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This is a list of notable performances of third party and independent candidates in United States gubernatorial elections. It is rare for candidates, other than those of the six parties which have succeeded as major parties (Federalist Party, Democratic-Republican Party, National Republican Party, Democratic Party, Whig Party, Republican Party), to take large shares of the vote in elections.
In the 369 gubernatorial elections since 1990, third party or independent candidates have won at least 5.0% of the vote 53 times (14%), while six candidates have won election (2%). The most recent third party or independent governor to win was Alaska's Bill Walker, a Republican turned independent, in 2014.
Listed below are gubernatorial elections since the 1820s in which a third party or independent candidate won at least 5.0% of the vote. Winners are shown in bold.
Year | State | Party | Nominee | Running mate | # Votes | % Votes | Place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1823 | Vermont | Independent | Dudley Chase | 1,088 | 8.11 / 100 | 2nd | |
1824 | Vermont | Independent | Joel Doolittle | 1,962 | 12.48 / 100 | 2nd | |
1826 | Vermont | Independent | Joel Doolittle | 3,157 | 22.3 / 100 | 2nd | |
1827 | Vermont | Independent | Joel Doolittle | 1,951 | 12.13 / 100 | 2nd | |
1828 | New York | Anti-Masonic | Solomon Southwick | 33,345 | 12.06 / 100 | 3rd | |
1829 | Georgia | Democratic-Troup | George Rockingham Gilmer | 24,204 | 69.31 / 100 | 1st | |
Democratic-Clark | Joel Crawford | 10,718 | 30.69 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Pennsylvania | Anti-Masonic | Joseph Ritner | 51,776 | 39.83 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Vermont | Anti-Masonic | Heman Allen | 7,346 | 28.59 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1830 | Vermont | Anti-Masonic | William A. Palmer | 10,923 | 35.56 / 100 | 2nd | |
1831 | Connecticut | Anti-Masonic | Zalmon Storrs | 4,778 | 25.62 / 100 | 2nd | |
Georgia | Union | Wilson Lumpkin | 27,305 | 51.35 / 100 | 1st | ||
Democratic-Troup | George Rockingham Gilmer | 25,867 | 48.65 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Indiana | Independent | Milton Stapp | 6,984 | 13.56 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Anti-Masonic | Samuel Lathrop | 13,357 | 25.01 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Vermont | Anti-Masonic | William A. Palmer | 15,258 | 44.0 / 100 | 1st | ||
1832 | Massachusetts | Anti-Masonic | Samuel Lathrop | 14,755 | 22.97 / 100 | 3rd | |
Ohio | Anti-Masonic | Darius Lyman | 63,185 | 46.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Pennsylvania | Anti-Masonic | Joseph Ritner | 88,165 | 49.12 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Rhode Island (General) | Anti-Masonic | William Sprague III | 610 | 10.82 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island (1st Runoff) | 698 | 10.03 / 100 | 3rd | ||||
Rhode Island (2nd Runoff) | 792 | 13.52 / 100 | 3rd | ||||
Rhode Island (3rd Runoff) | 967 | 14.33 / 100 | 3rd | ||||
Rhode Island (4th Runoff) | 832 | 13.8 / 100 | 3rd | ||||
Vermont | Anti-Masonic | William A. Palmer | 20,565 | 46.4 / 100 | 1st | ||
1833 | Connecticut | Anti-Masonic | Zalmon Storrs | 3,250 | 14.87 / 100 | 3rd | |
Georgia | Unionist Democratic | Wilson Lumpkin | 30,861 | 51.93 / 100 | 1st | ||
Nullifier Independent | Joel Crawford | 28,670 | 48.07 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Maine | Independent Democrat | Samuel E. Smith | 3,024 | 6.13 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Anti-Masonic | John Quincy Adams | 18,274 | 29.14 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Workingmen's | Samuel L. Allen | 3,459 | 5.52 / 100 | 4th | |||
Vermont | Anti-Masonic | William A. Palmer | 20,565 | 52.86 / 100 | 1st | ||
1834 | Connecticut | Anti-Masonic | Zalmon Storrs | 2,398 | 6.49 / 100 | 3rd | |
Massachusetts | Anti-Masonic | John Bailey | 10,160 | 13.48 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Anti-Masonic | William A. Palmer | 17,131 | 45.37 / 100 | 1st | ||
1835 | Georgia | Union | William Schley | 31,197 | 52.11 / 100 | 1st | |
Southern Rights | Charles Dougherty | 28,670 | 47.89 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Pennsylvania | Anti-Masonic | Joseph Ritner | 94,023 | 46.92 / 100 | 1st | ||
Independent Democrat | George Wolf | 65,804 | 32.83 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Tennessee | Anti-Van Buren Democrat | Newton Cannon | 41,862 | 50.41 / 100 | 1st | ||
Independent | West H. Humphreys | 7,999 | 9.63 / 100 | 3rd | |||
1836 | Missouri | Independent | William Henry Ashley | 13,057 | 47.7 / 100 | 2nd | |
New Hampshire | Independent | George Sullivan | 2,230 | 7.27 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1837 | Alabama | Anti-Van Buren Democrat | Samuel W. Oliver | 20,152 | 45.21 / 100 | 2nd | |
Georgia | Southern Rights | George Rockingham Gilmer | 34,179 | 50.56 / 100 | 1st | ||
Union | William Schley | 33,417 | 49.44 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Mississippi | Southern Rights Whig | J. B. Morgan | 9,896 | 35.54 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Southern Rights Whig | John A. Grimball | 4,974 | 17.86 / 100 | 3rd | |||
1838 | Pennsylvania | Anti-Masonic | Joseph Ritner | 122,325 | 48.9 / 100 | 2nd | |
1839 | Georgia | Union | Charles James McDonald | 34,634 | 51.42 / 100 | 1st | |
Southern Rights | Charles Dougherty | 32,727 | 48.58 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Rhode Island | Abolition | Tristam Burges | 457 | 7.4 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1841 | Alabama | Independent Whig | James W. McLung | 21,219 | 43.13 / 100 | 2nd | |
Vermont | Liberty | Titus Hutchinson | 3,039 | 6.34 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1842 | Maine | Liberty | James Appleton | 4,080 | 5.68 / 100 | 3rd | |
Massachusetts | Liberty | Samuel Sewall | 6,382 | 5.41 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Independent Democrat | John H. White | 5,869 | 12.2 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Liberty | Daniel Holt | 2,812 | 5.85 / 100 | 4th | |||
1843 | Maine | Liberty | James Appleton | 6,746 | 10.58 / 100 | 3rd | |
Calhoun Democrat | Edward Kavanagh | 3,221 | 5.05 / 100 | 4th | |||
Massachusetts | Liberty | Samuel Sewall | 8,901 | 7.34 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Michigan | Liberty | James G. Birney | 2,776 | 7.11 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Conservative | John H. White | 5,597 | 12.53 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Liberty | Daniel Holt | 3,392 | 7.59 / 100 | 4th | |||
Rhode Island | Law and Order | James Fenner | 9,107 | 55.18 / 100 | 1st | ||
Vermont | Liberty | Charles K. Williams | 5,618 | 10.24 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1844 | Arkansas | Independent | Richard C. Byrd | 2,514 | 13.5 / 100 | 3rd | |
Maine | Liberty | James Appleton | 6,245 | 6.65 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Liberty | Samuel Sewall | 9,635 | 7.18 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Liberty | Daniel Holt | 5,767 | 11.84 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Law and Order | James Fenner | 5,560 | 96.39 / 100 | 1st | ||
Vermont | Liberty | William R. Shafter | 5,618 | 10.24 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1845 | Alabama | Independent Democrat | Joshua L. Martin | 30,261 | 53.55 / 100 | 1st | |
Maine | Liberty | Samuel Fessenden | 5,867 | 8.7 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Liberty | Samuel Sewall | 8,316 | 7.85 / 100 | 3rd | ||
American | Henry Shaw | 8,089 | 7.64 / 100 | 4th | |||
Michigan | Liberty | James G. Birney | 3,065 | 7.76 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Liberty | Daniel Holt | 5,786 | 12.64 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Liberation Party | Charles Jackson | 8,007 | 50.48 / 100 | 1st | ||
Law and Order | James Fenner | 7,795 | 49.14 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Vermont | Liberty | William R. Shafter | 6,534 | 13.54 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1846 | Illinois | Liberty | Richard Eels | 5,154 | 5.11 / 100 | 3rd | |
Maine | Liberty | Samuel Fessenden | 9,398 | 12.42 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Liberty | Samuel Sewall | 9,997 | 9.81 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | Nathaniel S. Berry | 10,403 | 18.76 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Law and Order | Byron Diman | 7,477 | 49.77 / 100 | 1st | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Lawrence Brainerd | 7,118 | 14.62 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1847 | Maine | Liberty | Samuel Fessenden | 7,352 | 11.26 / 100 | 3rd | |
Massachusetts | Liberty | Samuel Sewall | 9,193 | 8.72 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Michigan | Liberty | Chester Gurney | 2,585 | 5.59 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | Nathaniel S. Berry | 8,531 | 14.1 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Lawrence Brainerd | 6,926 | 14.41 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1848 | Illinois | Free Soil | Charles V. Dyer | 4,692 | 6.0 / 100 | 3rd | |
Maine | Liberty | Samuel Fessenden | 11,484 | 14.27 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Free Soil | Stephen C. Phillips | 36,011 | 29.03 / 100 | 2nd | ||
New York | Free Soil | John Adams Dix | 122,811 | 26.7 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Oscar Lovell Shafter | 14,931 | 29.62 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1849 | Connecticut | Free Soil | John Milton Niles | 3,520 | 6.25 / 100 | 3rd | |
Maine | Free Soil | George F. Talbot | 7,987 | 10.83 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Free Soil | Stephen C. Phillips | 25,247 | 23.06 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | Nathaniel S. Berry | 7,045 | 12.57 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Free Soil | Edward Harris | 458 | 5.32 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Horatio Needham | 23,250 | 43.98 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Wisconsin | Free Soil | Warren Chase | 3,761 | 11.85 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1850 | Maine | Free Soil | George F. Talbot | 7,267 | 9.01 / 100 | 3rd | |
Massachusetts | Free Soil | Stephen C. Phillips | 27,636 | 22.77 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | Nathaniel S. Berry | 6,472 | 11.6 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Ohio | Free Soil | Edward Smith | 13,747 | 5.13 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Free Soil | Edward Harris | 773 | 16.89 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Lucius Benedict Peck | 18,856 | 39.69 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1851 | Georgia | Union | Howell Cobb | 57,417 | 59.66 / 100 | 1st | |
Southern Rights | Charles James McDonald | 38,824 | 40.34 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Massachusetts | Free Soil | John G. Palfrey | 28,560 | 20.85 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Mississippi | Union | Henry S. Foote | 29,358 | 50.87 / 100 | 1st | ||
Southern Rights | Jefferson Davis | 28,359 | 49.14 / 100 | 2nd | |||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | John Atwood | 12,049 | 20.73 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Ohio | Free Soil | Samuel Lewis | 16,918 | 6.0 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Timothy P. Redfield | 14,950 | 33.71 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1852 | Illinois | Free Soil | D. A. Knowlton | 9,024 | 5.85 / 100 | 3rd | |
Maine | Anti-Maine Law | Anson G. Chandler | 21,774 | 22.99 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Free Soil | Horace Mann | 36,740 | 26.54 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Michigan | Free Soil | Isaac P. Christiancy | 6,350 | 7.58 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | John Atwood | 9,683 | 15.78 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Lawrence Brainerd | 9,446 | 19.6 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1853 | Alabama | Unionist Democratic | Alvis Q. Nicks | 5,763 | 12.37 / 100 | 3rd | |
Connecticut | Free Soil | Francis Gillette | 8,926 | 14.78 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Georgia | Southern Rights | Herschel Vespasian Johnson | 47,638 | 50.27 / 100 | 1st | ||
Union | Charles J. Jenkins | 47,128 | 49.73 / 100 | 2nd | |||
Maine | Anti-Maine Law | Anson Morrill | 11,027 | 13.19 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Free Soil | Ezekial Holmes | 8,996 | 10.76 / 100 | 4th | |||
Massachusetts | Free Soil | Henry Wilson | 29,020 | 22.51 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | John H. White | 7,997 | 14.14 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Ohio | Free Soil | Samuel Lewis | 50,346 | 17.74 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Free Soil | Lawrence Brainerd | 8,291 | 17.49 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1854 | Connecticut | Temperance | Charles Chapman | 10,672 | 17.49 / 100 | 3rd | |
Delaware | American | Peter F. Causey | 6,941 | 52.64 / 100 | 1st | ||
Maine | American | Anson Morrill | 44,565 | 49.17 / 100 | 1st | ||
Massachusetts | American | Henry Gardner | 81,503 | 62.58 / 100 | 1st | ||
New Hampshire | Free Soil | Jared Perkins | 11,080 | 19.13 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New York | American | Daniel Ullman | 122,282 | 26.05 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Hard-Shell | Greene C. Bronson | 33,850 | 7.21 / 100 | 4th | |||
1855 | Alabama | American | George D. Shortridge | 32,086 | 42.21 / 100 | 2nd | |
California | American | J. Neely Johnson | 51,157 | 52.53 / 100 | 1st | ||
Connecticut | American | William T. Minor | 28,080 | 43.51 / 100 | 1st | ||
Georgia | American | Garnett Andrews | 43,358 | 41.76 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Temperance | B. H. Overby | 6,331 | 6.1 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Kentucky | American | Charles S. Morehead | 69,816 | 51.63 / 100 | 1st | ||
Louisiana | American | Charles Derbigny | 19,755 | 46.26 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Massachusetts | American | Henry Gardner | 51,497 | 37.73 / 100 | 1st | ||
Mississippi | American | Charles D. Fontaine | 27,579 | 45.78 / 100 | 2nd | ||
New Hampshire | American | Ralph Metcalf | 32,779 | 50.71 / 100 | 1st | ||
Ohio | American | Allen Trimble | 24,276 | 8.04 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Texas | American | D. C. Dickson | 18,968 | 40.93 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Vermont | American | James M. Slade | 3,631 | 8.33 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Virginia | American | Thomas Flournoy | 73,354 | 46.83 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1856 | Arkansas | American | James Yell | 15,249 | 35.58 / 100 | 2nd | |
Connecticut | American | William T. Minor | 26,008 | 38.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Florida | American | David S. Walker | 5,894 | 48.68 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Illinois | American | Buckner Stith Morris | 19,088 | 8.04 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Indiana | People's [note 1] | Oliver P. Morton | 112,039 | 48.71 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Massachusetts | Fillmore American | George W. Gordon | 10,385 | 6.62 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Missouri | American | Robert C. Ewing | 40,589 | 35.23 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Benton Democrat | Thomas Hart Benton | 27,618 | 23.97 / 100 | 3rd | |||
New Hampshire | American | Ralph Metcalf | 32,119 | 48.15 / 100 | 1st | ||
New York | American | Erastus Brooks | 130,870 | 22.04 / 100 | 3rd | ||
North Carolina | American | John Adams Gilmer | 44,970 | 43.8 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1857 | California | American | George Washington Bowie | 19,481 | 20.8 / 100 | 3rd | |
Georgia | American | Benjamin Harvey Hill | 46,889 | 44.86 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Maryland | American | Thomas Holliday Hicks | 47,141 | 54.93 / 100 | 1st | ||
Massachusetts | American | Henry Gardner | 37,596 | 28.81 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Mississippi | American | Edward M. Yerger | 14,095 | 33.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Missouri | American | James S. Rollins | 47,641 | 49.83 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Pennsylvania | American | Isaac Hazlehurst | 28,168 | 7.76 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Tennessee | American | Robert H. Hatton | 59,807 | 45.56 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Texas | American | Sam Houston | 23,628 | 42.06 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1858 | Delaware | People's [note 1] | James S. Buckmaster | 7,554 | 49.33 / 100 | 2nd | |
Massachusetts | American | Amos Adams Lawrence | 12,084 | 10.13 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New York | American | Lorenzo Burrows | 61,137 | 11.22 / 100 | 3rd | ||
North Carolina | Independent Democrat | Duncan K. McRae | 40,036 | 41.5 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1859 | Alabama | Southern Rights Democratic | William F. Samford | 19,745 | 27.22 / 100 | 2nd | |
California | Lecompton Democrat | Milton Latham | 61,352 | 59.7 / 100 | 1st | ||
Kentucky | Opposition | Joshua Fry Bell | 67,283 | 46.9 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Louisiana | American | Thomas J. Wells | 15,587 | 37.98 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Massachusetts | American | George N. Briggs | 14,365 | 13.2 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Mississippi | Independent | Harvey W. Walter | 10,308 | 22.98 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | Opposition | John H. Netherland | 68,040 | 47.21 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Texas | Constitutional Union | Sam Houston | 36,227 | 56.79 / 100 | 1st | ||
Virginia | Opposition | William L. Goggin | 71,592 | 48.11 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1860 | Arkansas | Independent Democrat | Henry Massey Rector | 32,048 | 52.52 / 100 | 1st | |
Massachusetts | Constitutional Union | Amos Adams Lawrence | 23,816 | 14.04 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Missouri | Constitutional Union | Sample Orr | 66,583 | 41.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Breckinridge Democrat | Hancock Lee Jackson | 11,415 | 7.2 / 100 | 3rd | |||
1861 | California | Breckinridge Democrat | John R. McConnell | 32,751 | 27.35 / 100 | 2nd | |
Maine | Opposition Democrat | John W. Dana | 19,383 | 19.77 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Vermont | Union People's | Andrew Tracy | 5,722 | 13.37 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1862 | Massachusetts | People's [note 1] | Charles Devens | 54,167 | 39.91 / 100 | 2nd | |
1863 | New Hampshire | Union | Walter Harriman | 4,372 | 6.56 / 100 | 3rd | |
1864 | Louisiana | Independent | J. Q. Fellows | 2,720 | 25.36 / 100 | 2nd | |
Radical Republican | Benjamin Flanders | 1,847 | 17.22 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Rhode Island | Independent Republican | Amos C. Barstow | 1,339 | 7.64 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1865 | Alabama | Whig | Robert M. Patton | 20,611 | 45.21 / 100 | 1st | |
Union | William Russell Smith | 8,557 | 18.77 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Louisiana | Independent | Henry Watkins Allen | 6,297 | 21.84 / 100 | 2nd | ||
North Carolina | Conservative | Jonathan Worth | 32,549 | 55.49 / 100 | 1st | ||
South Carolina | Independent | James Lawrence Orr | 9,771 | 51.75 / 100 | 1st | ||
Independent | Wade Hampton III | 9,109 | 48.25 / 100 | 2nd | |||
1866 | North Carolina | Conservative | Jonathan Worth | 34,250 | 75.87 / 100 | 1st | |
1867 | Kentucky | Conservative | William B. Kinkead | 13,167 | 9.59 / 100 | 3rd | |
Tennessee | Conservative | Emerson Etheridge | 22,440 | 23.15 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1868 | Florida | Radical Republican | Samuel Walker | 2,251 | 9.22 / 100 | 3rd | |
Louisiana | White Republican | James G. Taliaferro | 38,118 | 37.23 / 100 | 2nd | ||
North Carolina | Conservative | Thomas Samuel Ashe | 73,600 | 44.28 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1869 | Maine | Temperance | Nathan Griffith Hichborn | 5,028 | 5.28 / 100 | 3rd | |
Massachusetts | Labor Reform | Edwin M. Chamberlain | 13,567 | 9.8 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Mississippi | Conservative | Louis Dent | 38,097 | 33.34 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | Radical Republican | William Brickly Stokes | 55,036 | 31.38 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Virginia | Conservative | Gilbert Carlton Walker | 119,535 | 54.15 / 100 | 1st | ||
Radical Republican | Henry H. Wells | 101,204 | 45.85 / 100 | 2nd | |||
1870 | Massachusetts | Labor Reform | Wendell Phillips | 21,946 | 14.59 / 100 | 3rd | |
Missouri | Liberal Republican | Benjamin Gratz Brown | 104,374 | 62.27 / 100 | 1st | ||
New Hampshire | Labor Reform | Samuel Flint | 7,369 | 10.76 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1871 | Massachusetts | Labor Reform | Edwin M. Chamberlain | 6,848 | 5.01 / 100 | 3rd | |
1872 | Alabama | Liberal Republican | T. Hendon | 81,371 | 47.52 / 100 | 2nd | |
Arkansas | Liberal Republican | Joseph Brooks | 38,909 | 48.2 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Florida | Liberal Republican | William D. Bloxham | 16,004 | 47.62 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Georgia | Liberal Republican | James Milton Smith | 104,539 | 69.23 / 100 | 1st | ||
Illinois | Liberal Republican | Gustav Koerner | 197,084 | 45.1 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Kansas | Liberal Republican | Thaddeus H. Walker | 34,698 | 34.22 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Massachusetts | Liberal Republican | Francis W. Bird | 59,626 | 30.77 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | Liberal Republican | Austin Blair | 80,598 | 36.27 / 100 | 2nd | ||
North Carolina | Conservative | Augustus Summerfield Merrimon | 96,731 | 49.51 / 100 | 2nd | ||
South Carolina | Independent Republican | Reuben Tomlinson | 36,553 | 34.36 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | Liberal Republican | John C. Brown | 97,689 | 53.74 / 100 | 1st | ||
West Virginia | People's Independent | John J. Jacob | 42,888 | 51.55 / 100 | 1st | ||
1873 | Iowa | Anti-Monopoly | Jacob G. Vale | 82,556 | 43.61 / 100 | 2nd | |
Mississippi | Independent | James L. Alcorn | 52,857 | 41.89 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1874 | Connecticut | Temperance | Henry D. Smith | 4,960 | 5.4 / 100 | 3rd | |
Nebraska | Greenback Party | J. F. Gardner | 4,159 | 11.55 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Oregon | Independent | Thomas F. Campbell | 6,532 | 25.71 / 100 | 3rd | ||
South Carolina | Independent Republican | John T. Green | 68,818 | 46.12 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1875 | California | Independent | John Bidwell | 29,752 | 24.2 / 100 | 3rd | |
Iowa | Anti-Monopoly | Shepherd Leffler | 93,270 | 42.61 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Massachusetts | Temperance | John I. Baker | 9,124 | 5.27 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | National Republican | Rowland Hazard, II | 8,368 | 37.56 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1876 | Nebraska | Greenback Party | J. F. Gardner | 3,022 | 5.79 / 100 | 3rd | |
Rhode Island | National Republican | Albert C. Howard | 6,733 | 35.37 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | Independent | Dorsey B. Thomas | 73,695 | 35.09 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1877 | Iowa | Greenback Party | Daniel P. Stubbs | 34,316 | 13.97 / 100 | 3rd | |
Maine | Greenback Party | Henry C. Munson | 5,291 | 5.18 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Prohibition | Robert C. Pitman | 16,354 | 8.87 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Wisconsin | Greenback Party | Edward P. Allis | 26,216 | 14.72 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1878 | Colorado | Greenback Party | R. G. Buckingham | 2,783 | 9.72 / 100 | 3rd | |
Connecticut | Greenback Party | Charles Atwater | 8,314 | 7.94 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Delaware | Greenback Party | K. Stewart | 2,835 | 20.9 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Kansas | Greenback Party | David P. Mitchell | 27,057 | 19.57 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Maine | Greenback Party | Joseph L. Smith | 41,371 | 32.79 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | Greenback Party | Henry S. Smith | 73,313 | 25.93 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Nebraska | Greenback Party | Levi G. Todd | 9,484 | 18.16 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Hampshire | Greenback Party | Warren G. Brown | 6,507 | 8.57 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Pennsylvania | Greenback Party | Samuel R. Mason | 81,758 | 11.65 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Tennessee | Greenback Party | R. M. Edwards | 15,470 | 10.47 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Texas | Greenback Party | William H. Hamman | 55,002 | 23.2 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1879 | California | Workingmen's | William F. White | 44,482 | 27.76 / 100 | 3rd | |
Iowa | Greenback Party | Daniel Campbell | 45,674 | 15.65 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Kentucky | Greenback Party | Charles W. Cook | 18,954 | 8.38 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Maine | Greenback Party | Joseph L. Smith | 47,987 | 34.68 / 100 | 2nd | ||
New York | Jeffersonian | John Kelly | 77,566 | 8.65 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Wisconsin | Greenback Party | Reuben May | 12,996 | 6.88 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1880 | Alabama | Greenback Party | James Madison Pickens | 42,363 | 23.9 / 100 | 2nd | |
Arkansas | Greenback Party | W. Parks | 31,424 | 27.18 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Georgia | Independent Democrat | Thomas M. Norwood | 63,631 | 35.07 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Kansas | Greenback Party | H. P. Vrooman | 19,481 | 9.8 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Maine | Fusion | Harris M. Plaisted | 73,713 | 49.48 / 100 | 1st | ||
Michigan | Greenback Party | David Woodman | 31,085 | 8.9 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Missouri | Greenback Party | Luman A. Brown | 36,340 | 9.14 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Independent Republican | Albert C. Howard | 5,047 | 22.13 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Tennessee | Debt-Paying Democrat | William B. Bate | 79,081 | 32.38 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Low Tax Democrat | William B. Bate | 57,568 | 23.57 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Texas | Greenback Party | William H. Hamman | 33,721 | 12.76 / 100 | 3rd | ||
West Virginia | Greenback Party | N. B. French | 13,027 | 10.96 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1881 | Iowa | Greenback Party | D. M. Clark | 28,112 | 11.96 / 100 | 3rd | |
Mississippi | Fusion | Benjamin King | 51,994 | 40.37 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Virginia | Readjuster | William E. Cameron | 113,464 | 52.97 / 100 | 1st | ||
Wisconsin | Prohibition | Theodore D. Kanouse | 13,225 | 7.7 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1882 | Arkansas | Greenback Party | Rufus King Garland Jr. | 10,142 | 6.89 / 100 | 3rd | |
Georgia | Independent Democrat | Lucius Jeremiah Gartrell | 44,893 | 29.43 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Kansas | Greenback Party | Charles L. Robinson | 20,933 | 11.67 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Massachusetts | Fusion | Benjamin Butler | 133,946 | 52.27 / 100 | 1st | ||
Michigan | Fusion | Josiah Begole | 154,269 | 49.42 / 100 | 1st | ||
Nebraska | Greenback Party | E. P. Ingersoll | 16,991 | 19.08 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Pennsylvania | Independent Republican | John Stewart | 43,743 | 5.88 / 100 | 3rd | ||
South Carolina | Greenback Party | J. H. McLane | 17,319 | 20.5 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | Low Tax Democrat | William B. Bate | 120,091 | 52.73 / 100 | 1st | ||
Texas | Fusion | George Wallace Jones | 102,501 | 40.41 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1883 | Iowa | Greenback Party | James B. Weaver | 23,089 | 7.06 / 100 | 3rd | |
Massachusetts | Fusion | Benjamin Butler | 150,228 | 48.1 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1884 | Massachusetts | Greenback Party | Matthew J. McCafferty | 24,363 | 8.01 / 100 | 3rd | |
Michigan | Fusion | Josiah Begole | 186,887 | 46.68 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Prohibition | David Preston | 22,207 | 5.55 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Texas | Greenback Party | George Washington Jones | 88,450 | 27.11 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1885 | Rhode Island | Prohibition | Gordon H. Slade | 1,206 | 5.37 / 100 | 3rd | |
1886 | Arkansas | Agricultural Wheel | Charles E. Cunningham | 19,169 | 11.7 / 100 | 3rd | |
California | Independent | C. C. O'Donnell | 12,227 | 6.25 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Delaware | Temperance Reform | John H. Hoffecker | 7,835 | 35.75 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | Fusion | George L. Yaple | 174,042 | 45.69 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Prohibition | Samuel Dickie | 25,179 | 6.61 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Nebraska | Prohibition | H. W. Hardy | 8,198 | 5.92 / 100 | 3rd | ||
New Jersey | Prohibition | Clinton B. Fisk | 19,808 | 8.55 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Prohibition | Gordon H. Slade | 2,585 | 9.6 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Texas | Prohibition | E. L. Dahoney | 19,186 | 6.12 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Wisconsin | People's | John Cochrane | 21,467 | 7.5 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1887 | Rhode Island | Prohibition | Thomas H. Peabody | 1,895 | 5.39 / 100 | 3rd | |
1888 | Arkansas | Union Labor | C. M. Norwood | 84,223 | 45.91 / 100 | 2nd | |
Kansas | Union Labor | P. P. Elder | 35,847 | 10.84 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Michigan | Fusion | Wellington R. Burt | 216,450 | 45.59 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Minnesota | Prohibition | Hugh G. Harrison | 17,026 | 6.51 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Texas | Fusion | Marion Martin | 98,447 | 28.23 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1889 | Massachusetts | Prohibition | Joseph Blackmer | 15,108 | 5.74 / 100 | 3rd | |
Rhode Island | Law Enforcement | James Chace | 3,596 | 8.34 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1890 | Arkansas | Union Labor | N. B. Fizer | 85,181 | 44.49 / 100 | 2nd | |
Colorado | Union Labor | John G. Coy | 5,199 | 6.23 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Kansas | People's | John F. Willits | 106,945 | 36.31 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | Prohibition | Azariah S. Partridge | 28,681 | 7.21 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Minnesota | Alliance | Sidney M. Owen | 58,513 | 24.29 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Nebraska | People's Independent | J. H. Powers | 70,187 | 32.78 / 100 | 2nd | ||
North Dakota | Alliance | Walter Muir | 4,821 | 13.22 / 100 | 3rd | ||
South Carolina | Independent Democrat | A. C. Haskell | 14,828 | 20.04 / 100 | 2nd | ||
South Dakota | Independent | H. L. Loucks | 24,591 | 31.71 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | Prohibition | D. Kelley | 11,082 | 5.52 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1891 | Kentucky | People's | S. B. Erwin | 25,631 | 8.86 / 100 | 3rd | |
1892 | Alabama | Independent Democrat | R. F. Kolb | 115,732 | 47.58 / 100 | 2nd | |
Arkansas | People's | J. P. Carnahan | 31,116 | 19.92 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Colorado | People's | Davis Hanson Waite | 43,342 | 46.68 / 100 | 1st | ||
Florida | People's | Alonzo P. Baskin | 8,379 | 20.57 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Georgia | People's | W. Peck | 68,093 | 33.28 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Idaho | People's | Abraham J. Crook | 4,865 | 24.23 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Kansas | People's | Lorenzo D. Lewelling | 162,507 | 50.04 / 100 | 1st | ||
Louisiana | Anti-Lottery Democrat | Murphy J. Foster | 79,407 | 44.54 / 100 | 1st | ||
Independent Republican | John E. Breaux | 12,409 | 6.96 / 100 | 4th | |||
People's | R. H. Tannehill | 9,792 | 5.49 / 100 | 5th | |||
Minnesota | People's | Ignatius L. Donnelly | 39,862 | 15.58 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Missouri | People's | Leverett Leonard | 37,262 | 6.89 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Nebraska | People's Independent | Charles Van Wyck | 68,617 | 34.75 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Montana | People's | William Kennedy | 7,794 | 17.64 / 100 | 3rd | ||
North Carolina | People's | Wyatt P. Exum | 47,747 | 17.04 / 100 | 3rd | ||
North Dakota | People's | Eli C. D. Shortridge | 18,995 | 52.43 / 100 | 1st | ||
South Dakota | Independent | A. L. Van Osdel | 22,323 | 31.71 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | People's | John P. Buchanan | 31,515 | 11.95 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Texas | Independent Democrat | George Clark | 133,395 | 30.63 / 100 | 2nd | ||
People's | Thomas L. Nugent | 108,483 | 24.91 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Washington | People's | Cyrus W. Young | 23,750 | 26.41 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1893 | Iowa | People's | J. M. Joseph | 23,980 | 5.77 / 100 | 3rd | |
Rhode Island | Prohibition | Henry B. Metcalf | 3,265 | 6.93 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Virginia | People's | Edmund R. Cocke | 79,653 | 37.09 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1894 | Alabama | People's | R. F. Kolb | 83,292 | 42.9 / 100 | 2nd | |
Arkansas | People's | D. E. Barker | 24,181 | 19.1 / 100 | 3rd | ||
California | People's | J. V. Webster | 51,304 | 18.03 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Colorado | People's | Davis Hanson Waite | 73,894 | 41.06 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Georgia | People's | J. K. Hines | 96,990 | 44.44 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Idaho | People's | James W. Ballantine | 7,121 | 28.96 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Kansas | People's | Lorenzo D. Lewelling | 118,329 | 39.41 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | People's | Alva W. Nichols | 30,012 | 7.2 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Minnesota | People's | Sidney M. Owen | 87,890 | 29.67 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Nebraska | Fusion | Silas A. Holcomb | 97,825 | 47.97 / 100 | 1st | ||
Nevada | Silver | John Edward Jones | 5,223 | 49.87 / 100 | 1st | ||
People's | George Peckham | 711 | 6.79 / 100 | 3rd | |||
North Dakota | People's | Elmer D. Wallace | 9,354 | 21.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Oregon | People's | Nathan Pierce | 26,125 | 29.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
South Carolina | People's | Sampson Pope | 17,278 | 30.43 / 100 | 2nd | ||
South Dakota | People's | Isaac Howe | 27,568 | 35.46 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Tennessee | People's | A. L. Mims | 23,092 | 11.0 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Texas | People's | Thomas L. Nugent | 152,731 | 36.13 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Wisconsin | People's | D. Frank Powell | 25,604 | 6.82 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Wyoming | People's | Lewis C. Tidball | 2,176 | 11.28 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1895 | Iowa | People's | Sylvester B. Crane | 32,189 | 8.02 / 100 | 3rd | |
Mississippi | People's | Frank Burkett | 18,167 | 27.93 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Ohio | People's | Jacob S. Coxey Sr. | 52,675 | 6.29 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Prohibition | Smith Quimby | 2,624 | 5.95 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1896 | Alabama | People's | Albert Taylor Goodwyn | 89,290 | 40.99 / 100 | 2nd | |
Arkansas | People's | Abner W. Files [1] [2] | 13,980 | 9.86 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Colorado | People's | M. S. Bailey | 71,808 | 37.98 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Delaware | Union Republican [note 2] | John H. Hoffecker | 11,014 | 31.35 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Florida | People's | W. A. Wicks | 5,370 | 13.15 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Georgia | People's | Seaborn Wright | 85,981 | 41.1 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Idaho | Fusion | Frank Steunenberg | 22,096 | 76.79 / 100 | 1st | ||
Kansas | People's | John W. Leedy | 167,941 | 50.55 / 100 | 1st | ||
Louisiana | Fusion | John N. Pharr | 87,698 | 42.99 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | Democratic People's Union Silver | Charles Robert Sligh | 221,022 | 40.35 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Minnesota | Democratic People's | John Lind | 162,254 | 48.1 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Montana | People's | Robert Burns Smith | 36,688 | 70.99 / 100 | 1st | ||
Nebraska | Fusion | Silas A. Holcomb | 116,415 | 53.46 / 100 | 1st | ||
North Carolina | People's | William A. Guthrie | 30,943 | 9.35 / 100 | 3rd | ||
North Dakota | People's | Robert B. Richardson | 20,690 | 44.39 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Rhode Island | Prohibition | Thomas H. Peabody | 2,950 | 5.84 / 100 | 3rd | ||
South Carolina | Lily-White Republican | Sampson Pope | 4,432 | 6.65 / 100 | 2nd | ||
South Dakota | People's | Andrew E. Lee | 41,177 | 49.75 / 100 | 1st | ||
Texas | People's | Jerome Claiborne Kearby | 238,325 | 44.18 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Washington | Fusion | John Rankin Rogers | 50,849 | 55.55 / 100 | 1st | ||
1897 | Massachusetts | National Democratic | William Everett | 13,879 | 5.14 / 100 | 3rd | |
Rhode Island | Prohibition | Thomas H. Peabody | 2,096 | 5.01 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1898 | Alabama | People's | Gilbert B. Dean | 50,052 | 30.32 / 100 | 2nd | |
Arkansas | People's | W. S. Morgan | 8,332 | 7.45 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Colorado | Fusion | Charles S. Thomas | 93,966 | 62.89 / 100 | 1st | ||
Georgia | People's | J. Hogan | 51,191 | 30.25 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Idaho | Fusion | Frank Steunenberg | 19,407 | 48.83 / 100 | 1st | ||
People's | James H. Henderson | 5,371 | 13.51 / 100 | 3rd | |||
Kansas | People's | John W. Leedy | 134,158 | 46.55 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Michigan | Democratic People's Union Silver | Justin Rice Whiting | 168,142 | 39.92 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Minnesota | Democratic People's | John Lind | 131,980 | 52.26 / 100 | 1st | ||
Nebraska | Fusion | William A. Poynter | 95,703 | 50.19 / 100 | 1st | ||
Nevada | Silver | Reinhold Sadler | 3,570 | 35.67 / 100 | 1st | ||
People's | J. B. McCullough | 833 | 8.32 / 100 | 4th | |||
North Dakota | Fusion | David M. Holmes | 19,496 | 40.78 / 100 | 2nd | ||
Pennsylvania | Prohibition | Silas C. Swallow | 132,931 | 13.68 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Socialist Labor | James P. Reid | 2,877 | 6.71 / 100 | 3rd | ||
South Dakota | Fusion | Andrew E. Lee | 37,319 | 49.63 / 100 | 1st | ||
Texas | People's | Barnett Gibbs | 114,955 | 28.07 / 100 | 2nd | ||
1899 | Mississippi | People's | R. K. Prewitt | 6,097 | 12.61 / 100 | 2nd | |
Ohio | Independent | Samuel M. Jones | 106,721 | 11.75 / 100 | 3rd | ||
Rhode Island | Socialist Labor | Thomas Herrick | 2,941 | 6.82 / 100 | 3rd | ||
1900 | Alabama | People's | Grattan B. Crowe | 17,444 | 10.84 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Georgia | People's | George W. Trayler | 25,285 | 21.43 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | ||
Kansas | People's | John W. Breidenthal | 164,793 | 47.33 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Louisiana | Fusion [note 3] | Donelson Caffery | 14,215 | 18.49 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Democratic People's [note 4] | John Lind | 150,651 | 47.95 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Montana | Independent Democratic | Thomas S. Hogan | 9,188 | 14.4 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Nebraska | Fusion [note 5] | William A. Poynter | 113,018 | 48.51 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
North Dakota | Fusion [note 5] | M. Wipperman | 22,275 | 38.72 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
Rhode Island | Socialist Labor | James P. Reid | 2,858 | 5.96 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
South Dakota | Fusion [note 5] | Burre H. Lien | 40,091 | 41.97 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Texas | People's | T. J. McMinn | 26,579 | 5.92 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
1902 | Arkansas | Independent Republican | Charles D. Greaves | 8,345 | 6.97 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Georgia | People's | J. K. Hines | 5,566 | 6.39 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | ||
Massachusetts | Socialist | John C. Chase | 33,629 | 8.44 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Nebraska | Fusion [note 5] | William Henry Thompson | 91,116 | 46.79 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Nevada | Silver-Democratic [note 6] | John Sparks | 6,540 | 57.78 / 100 | Elected | ||
Vermont | Local Option [note 7] | Percival W. Clement | 28,201 | 40.33 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
1903 | Massachusetts | Socialist | John C. Chase | 25,251 | 6.37 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
1904 | Idaho | Socialist | Theodore B. Shaw | 4,000 | 5.61 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Illinois | Socialist | John Collins | 59,062 | 5.51 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | ||
Montana | Socialist | Malcolm A. O'Malley | 3,431 | 5.22 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Nebraska | Fusion [note 5] | George W. Berge | 102,568 | 45.61 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Utah | American | William Montague Ferry | 7,959 | 7.82 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Washington | Socialist | David Burgess | 7,420 | 5.13 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic [note 8] | William A. Arnold | 24,857 | 5.53 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1906 | California | Independence League | William H. Langdon | 45,008 | 14.43 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Socialist | Austin Lewis | 16,036 | 5.14 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Colorado | Independent | Ben Lindsey | 18,014 | 8.87 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Socialist | Bill Haywood | 16,015 | 7.88 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Idaho | Socialist | Thomas F. Kelley | 4,650 | 6.32 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Nebraska | Fusion [note 5] | Ashton C. Shallenberger | 84,885 | 44.48 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Nevada | Silver-Democratic [note 6] | John Sparks | 8,686 | 58.54 / 100 | Re-elected | ||
Socialist | Thomas B. Casey | 815 | 5.49 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |||
Vermont | Independent | Percival W. Clement | 26,912 | 38.18 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
1907 | Massachusetts | Independence League | Thomas L. Hisgen | 75,499 | 20.2 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | |
1908 | Florida | Socialist | A. J. Pettigrew | 2,427 | 5.79 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Georgia | Independent | Yancy Carter | 11,746 | 9.47 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | ||
Idaho | Socialist | Ernest Untermann | 6,155 | 6.38 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Massachusetts | Independence League | William N. Osgood | 23,101 | 5.22 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Montana | Socialist | Harry Hazelton | 5,122 | 7.5 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Nebraska | Fusion [note 5] | Ashton C. Shallenberger | 132,960 | 49.9 / 100 | Elected | ||
Utah | American | John A. Street | 11,404 | 10.23 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic [note 8] | H. D. Brown | 28,583 | 6.36 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1910 | Arkansas | Socialist | Dan Hogan | 9,196 | 6.1 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
California | Socialist | Jackson Stitt Wilson | 47,819 | 12.4 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Connecticut | Socialist | Robert Hunter | 12,179 | 7.33 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Idaho | Socialist | S. W. Motley | 5,342 | 6.2 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Nevada | Socialist | Henry F. Gegax | 1,393 | 6.75 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Ohio | Socialist | Tom Clifford | 60,637 | 6.56 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Oklahoma | Socialist | J. T. Cumbie | 24,457 | 9.91 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Oregon | Socialist | W. S. Richards | 8,040 | 6.83 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Prohibition | A. E. Eaton | 6,046 | 5.14 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Pennsylvania | Keystone | William H. Berry | 382,127 | 38.27 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Texas | Socialist | Reddin Andrews | 11,538 | 5.27 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic [note 8] | William A. Jacobs | 39,547 | 12.38 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1911 | Arizona | Socialist | P. W. Gallentine | 1,247 | 5.77 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
1912 | Arkansas | Socialist | G. E. Mikel | 13,384 | 7.89 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Colorado | Progressive | Edward P. Costigan | 66,132 | 24.88 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Charles A. Ashelstrom | 16,189 | 6.09 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Connecticut | Progressive | Herbert Smith | 31,020 | 16.29 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Samuel E. Beardsley | 10,236 | 5.38 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Delaware | Progressive | George Beswick Hynson | 3,019 | 6.23 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Florida | Socialist | Thomas W. Cox | 3,467 | 7.15 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
Idaho | Progressive | G. H. Martin | 24,325 | 23.05 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Socialist | L. A. Coblentz | 11,094 | 10.51 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Illinois | Progressive | Frank H. Funk | 303,401 | 26.09 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Socialist | John C. Kennedy | 78,679 | 6.77 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Indiana | Progressive | Albert J. Beveridge | 166,654 | 25.99 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Stephen N. Reynolds | 35,464 | 5.53 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Iowa | Progressive | John L. Stevens | 71,879 | 15.59 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Kansas | Socialist | George W. Kleihege | 24,767 | 6.89 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Massachusetts | Progressive | Charles S. Bird | 126,602 | 26.39 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Michigan | Progressive | L. Whitney Watkins | 155,372 | 28.31 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Minnesota | Progressive | Paul V. Collins | 33,455 | 10.51 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Prohibition | Engebret E. Lobeck | 29,876 | 9.38 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Public Ownership [note 8] | David Morgan | 25,769 | 8.09 / 100 | 5th of 5 | |||
Missouri | Progressive | Albert D. Nortoni | 109,146 | 15.61 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Montana | Progressive | Frank J. Edwards | 18,881 | 23.61 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Socialist | Lewis J. Duncan | 12,766 | 15.96 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
New Hampshire | Progressive | Winston Churchill | 14,401 | 17.29 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
New York | Progressive | Oscar Straus | 393,183 | 25.1 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
North Carolina | Progressive | Iredell Meares | 49,930 | 20.42 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
North Dakota | Progressive | W. D. Sweet | 9,406 | 10.74 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Socialist | A. E. Bowen Jr. | 6,835 | 7.8 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Ohio | Progressive | Arthur Lovett Garford | 217,903 | 21.02 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Charles Emil Ruthenberg | 87,709 | 8.46 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Rhode Island | Progressive | Albert H. Humes | 8,457 | 10.82 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Texas | Socialist | Reddin Andrews | 25,258 | 8.39 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Progressive | Ed C. Lasater | 15,794 | 5.24 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Utah | Progressive | Nephi L. Morris | 23,591 | 21.16 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Socialist | Homer P. Burt | 8,797 | 7.89 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Vermont | Progressive | Fraser Metzger | 15,629 | 24.1 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Washington | Progressive | Robert T. Hodge | 77,792 | 24.44 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Anna A. Maley | 37,155 | 11.67 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
West Virginia | Socialist | Walter B. Hilton | 15,048 | 5.61 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic [note 8] | Carl D. Thompson | 34,468 | 8.75 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1913 | Arkansas | Progressive | George W. Murphy | 8,431 | 10.1 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Socialist | J. Emil Webber | 4,378 | 5.24 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Massachusetts | Progressive | Charles S. Bird | 127,755 | 27.72 / 100 | 2nd of 7 | ||
New Jersey | Progressive | Everett Colby | 41,132 | 10.96 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | ||
Virginia | Socialist | C. Campbell | 3,789 | 5.23 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
1914 | Arizona | Progressive | George U. Young | 5,206 | 10.21 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Arkansas | Socialist | Dan Hogan | 10,434 | 7.7 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
California | Progressive | Hiram Johnson | 460,495 | 49.69 / 100 | Re-elected | ||
Socialist | Noble A. Richardson | 50,716 | 5.47 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Colorado | Progressive | Edward P. Costigan | 32,920 | 12.41 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Idaho | Progressive | Hugh E. McElroy | 10,583 | 9.81 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Socialist | L. A. Coblentz | 7,967 | 7.38 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Kansas | Progressive | Henry Justin Allen | 84,060 | 15.91 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Independent | Julius B. Billiard | 7,967 | 7.38 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Maine | Progressive | Halbert P. Gardner | 18,226 | 12.87 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Massachusetts | Progressive | Joseph Walker | 32,145 | 7.02 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Michigan | Progressive | Henry R. Pattengill | 36,747 | 8.34 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Minnesota | Prohibition | Willis G. Calderwood | 18,582 | 5.41 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Thomas J. "Tom" Lewis | 17,225 | 5.02 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Nevada | Socialist | W. A. Morgan | 3,391 | 15.74 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
New York | American | William Sulzer | 126,270 | 8.77 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
North Dakota | Socialist | J. A. Williams | 6,019 | 6.74 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Ohio | Progressive | James Rudolph Garfield | 60,904 | 5.39 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Oklahoma | Socialist | Fred W. Holt | 52,704 | 20.78 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Oregon | Socialist | W. J. Smith | 14,284 | 5.76 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
South Dakota | Independent | Richard Olsen Richards | 9,725 | 9.91 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Texas | Socialist | E. R. Meitzen | 24,977 | 11.59 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
Vermont | Progressive | Walter J. Aldrich | 6,969 | 11.22 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive [note 9] | John J. Blaine | 32,560 | 10.01 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Social-Democratic [note 8] | Oscar Ameringer | 25,917 | 7.96 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
1915 | Mississippi | Socialist | J. T. Lester | 4,046 | 7.41 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
1916 | Arkansas | Socialist | William Davis | 9,730 | 5.54 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Florida | Prohibition | Sidney Johnston Catts | 39,546 | 47.71 / 100 | Elected | ||
Idaho | Socialist | Annie E. Triplow | 7,321 | 5.44 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Louisiana | Progressive | John M. Parker | 48,085 | 37.2 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Socialist | J. O. Bentall | 26,306 | 6.73 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Prohibition | Thomas J. Anderson | 19,884 | 5.09 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Montana | Socialist | Lewis J. Duncan | 11,342 | 6.53 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Washington | Socialist | Ludwig E. Katterfield | 21,167 | 5.61 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Wisconsin | Socialist | Rae Weaver | 30,649 | 7.06 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
1918 | Alabama | Independent | Dallas B. Smith | 13,497 | 19.79 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
Arkansas | Socialist | Clay Fulks | 4,792 | 6.57 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | ||
California | Independent | Theodore Arlington Bell | 251,189 | 36.48 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | David H. Evans | 111,948 | 30.28 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
New York | Socialist | Joseph Cannon | 159,804 | 7.36 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
South Dakota | Independent | Mark P. Bates | 25,118 | 26.12 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
Wisconsin | Socialist | Emil Seidel | 57,523 | 17.35 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
1920 | Arkansas | Independent [note 10] | J. H. Blount | 15,627 | 8.22 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Idaho | Independent | Sherman D. Fairchild | 28,752 | 20.11 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Independent [note 11] | Henrik Shipstead | 281,402 | 35.91 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Nebraska | Nonpartisan League | Arthur G. Wray | 88,905 | 23.51 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
New York | Socialist | Joseph Cannon | 159,804 | 5.57 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
South Dakota | Nonpartisan League | Mark P. Bates | 48,426 | 26.34 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
Texas | American | T. H. McGregor | 69,380 | 14.4 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Black and Tan Republican | H. Capers | 26,091 | 5.42 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Washington | Farmer–Labor | Robert Bridges | 121,371 | 30.1 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
West Virginia | Nonpartisan League | Samuel B. Montgomery | 81,330 | 15.89 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Wisconsin | Socialist | William Coleman | 71,126 | 10.29 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
1922 | Idaho | Progressive | H. F. Samuels | 40,516 | 31.69 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | |
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Magnus Johnson | 295,479 | 43.13 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
North Dakota | Nonpartisan League | William Lemke | 81,048 | 42.35 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | ||
South Dakota | Nonpartisan League | Alice Lorraine Daly | 46,033 | 26.24 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Wisconsin | Independent Democratic | Arthur A. Bentley | 51,061 | 10.6 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
Socialist | Louis A. Arnold | 39,570 | 8.21 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |||
1924 | Idaho | Progressive | H. F. Samuels | 58,163 | 39.04 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | |
Kansas | Independent | William Allen White | 149,811 | 22.71 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 366,029 | 43.84 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
Montana | Farmer–Labor | Frank J. Edwards | 10,576 | 6.08 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Nebraska | Progressive | Dan Butler | 35,594 | 7.94 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
South Dakota | Farmer–Labor | A. L. Putnam | 27,027 | 13.25 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Independent | Richard Olsen Richards | 20,359 | 9.98 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Washington | Progressive | J. R. "Bob" Oman | 40,073 | 10.27 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Wisconsin | Socialist | William F. Quick | 45,268 | 5.68 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | ||
1926 | Idaho | Progressive | W. Scott Hall | 34,208 | 28.36 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | |
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Magnus Johnson | 266,845 | 38.09 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
Oregon | Independent | H. H. Stallard | 12,402 | 5.49 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
South Dakota | Farmer–Labor | Tom Ayres | 11,958 | 6.51 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Independent | John E. Hipple | 10,637 | 5.79 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Wisconsin | Independent | Charles Perry | 76,507 | 13.84 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Socialist | Herman O. Kent | 40,293 | 7.29 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
1928 | Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Ernest Lundeen | 227,193 | 22.72 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | |
1930 | Alabama | Independent | Hugh A. Locke | 95,745 | 38.18 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
Kansas | Independent (Write-In) | John R. Brinkley | 183,278 | 29.5 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 473,154 | 59.34 / 100 | Elected | ||
New York | Law Preservation [note 12] | Robert P. Carroll | 190,666 | 6.08 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Oregon | Independent | Julius Meier | 135,608 | 54.51 / 100 | Elected | ||
1932 | Kansas | Independent | John R. Brinkley | 244,607 | 30.58 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 522,438 | 50.57 / 100 | Re-elected | ||
Tennessee | Independent | Lewis S. Pope | 106,990 | 27.05 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Washington | Liberty | Luvern Clyde Hicks | 41,710 | 6.79 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | ||
Wisconsin | Socialist | Frank Metcalfe | 56,965 | 5.07 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
1934 | California | Progressive | Raymond L. Haight | 302,519 | 12.99 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Connecticut | Socialist | Jasper McLevy | 38,438 | 6.96 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Massachusetts | Equal Tax | Frank A. Goodwin | 94,141 | 6.35 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 468,812 | 44.61 / 100 | Re-elected | ||
Nevada | Independent | Lindley C. Branson | 4,940 | 11.54 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Oregon | Independent | Peter Zimmerman | 95,519 | 31.57 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Tennessee | Fusion [note 13] | Lewis S. Pope | 122,965 | 38.22 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Philip La Follette | 373,093 | 39.12 / 100 | Elected | ||
1936 | Delaware | Independent Republican | Isaac Dolphus Short | 8,400 | 6.62 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Elmer Austin Benson | 680,342 | 60.74 / 100 | Elected | ||
North Dakota | Nonpartisan League | William Langer | 98,750 | 35.80 / 100 | Elected | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Philip La Follette | 573,724 | 46.38 / 100 | Re-elected | ||
1938 | Arkansas | Independent | Charles F. Cole | 12,077 | 8.78 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | |
Connecticut | Socialist | Jasper McLevy | 166,253 | 26.3 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Elmer Austin Benson | 387,263 | 34.18 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Nebraska | Independent | Charles W. Bryan | 76,258 | 15.35 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Philip La Follette | 353,381 | 36.0 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
1940 | Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Hjalmar Petersen | 459,609 | 36.55 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | |
Wisconsin | Progressive | Orland Steen Loomis | 546,436 | 39.78 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | ||
1942 | Connecticut | Socialist | Jasper McLevy | 34,537 | 6.01 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Hjalmar Petersen | 299,917 | 37.76 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
New York | American Labor | Dean Alfange | 403,626 | 9.79 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Orland Steen Loomis | 397,664 | 49.65 / 100 | Elected | ||
1944 | North Dakota | Independent | Alvin C. Strutz | 38,997 | 18.81 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Wisconsin | Progressive | Alexander O. Benz | 76,028 | 5.76 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1946 | California | Prohibition | Henry R. Schmidt | 180,579 | 7.06 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
1950 | Tennessee | Independent [note 14] | John Randolph Neal Jr. | 51,757 | 21.91 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
1952 | Maine | Independent Republican | Neil S. Bishop | 35,732 | 14.38 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Vermont | Republican (Write-In) | Henry D. Vail | 12,447 | 8.25 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
1954 | Tennessee | Independent | John Randolph Neal Jr. | 39,574 | 12.27 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | |
1956 | Nebraska | Independent | George Morris | 31,592 | 5.56 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Texas | Democratic (Write-In) | W. Lee O'Daniel | 110,234 | 6.39 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Utah | Independent | J. Bracken Lee | 94,428 | 28.37 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
1958 | Oklahoma | Independent | D. A. "Jelly" Bryce | 31,840 | 5.91 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Tennessee | Independent | Jim Nance McCord | 136,406 | 31.54 / 100 | 2nd of 9 | ||
1960 | North Dakota | Independent | Herschel Lashkowitz | 16,741 | 6.08 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
1962 | Tennessee | Independent | William Anderson | 203,765 | 32.83 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | |
1965 | Virginia | Virginia Conservative | William J. Story Jr. | 75,307 | 13.38 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
1966 | Alabama | Independent | Carl Robinson | 47,653 | 5.62 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Georgia | Democratic (Write-In) | Ellis Arnall | 51,947 | 5.43 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Idaho | Independent | Perry Swisher | 30,913 | 12.24 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Independent | Philip Jungert | 23,139 | 9.16 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Maryland | Independent | Hyman A. Pressman | 90,899 | 9.88 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
New York | Conservative | Paul Adams | 510,023 | 8.46 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Liberal | Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr. | 507,234 | 8.41 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Tennessee | Independent | H. L. Crowder | 64,602 | 9.84 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | ||
Independent | Charlie Moffett | 50,221 | 7.65 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |||
1970 | Alabama | National Democratic | John L. Cashin Jr. | 125,491 | 14.68 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | |
Independent | A. C. Shelton | 75,679 | 8.85 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | |||
Arkansas | American | Walter L. Carruth | 36,132 | 5.93 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
New Hampshire | American | Meldrim Thomson Jr. | 22,033 | 9.91 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
New York | Conservative | Paul Adams | 422,514 | 7.03 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
1971 | Mississippi | Independent | Charles Evers | 172,762 | 22.13 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
1972 | New Hampshire | Independent | Malcolm McLane | 63,199 | 19.56 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Texas | Raza Unida | Ramsey Muñiz | 214,118 | 6.28 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Washington | Taxpayers | Vick Gould | 86,843 | 5.9 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1973 | Virginia | Independent | Henry Howell | 510,103 | 49.28 / 100 | 2nd of 2 | |
1974 | Maine | Independent | James B. Longley | 142,464 | 39.14 / 100 | Elected | |
Nebraska | Independent | Ernie Chambers | 24,320 | 5.39 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Nevada | Independent American | James Ray Houston | 26,285 | 15.52 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Texas | Raza Unida | Ramsey Muñiz | 93,295 | 5.64 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
1976 | Vermont | Liberty Union | Bernie Sanders | 11,317 | 6.09 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
1978 | Alaska | Republican (Write-In) | Wally Hickel | 33,555 | 26.44 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | |
Independent | Tom Kelly | 15,656 | 12.34 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
California | Independent [note 15] | Ed Clark | 377,960 | 5.46 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Maine | Independent | Herman C. Frankland | 65,889 | 17.8 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Rhode Island | Independent | Joseph A. Doorley | 20,381 | 6.48 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
1982 | Alaska | Libertarian | Dick Randolph | 29,067 | 14.92 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Arizona | Libertarian | Sam Steiger | 36,649 | 5.05 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Hawaii | Independent [note 16] | Frank Fasi | 89,303 | 28.64 / 100 | 2nd of 3 | ||
1986 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Joe Vogler | 10,013 | 5.58 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Arizona | Independent | Bill Schulz | 224,085 | 25.85 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Illinois | Solidarity | Adlai Stevenson III | Mike Howlett | 1,256,626 | 39.97 / 100 | 2nd of 5 | |
Maine | Independent | Sherry Huber | 64,317 | 15.07 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Independent | John Menario | 63,747 | 14.87 / 100 | 4th of 4 | |||
Oklahoma | Independent | Jerry Brown | 60,115 | 6.61 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Vermont | Independent | Bernie Sanders | 28,418 | 14.45 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
1988 | Utah | Independent | Merrill Cook | 136,651 | 21.05 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
1990 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Wally Hickel | Jack Coghill | 75,721 | 38.88 / 100 | Elected |
Connecticut | A Connecticut Party | Lowell Weicker | Eunice Groark | 460,576 | 40.36 / 100 | Elected | |
Kansas | Independent | Christina Campbell-Cline | Benton | 69,127 | 8.82 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Maine | Independent | Andrew Adam | 48,377 | 9.26 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
New York | Conservative | Herbert London | Anthony Diperna | 827,614 | 20.4 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | |
Oklahoma | Independent [note 17] | Thomas D. Ledgerwood II | 90,534 | 9.93 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Oregon | Independent | Al Mobley | 144,062 | 12.95 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
1992 | Utah | Independent | Merrill Cook | Frances Hatch Merrill | 255,753 | 33.54 / 100 | 2nd of 8 |
West Virginia | Independent (Write-In) | Charlotte Pritt | 48,873 | 7.43 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
1994 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Jack Coghill | Margaret Ward | 27,838 | 13.04 / 100 | 3rd of 5 |
Connecticut | A Connecticut Party | Eunice Groark | Audrey Rowe | 216,585 | 18.88 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Independent | Tom Scott | Glen R. O'Keefe | 130,128 | 11.34 / 100 | 4th of 5 | ||
Hawaii | Best Party of Hawaii | Frank Fasi | Danny Kaleikini | 113,158 | 30.67 / 100 | 2nd of 4 | |
Maine | Independent | Angus King | 180,829 | 35.37 / 100 | Elected | ||
Green | Jonathan Carter | 32,695 | 6.39 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
New Mexico | Green | Roberto Mondragón | Steven Schmidt | 47,990 | 10.26 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Oklahoma | Independent | Wes Watkins | 233,336 | 23.45 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Pennsylvania | Constitution | Peg Luksik | Jim Clymer | 460,269 | 12.84 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | |
Rhode Island | Independent | Robert J. Healey | 32,822 | 9.08 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Vermont | Independent | Thomas J. Morse | 15,000 | 7.07 / 100 | 3rd of 8 | ||
1998 | Alaska | Republican (Write-In) | Robin L. Taylor | 40,209 | 18.26 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | |
Republican Moderate | Ray Metcalfe | Clyde Baxley | 13,540 | 6.15 / 100 | 4th of 6 | ||
Maine | Independent | Angus King | 246,772 | 58.61 / 100 | Re-elected | ||
Green | Pat LaMarche | 28,722 | 6.82 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Minnesota | Reform | Jesse Ventura | Mae Schunk | 773,713 | 36.99 / 100 | Elected | |
New York | Independence | Tom Golisano | Laureen Oliver | 364,056 | 7.69 / 100 | 3rd of 10 | |
Pennsylvania | Constitution | Peg Luksik | Jim Clymer | 315,761 | 10.44 / 100 | 3rd of 10 | |
Rhode Island | Cool Moose | Robert J. Healey | 19,250 | 6.28 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
1999 | Kentucky | Reform | Gatewood Galbraith | Kathy Lyons | 88,930 | 15.33 / 100 | 3rd of 5 |
2000 | New Hampshire | Independent | Mary Brown | 35,904 | 6.36 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Vermont | Vermont Progressive | Anthony Pollina | 28,116 | 9.58 / 100 | 3rd of 8 | ||
2002 | Arizona | Independent | Richard D. Mahoney | 84,947 | 6.93 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
California | Green | Peter Camejo | 393,036 | 5.26 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | ||
Maine | Green | Jonathan Carter | 46,903 | 9.28 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Independence | Tim Penny | Martha Robertson | 364,534 | 16.18 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | |
New Mexico | Green | David Bacon | Kathleen Sanchez | 26,465 | 5.47 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
New York | Independence | Tom Golisano | Mary Donohue | 654,016 | 14.28 / 100 | 3rd of 8 | |
Oklahoma | Independent | Gary Richardson | 146,200 | 14.12 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Vermont | Independent | Cornelius Hogan | 22,353 | 9.71 / 100 | 3rd of 10 | ||
Wisconsin | Libertarian | Ed Thompson | Martin Reynolds | 185,455 | 10.45 / 100 | 3rd of 8 | |
2006 | Alaska | Independent | Andrew Halcro | Fay Von Gemmingen | 22,443 | 9.46 / 100 | 3rd of 6 |
Illinois | Green | Rich Whitney | Julie Samuels | 361,336 | 10.36 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
Maine | Independent | Barbara Merrill | 118,720 | 21.55 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Green | Pat LaMarche | 52,690 | 9.56 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
Massachusetts | Independent | Christy Mihos | John J. Sullivan | 154,628 | 6.97 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Minnesota | Independence | Peter Hutchinson | Maureen Reed | 141,735 | 6.43 / 100 | 3rd of 6 | |
Texas | Independent | Carole Keeton Strayhorn | 797,577 | 18.13 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Independent | Kinky Friedman | 546,869 | 12.43 / 100 | 4th of 5 | |||
2007 | Louisiana | Independent | John Georges | 186,682 | 14.38 / 100 | 3rd of 12 | |
2008 | Vermont | Independent | Anthony Pollina | 69,791 | 21.87 / 100 | 2nd of 7 | |
2009 | New Jersey | Independent | Chris Daggett | Frank J. Esposito | 139,579 | 5.75 / 100 | 3rd of 12 |
2010 | Colorado | Constitution | Tom Tancredo | Pat Miller | 652,376 | 36.38 / 100 | 2nd of 6 |
Idaho | Independent | Jana M. Kemp | 26,655 | 5.89 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Maine | Independent | Eliot Cutler | 208,270 | 36.36 / 100 | 2nd of 6 | ||
Independent | Shawn Moody | 28,756 | 5.02 / 100 | 4th of 6 | |||
Massachusetts | Independent | Tim Cahill | Paul Loscocco | 184,387 | 8.03 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Minnesota | Independence | Tom Horner | James A. Mulder | 251,487 | 11.94 / 100 | 3rd of 7 | |
Rhode Island | Independent | Lincoln Chafee | 123,571 | 36.1 / 100 | Elected | ||
Moderate | Ken Block | 22,146 | 6.47 / 100 | 4th of 7 | |||
Wyoming | Independent | Taylor Haynes | 13,796 | 7.32 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
2011 | Kentucky | Independent | Gatewood Galbraith | Dea Taylor | 74,860 | 8.99 / 100 | 3rd of 3 |
2013 | Virginia | Libertarian | Robert Sarvis | 146,084 | 6.52 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | |
2014 | Alaska | Independent | Bill Walker | Byron Mallott | 134,658 | 48.1 / 100 | Elected |
Hawaii | Independent | Mufi Hannemann | Les Chang | 42,934 | 11.72 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
Maine | Independent | Eliot Cutler | 51,518 | 8.43 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
Rhode Island | Moderate | Robert J. Healey | 69,278 | 21.38 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Wyoming | Independent | Don Wills | 9,895 | 5.89 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | ||
2016 | West Virginia | Mountain | Charlotte Pritt | 41,310 | 5.9 / 100 | 3rd of 4 | |
2018 | Kansas | Independent | Greg Orman | John Doll | 66,163 | 6.5 / 100 | 3rd of 6 |
Maine | Independent | Terry Hayes | 37,128 | 5.9 / 100 | 3rd of 3 | ||
2020 | Indiana | Libertarian | Donald Rainwater | William Henry | 345,569 | 11.4 / 100 | 3rd of 3 |
Vermont | Vermont Progressive | David Zuckerman [note 18] | 99,214 | 27.4 / 100 | 2nd of 8 | ||
2022 | Alaska | Independent | Bill Walker | Heidi Drygas | 54,585 | 20.7 / 100 | 3rd of 4 |
Idaho | Independent | Ammon Bundy | 101,837 | 17.2 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
Oregon | Independent | Betsy Johnson | 164,755 | 8.6 / 100 | 3rd of 5 | ||
The 1992 United States presidential election was the 52nd quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 3, 1992. Democratic Governor Bill Clinton of Arkansas defeated incumbent Republican President George H. W. Bush and independent businessman Ross Perot of Texas. The election marked the end of a period of Republican dominance in American presidential politics that began in 1968, and also marked the end of 12 years of Republican rule of the White House, as well as the end of the Greatest Generation's 32-year American rule and the beginning of the baby boomers' 28-year dominance until 2020. It was the last time the incumbent president failed to win a second term until 2020, when Donald Trump lost the election to Joe Biden; it was the first such occurrence since 1980.
The 1860 United States presidential election was the 19th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 6, 1860. In a four-way contest, the Republican Party ticket of Abraham Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin, absent from the ballot in ten slave states, won a national popular plurality, a popular majority in the North where states already had abolished slavery, and a national electoral majority comprising only Northern electoral votes. Lincoln's election thus served as the main catalyst of the states that would become the Confederacy seceding from the Union. This marked the first time that a Republican was elected president. It was also the first presidential election in which both major party candidates were registered in the same home state; the others have been in 1904, 1920, 1940, 1944, and 2016.
The 1884 United States presidential election was the 25th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 4, 1884. In the election, Governor Grover Cleveland of New York defeated Republican James G. Blaine of Maine. It was set apart by unpleasant mudslinging and shameful personal allegations that eclipsed substantive issues, such as civil administration change. Cleveland was the first Democrat elected President of the United States since James Buchanan in 1856, the first to hold office since Andrew Johnson left the White House in 1869, and the last to hold office until Woodrow Wilson, who began his first term in 1913. For this reason, 1884 is a significant election in U.S. political history, marking an interruption in the era when Republicans largely controlled the presidency between Reconstruction and the Great Depression.
The 1892 United States presidential election was the 27th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 1892. In a rematch of the closely contested 1888 presidential election, former Democratic President Grover Cleveland defeated incumbent Republican President Benjamin Harrison. Cleveland's victory made him the first and, to date, the only person in American history to be elected to a non-consecutive second presidential term. It was also the first of two times incumbents were defeated in consecutive elections—the second being Jimmy Carter's defeat of Gerald Ford in 1976, followed by Carter's subsequent loss to Ronald Reagan in 1980.
The 1908 United States presidential election was the 31st quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 3, 1908. Republican Party nominee William Howard Taft defeated three-time Democratic nominee William Jennings Bryan.
The 1924 United States presidential election was the 35th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 4, 1924. In a three-way contest, incumbent Republican President Calvin Coolidge won election to a full term. Coolidge was the second vice president to ascend to the presidency and then win a full term.
The 1928 United States presidential election was the 36th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 6, 1928. Republican former Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover defeated the Democratic nominee, Governor Al Smith of New York. After President Calvin Coolidge declined to seek reelection, Hoover emerged as his party's frontrunner. As Hoover's party opponents failed to unite around a candidate, Hoover received a large majority of the vote at the 1928 Republican National Convention. The strong state of the economy discouraged some Democrats from running, and Smith was nominated on the first ballot of the 1928 Democratic National Convention. Hoover and Smith had been widely known as potential presidential candidates long before the 1928 campaign, and both were generally regarded as outstanding leaders. Both were newcomers to the presidential race and presented in their person and record an appeal of unknown potency to the electorate. Both faced serious discontent within their respective parties' membership, and both lacked the wholehearted support of their parties' organization.
Electoral fusion is an arrangement where two or more political parties on a ballot list the same candidate, pooling the votes for that candidate. It is distinct from the process of electoral alliances in that the political parties remain separately listed on the ballot. The practice of electoral fusion in jurisdictions where it exists allows minor parties to influence election results and policy by offering to endorse or nominate a major party's candidate.
American electoral politics have been dominated by successive pairs of major political parties since shortly after the founding of the republic of the United States. Since the 1850s, the two largest political parties have been the Democratic Party and the Republican Party—which together have won every United States presidential election since 1852 and controlled the United States Congress since at least 1856. Despite keeping the same names, the two parties have evolved in terms of ideologies, positions, and support bases over their long lifespans, in response to social, cultural, and economic developments—the Democratic Party being the left-of-center party since the time of the New Deal, and the Republican Party now being the right-of-center party.
Third party is a term used in the United States for political parties other than the two major parties.
Elections in the United States have rules and procedures regulating the conditions under which a candidate, political party, or ballot measure is entitled to appear on voters' ballots. As election processes are decentralized by Article I, Section 4, of the United States Constitution, ballot access laws are established and enforced by the states. As a result, ballot access processes may vary from one state to another. State access requirements for candidates generally pertain to personal qualities of a candidate, such as: minimum age, residency, citizenship, and being a qualified voter. Additionally, many states require prospective candidates to collect a specified number of qualified voters' signatures on petitions of support and mandate the payment of filing fees before granting access; ballot measures are similarly regulated. Each state also regulates how political parties qualify for automatic ballot access, and how those minor parties that do not can. Fundamental to democracy, topics related to ballot access are the subject of considerable debate in the United States.
The Independence Party is a political party in the U.S. state of New York. The party was founded in 1991 by Gordon Black, Tom Golisano, and Laureen Oliver and acquired ballot status in 1994. They lost their ballot status in 2020 under a change in the New York state election law that required at least 130,000 votes on the party line every two years. Although often associated with Ross Perot, as the party came to prominence in the wake of Perot's 1992 presidential campaign, it was created prior to Perot's run. In 2020, it affiliated with the Alliance Party, but disaffiliated in 2021. It used to have one elected member of the New York State Assembly, Fred Thiele, until Thiele switched his party affiliation to the Democratic Party in 2022. On December 9, 2022, New York governor Kathy Hochul signed S1851A, banning the use of the words "Independent" and "Independence" from use in political party names in New York state.
The Minnesota Democratic Party was a political party in Minnesota that existed from the formation of Minnesota Territory in 1849 until 1944, when the party merged with the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party to form the modern Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party.
The 1896 United States elections elected the 55th United States Congress. Republicans won control of the Presidency and maintained control of both houses of Congress. The election marked the end of the Third Party System and the start of the Fourth Party System, as Republicans would generally dominate politics until the 1930 elections. Political scientists such as V.O. Key, Jr. argue that this election was a realigning election, while James Reichley argues against this idea on the basis that the Republican victory in this election merely continued the party's post-Civil War dominance. The election took place in the aftermath of the Panic of 1893, and featured a fierce debate between advocates of bimetallism and supporters of the gold standard.
The 2016 United States presidential election in Arkansas was held on Tuesday, November 8, 2016, as part of the 2016 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Arkansas voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican Party's nominee, businessman Donald Trump, and running mate Indiana Governor Mike Pence against Democratic Party nominee, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and her running mate Virginia Senator Tim Kaine. Arkansas has six electoral votes in the Electoral College.
The 1860 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on 6 November 1860, as part of the 1860 United States presidential election. Voters in New Jersey chose seven electors of the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President. New Jersey voters voted for each elector individually, and thus could split their votes. All seven electors were chosen in a single at-large election. That is, each voter voted for up to seven candidates, and the seven candidates with highest vote counts were elected.
The 2020 United States presidential election in Arkansas took place on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, as part of the 2020 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Arkansas voters chose six electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting incumbent Republican President Donald Trump and his running mate, incumbent Vice President Mike Pence, against Democratic challenger and former Vice President Joe Biden and his running mate, United States Senator Kamala Harris of California. Also on the ballot were the nominees for the Libertarian, Green, Constitution, American Solidarity, Life and Liberty, and Socialism and Liberation parties and Independent candidates. Write-in candidates are not allowed to participate in presidential elections.
From 1894 to 1900 the North Carolina Republican Party and the Populist Party collaborated via electoral fusion to compete against the North Carolina Democratic Party. This political coalition was dubbed Fusionism.