1980 United States presidential election in Florida

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1980 United States presidential election in Florida
Flag of Florida (1900-1985).svg
  1976 November 4, 1980 1984  
TurnoutSteady2.svg77% [1]
  Official Portrait of President Reagan 1981-cropped.jpg Carter cropped.jpg John B. Anderson in New Jersey (cropped).jpg
Nominee Ronald Reagan Jimmy Carter John B. Anderson
Party Republican Democratic Independent
Home state California Georgia Illinois
Running mate George H. W. Bush Walter Mondale Patrick Lucey
Electoral vote1700
Popular vote2,046,9511,419,475189,692
Percentage55.52%38.50%5.14%

Florida Presidential Election Results 1980.svg
County Results

President before election

Jimmy Carter
Democratic

Elected President

Ronald Reagan
Republican

The 1980 United States presidential election in Florida took place on Tuesday, November 4, 1980, as part of the 1980 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Florida voters chose 17 electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting incumbent Democratic President Jimmy Carter and his running mate, Vice President Walter Mondale, against Republican challenger and former California Governor Ronald Reagan and his running mate and former Director of the CIA, George H.W. Bush.

Contents

The Republican ticket won Florida by a wide 17.02% margin, a particularly strong performance in this conservative leaning state that voted for Carter in 1976 by a 5.29% margin. [2] John B. Anderson, a liberal Republican Congressman from Illinois who ran as an Independent with former U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Patrick Lucey, received his strongest performance of any former Confederate state in Florida, where he won 5.14% of the vote. Florida, along with Virginia, were one of only two southern states to give Anderson over 5% of the vote. Although Carter lost Florida, he is the last Democrat to win a majority of counties in the state's northern region. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is also the last time for a Democrat to win the counties of Baker, Bradford, Columbia, Jackson, Lafayette, Liberty, Suwannee, and Union. [3] This cycle also marks the most recent time that an incumbent President standing for re-election would fail to carry Florida, irrespective of the national outcome.

Reagan’s victory was the first of four consecutive Republican victories in the state, as Florida would not vote Democratic again until Bill Clinton won the state in his re-election bid in 1996. Whether Florida is a swing state or a Republican-leaning state today is disputed among political observers. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10]

62% of white voters supported Reagan while 31% supported Carter. [11] [12]

Results

Electoral results
Presidential candidatePartyHome statePopular voteElectoral
vote
Running mate
CountPercentageVice-presidential candidateHome stateElectoral vote
Ronald Reagan Republican California 2,046,95155.52%17 George Bush Texas 17
Jimmy Carter Democrat Georgia 1,419,47538.50%0 Walter Mondale Minnesota 0
John B. Anderson Independent Illinois 189,6925.14%0 None0
Ed Clark Libertarian California 30,5240.83%0 David Koch New York 0
David McReynolds Socialist New York 2120.01%0 Diane Drufenbrock Wisconsin 0
Gus Hall Communist New York 1230.00%0 Angela Davis California 0
Clifton DeBerry Socialist Workers California 410.00%0 Matilde Zimmermann 0
Deirdre Griswold Workers World New York 80.00%0 Larry Holmes Illinois 0
Total3,687,026100%1717
Needed to win270270

Results by county

CountyRonald Reagan
Republican
Jimmy Carter
Democratic
John B. Anderson
Independent
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
# %# %# %# %# %#
Alachua 19,80438.56%26,84952.27%4,1788.13%5331.04%-7,045-13.71%51,364
Baker 2,28345.88%2,61152.47%561.13%260.52%-328-6.59%4,976
Bay 20,94860.61%12,38935.85%7402.14%4841.40%8,55924.76%34,561
Bradford 2,77844.50%3,34753.61%901.44%280.45%-569-9.11%6,243
Brevard 69,46060.07%39,00733.73%5,8665.07%1,3031.13%30,45326.34%115,636
Broward 229,69355.95%146,32335.64%31,5547.69%2,9910.73%83,37020.31%410,561
Calhoun 1,50438.72%2,30059.22%521.34%280.72%-796-20.50%3,884
Charlotte 20,48664.62%9,76930.82%1,2103.82%2350.74%10,71733.80%31,700
Citrus 14,28658.48%9,16237.50%7873.22%1950.80%5,12420.98%24,430
Clay 15,64364.85%7,63031.63%6922.87%1570.65%8,01333.22%24,122
Collier 23,90071.10%7,73923.02%1,6784.99%2960.88%16,16148.08%33,613
Columbia 5,64348.45%5,68048.76%2482.13%770.66%-37-0.31%11,648
DeSoto 3,35653.40%2,71343.17%1552.47%610.97%64310.23%6,285
Dixie 1,10134.70%2,01063.35%451.42%170.54%-909-28.65%3,173
Duval 98,66450.45%90,46646.26%5,1842.65%1,2400.63%8,1984.19%195,554
Escambia 51,79458.49%33,51337.84%2,6342.97%6180.70%18,28120.65%88,559
Flagler 2,89551.70%2,50344.70%1542.75%480.86%3927.00%5,600
Franklin 1,50844.59%1,77552.48%541.60%451.33%-267-7.89%3,382
Gadsden 3,71830.41%8,22267.26%2011.64%840.69%-4,504-36.85%12,225
Gilchrist 1,09339.13%1,62758.25%562.01%170.61%-534-19.12%2,793
Glades 1,09845.96%1,20350.36%612.55%271.13%-105-4.40%2,389
Gulf 2,12743.18%2,70054.81%611.24%380.77%-573-11.63%4,926
Hamilton 1,30139.66%1,92358.63%401.22%160.49%-622-18.97%3,280
Hardee 2,60348.82%2,59948.74%831.56%470.88%40.08%5,332
Hendry 2,70349.93%2,54346.97%1312.42%370.68%1602.96%5,414
Hernando 12,11554.99%8,85840.21%8523.87%2070.94%3,25714.78%22,032
Highlands 11,92561.95%6,68834.74%5312.76%1050.55%5,23727.21%19,249
Hillsborough 106,16051.71%88,27142.99%8,9654.37%1,9180.93%17,8898.72%205,314
Holmes 3,22152.41%2,76745.02%691.12%891.45%4547.39%6,146
Indian River 15,56862.98%7,75931.39%1,1854.79%2050.83%7,80931.59%24,717
Jackson 6,34844.76%7,56753.36%1591.12%1070.75%-1,219-8.60%14,181
Jefferson 1,62339.19%2,36757.16%962.32%551.33%-744-17.97%4,141
Lafayette 79542.67%1,03455.50%221.18%120.64%-239-12.83%1,863
Lake 26,79864.53%13,12831.61%1,2443.00%3580.86%13,67032.92%41,528
Lee 61,03364.51%28,12529.73%4,2294.47%1,2261.30%32,90834.78%94,613
Leon 24,91943.47%28,45049.63%3,1935.57%7641.33%-3,531-6.16%57,326
Levy 3,21042.26%4,17054.90%1752.30%410.54%-960-12.64%7,596
Liberty 89943.81%1,11454.29%251.22%140.68%-215-10.48%2,052
Madison 2,28041.39%3,13456.89%651.18%300.54%-854-15.50%5,509
Manatee 40,53561.81%21,67933.06%2,9284.47%4340.66%18,85628.75%65,576
Marion 23,74358.49%15,40037.94%1,1872.92%2620.65%8,34320.55%40,592
Martin 20,52168.05%8,08726.82%1,3214.38%2250.75%12,43441.23%30,154
Miami-Dade 265,88850.65%210,86840.17%44,7998.53%3,3500.64%55,02010.48%524,905
Monroe 11,64453.40%7,92036.32%1,9328.86%3101.42%3,72417.08%21,806
Nassau 5,44050.60%5,07447.20%1831.70%540.50%3663.40%10,751
Okaloosa 28,07269.62%10,84526.90%1,1162.77%2900.72%17,22742.72%40,323
Okeechobee 2,78344.81%3,22851.98%1562.51%430.69%-445-7.17%6,210
Orange 87,45461.06%48,76734.05%5,4033.77%1,5951.11%38,68727.01%143,219
Osceola 10,86359.67%6,60336.27%5643.10%1750.96%4,26023.40%18,205
Palm Beach 143,63956.79%91,99136.37%15,1936.01%2,1070.83%51,64820.42%252,930
Pasco 50,12056.67%34,05438.50%3,5694.04%6990.79%16,06618.17%88,442
Pinellas 185,72853.83%138,42840.12%17,8395.17%3,0080.87%47,30013.71%345,003
Polk 59,65156.11%43,32740.75%2,6272.47%7100.67%16,32415.36%106,315
Putnam 8,27346.67%8,90650.24%4142.34%1340.76%-633-3.57%17,727
St. Johns 11,23459.67%6,89836.64%5542.94%1400.74%4,33623.03%18,826
St. Lucie 18,12660.76%10,34734.69%1,1133.73%2440.82%7,77926.07%29,830
Santa Rosa 13,80263.93%6,96432.26%6062.81%2181.01%6,83831.67%21,590
Sarasota 68,06568.57%25,62125.81%4,7964.83%7830.79%42,44442.76%99,265
Seminole 39,98966.16%17,44328.86%2,4594.07%5480.91%22,54637.30%60,439
Sumter 3,67144.41%4,38052.98%1411.71%750.91%-709-8.57%8,267
Suwannee 3,89946.22%4,34551.51%1351.60%570.68%-446-5.29%8,436
Taylor 2,77647.31%2,96350.49%781.33%510.87%-187-3.18%5,868
Union 1,12346.35%1,23751.05%451.86%180.74%-114-4.70%2,423
Volusia 52,66351.69%44,51343.69%3,3103.25%1,3961.37%8,1508.00%101,882
Wakulla 2,02147.26%2,08248.69%1122.62%611.43%-61-1.43%4,276
Walton 4,69450.28%4,36046.70%1992.13%830.89%3343.58%9,336
Washington 3,25149.92%3,11047.75%931.43%590.91%1412.17%6,513
Totals2,046,95155.52%1,419,47538.50%189,6925.14%30,9080.84%627,47617.02%3,687,026

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Ronald Reagan campaigning in Florida. Ronald Reagan campaigning in Florida (8102550796).jpg
Ronald Reagan campaigning in Florida.

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References

  1. "Voter Turnout". Florida Division of Elections. 2021. Archived from the original on June 2, 2015.
  2. Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas; 1980 Presidential General Election Results - Florida
  3. Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  4. Nicole, Narea (November 11, 2022). "It's official: Florida is a red state". Vox.com. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  5. Borressen, Jennifer (November 26, 2022). "DeSantis, Republicans win big: How Florida went from swing state to red state — in visuals". www.usatoday.com. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  6. Friedersdorf, Conor (November 9, 2022). "Is Florida Still a Swing State?". The Atlantic. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  7. Kennedy, Brigid (November 14, 2022). "Why Florida is no longer a swing state". The Week. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  8. "Will Florida now be red forever and ever? No, it's still a swing state / Opinion". November 10, 2022. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  9. Greenwood, Max (November 9, 2022). "Florida shifts from swing state to solid GOP". The Hill. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  10. Boot, Max (November 28, 2022). "Opinion | Florida is no longer a swing state. That's good news for U.S. foreign policy". Washington Post. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
  11. Black & Black 1992, p. 295.
  12. Black & Black 1992, p. 335.

Works cited