.68%1061.40%-1,323-17.48%7,569
Kern 62,65836.56%92,15153.77%13,4527.85%1,2890.75%1,8411.07%-29,493-17.21%171,391
Kings 11,25443.59%12,36847.91%1,7456.76%2050.79%2430.94%-1,114-4.32%25,815
Lake 10,43248.90%7,45834.96%2,53911.90%5832.73%3231.51%2,97413.94%21,335
Lassen 3,31833.60%5,19452.60%1,08010.94%1311.33%1521.54%-1,876-19.00%9,875
Los Angeles 1,430,62959.34%746,54430.96%157,7526.54%45,9771.91%30,1121.25%684,08528.38%2,411,014
Madera 11,25436.70%16,51053.85%2,1927.15%3761.23%3301.08%-5,256-17.15%30,662
Marin 67,40658.04%32,71428.17%6,5595.65%7,3606.34%2,1011.81%34,69229.87%116,140
Mariposa 2,92036.73%3,97650.02%7299.17%1922.42%1321.66%-1,056-13.29%7,949
Mendocino 14,95245.74%9,76529.87%3,68511.27%3,60811.04%6822.09%5,18715.87%32,692
Merced 21,78646.41%20,84744.41%3,4277.30%4620.98%4160.89%9392.00%46,938
Modoc 1,36831.79%2,28553.10%52812.27%491.14%731.70%-917-21.31%4,303
Mono 1,58038.62%1,88246.00%44710.93%962.35%862.10%-302-7.38%4,091
Monterey 57,70053.15%39,79436.66%7,2406.67%2,3912.20%1,4331.32%17,90616.49%108,558
Napa 24,58850.89%17,43936.09%4,2548.80%1,2422.57%7961.65%7,14914.80%48,319
Nevada 15,36935.56%21,78450.40%3,3307.70%2,0974.85%6391.48%-6,415-14.84%43,219
Orange 327,48537.88%446,71751.67%66,1957.66%11,8421.37%12,3371.43%-119,232-13.79%864,576
Placer 34,98137.05%49,80852.75%6,5426.93%1,8751.99%1,2211.29%-14,827-15.70%94,427
Plumas 3,54036.31%4,90550.31%9199.43%2142.19%1721.76%-1,365-14.00%9,750
Riverside 168,57943.05%178,61145.61%35,4819.06%4,8141.23%4,1281.05%-10,032-2.56%391,613
Sacramento 203,01949.83%166,04940.76%23,8565.86%9,1422.24%5,3481.31%36,9709.07%407,414
San Benito 7,03050.55%5,38438.72%1,0447.51%2361.70%2121.52%1,64611.83%13,906
San Bernardino 183,37244.36%180,13543.58%39,3309.51%5,1501.25%5,3681.30%3,2370.78%413,355
San Diego 389,96444.11%402,87645.57%63,0377.13%15,8581.79%12,4161.40%-12,912-1.46%884,151
San Francisco 209,77772.24%45,47915.66%9,6593.33%21,4717.39%3,9991.38%164,29856.58%290,385
San Joaquin 67,25346.34%65,13144.87%9,6926.68%1,5011.03%1,5631.08%2,1221.47%145,140
San Luis Obispo 40,39540.19%46,73346.50%8,2048.16%3,8543.83%1,3141.31%-6,338-6.31%100,500
San Mateo 152,30460.55%73,50829.22%15,0475.98%7,3362.92%3,3371.33%78,79631.33%251,532
Santa Barbara 70,65046.87%63,91542.40%9,4576.27%4,7743.17%1,9491.29%6,7354.47%150,745
Santa Clara 297,63956.88%168,29132.16%34,9086.67%12,3122.35%10,1411.94%129,34824.72%523,291
Santa Cruz 58,25056.52%27,76626.94%6,5556.36%7,8037.57%2,6882.61%30,48429.58%103,062
Shasta 20,84833.11%34,73655.17%5,8759.33%6751.07%8271.31%-13,888-22.06%62,961
Sierra 57333.57%87751.38%1709.96%402.34%472.75%-304-17.81%1,707
Siskiyou 7,02238.39%8,65347.30%1,87910.27%3722.03%3672.01%-1,631-8.91%18,293
Solano 64,64455.12%40,74234.74%8,6827.40%1,8681.59%1,3431.15%23,90220.38%117,279
Sonoma 100,73855.57%53,55529.54%13,8627.65%9,5475.27%3,5951.98%47,18326.03%181,297
Stanislaus 53,73845.93%52,40344.79%8,3607.14%1,1721.00%1,3341.14%1,3351.14%117,007
Sutter 8,50434.37%14,26457.64%1,5336.20%2080.84%2360.95%-5,760-23.27%24,745
Tehama 7,29035.66%10,29250.34%2,32511.37%2451.20%2911.42%-3,002-14.68%20,443
Trinity 2,20337.38%2,53042.93%85614.53%1592.70%1452.46%-327-5.55%5,893
Tulare 32,66938.06%46,27253.90%5,1065.95%7370.86%1,0621.24%-13,603-15.84%85,846
Tuolumne 8,95040.73%10,38647.27%1,9258.76%4271.94%2841.29%-1,436-6.54%21,972
Ventura 110,77244.10%109,20243.47%23,0549.18%4,7321.88%3,4341.37%1,5700.63%251,194
Yolo 33,03356.88%18,80732.38%3,1505.42%2,3774.09%7121.23%14,22624.50%58,079
Yuba 5,78937.42%7,97151.53%1,3088.46%2011.30%2011.30%-2,182-14.11%15,470
Total5,119,83551.10%3,828,38038.21%697,8476.96%237,0162.37%136,4061.36%1,291,45512.89%10,019,484

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Counties that flipped from Independent to Republican

By congressional district

Clinton won 38 of 52 congressional districts, including eight held by Republicans. Dole won 14 districts, including one held by a Democrat.

DistrictDoleClintonPerotRepresentative
1st 35%48%10% Frank Riggs
2nd 51%36%9% Wally Herger
3rd 44%45%7% Vic Fazio
4th 51%38%8% John Doolittle
5th 34%57%5% Bob Matsui
6th 29%57%7% Lynn Woolsey
7th 25%65%6% George Miller
8th 18%66%4% Nancy Pelosi
9th 13%75%3% Ron Dellums
10th 43%48%6% Bill Baker
Ellen Tauscher
11th 45%46%7% Richard Pombo
12th 21%70%4% Tom Lantos
13th 28%62%7% Pete Stark
14th 31%58%6% Anna Eshoo
15th 35%53%7% Tom Campbell
16th 29%61%6% Zoe Lofgren
17th 32%55%6% Sam Farr
18th 45%46%7% Gary Condit
19th 52%40%6% George Radanovich
20th 41%52%6% Cal Dooley
21st 56%34%8% Bill Thomas
22nd 44%44%7% Andrea Seastrand
Walter Capps
23rd 42%46%9% Elton Gallegly
24th 37%52%7% Anthony Beilenson
Brad Sherman
25th 47%41%9% Buck McKeon
26th 25%65%7% Howard Berman
27th 41%49%7% Carlos Moorhead
Jim Rogan
28th 44%45%8% David Dreier
29th 24%67%5% Henry Waxman
30th 20%71%5% Xavier Becerra
31st 26%65%7% Matthew G. Martínez
32nd 12%81%4% Julian Dixon
33rd 14%80%4% Lucille Roybal-Allard
34th 27%63%7% Esteban Torres
35th 11%84%4% Maxine Waters
36th 41%47%8% Jane Harman
37th 13%82%4% Walter R. Tucker III
Juanita Millender-McDonald
38th 36%53%8% Steve Horn
39th 48%41%8% Ed Royce
40th 49%38%11% Jerry Lewis
41st 47%43%8% Jay Kim
42nd 36%54%9% George Brown Jr.
43rd 46%43%9% Ken Calvert
44th 45%44%9% Sonny Bono
45th 51%38%8% Dana Rohrabacher
46th 41%49%8% Bob Dornan
Loretta Sánchez
47th 54%36%7% Christopher Cox
48th 56%34%8% Ron Packard
49th 40%49%7%
Brian Bilbray
50th 32%60%6% Bob Filner
51st 52%39%7% Duke Cunningham
52nd 48%41%8% Duncan Hunter

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References

  1. "Historical Voter Registration and Participation in Statewide General Elections 1910-2018" (PDF). California Secretary of State. Retrieved May 5, 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 Dave Leip's Atlas of United States Presidential Election Results - 1996 California Results
  3. 1 2 "County winners, 1836-2016". Google Docs. Retrieved November 29, 2020.
  4. 1 2 Ayres, B. Drummond Jr. (October 31, 1996). "Behind Dole's California Strategy: A Bid to Save His Campaign (Published 1996)". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved November 29, 2020.
  5. "Perot Names Stand-in Veep Candidate". Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved February 5, 2012.
  6. Statement of Vote November 5, 1996, Prepared by Bill Jones California Secretary of State Archived July 31, 2008, at the Wayback Machine (access date 2012-02-05)