Electoral history of Ron Paul

Electoral history of Ron Paul, Republican U.S. Representative from Texas (1976-1977, 1979-1985, 1997-2013), 1988 Libertarian Party Presidential nominee and candidate for the 2008 and 2012 Republican presidential nomination.
House and Senate races (1974-1984)
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1974:[1]
- Robert R. Casey (D) (inc.) – 47,783 (69.54%)
 - Ron Paul (R) – 19,483 (28.35%)
 - James T. Smith (American) – 847 (1.23%)
 - Jill Fein (Socialist Workers) – 602 (0.88%)
 
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1976 (special election):[2]
- Robert Gammage (D) – 15,287 (42.07%)
 - Ron Paul (R) – 14,386 (39.59%)
 - John S. Brunson (D) – 3,670 (10.10%)
 - Roy Ybarra (D) – 1,456 (4.01%)
 - J. Charles Whitfield (I) – 776 (2.14%)
 - Joe W. Jones (I) – 568 (1.56%)
 - Erich J. Brann (I) – 197 (0.54%)
 
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1976 (special election runoff):[3]
- Ron Paul (R) – 39,041 (56.16%)
 - Robert Gammage (D) – 30,483 (43.85%)
 
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1976:[4]
- Robert Gammage (D) – 96,535 (50.07%)
 - Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 96,267 (49.93%)
 
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1978:[5]
- Ron Paul (R) – 54,643 (50.56%)
 - Robert Gammage (D) (inc.) – 53,443 (49.45%)
 
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1980:[6]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 106,797 (51.04%)
 - Mike Andrews (D) – 101,094 (48.31%)
 - Vaudie V. Nance (LBT) – 1,360 (0.65%)
 
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 1982:[7]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 66,536 (100.00%)
 
Republican primary for the United States Senate from Texas, 1984:[8]
- Phil Gramm – 246,716 (73.25%)
 - Ron Paul – 55,431 (16.46%)
 - Robert Mosbacher, Jr. – 26,279 (7.80%)
 - Hank Grover – 8,388 (2.49%)
 
1988 presidential election
1987 Libertarian National Convention:[9]
- Ron Paul – 196 (51.31%)
 - Russell Means – 120 (31.41%)
 - James A. Lewis – 49 (12.83%)
 - None – 17 (4.45%)
 
1988 North Dakota Libertarian presidential primary:[10]
- Ron Paul – 985 (100.00%)
 
United States presidential election, 1988:
- George H. W. Bush/Dan Quayle (R) – 48,886,597 (53.4%) and 426 electoral votes (79.18%, 40 states carried)
 - Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Bentsen (D) – 41,809,476 (45.6%) and 111 electoral votes (20.63%, 10 states and D.C. carried)
 - Lloyd Bentsen/Michael Dukakis (D) – 1 electoral vote (0.19%, West Virginia faithless elector)
 - Ron Paul/Andre Marrou (LBT) – 431,750 (0.5%)
 - Lenora Fulani (New Alliance) – 217,221 (0.2%)
 - Others – 249,642 (0.3%)
 
House races (from 1996)
Texas's 14th congressional district, 1996 (Republican primary):[11]
- Greg Laughlin (inc.) – 14,777 (42.52%)
 - Ron Paul – 11,112 (31.97%)
 - Jim Deats – 8,466 (24.36%)
 - Ted Bozarth – 398 (1.15%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 1996 (Republican primary runoff):[11]
- Ron Paul – 11,244 (54.06%)
 - Greg Laughlin (inc.) – 9,555 (45.94%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 1996:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) – 99,961 (51.08%)
 - Charles Morris (D) – 93,200 (47.62%)
 - Ed Fasanella (Natural Law) – 2,538 (1.30%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 1998:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 84,459 (55.25%)
 - Loy Sneary (D) – 68,014 (44.49%)
 - Write-in – 390 (0.26%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2000:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 137,370 (59.71%)
 - Loy Sneary (D) – 92,689 (40.29%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2002:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 102,905 (68.09%)
 - Corby Windham (D) – 48,224 (31.91%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2004:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 173,668 (100.00%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2006 (Republican primary):[11]
- Ron Paul (inc.) – 24,075 (77.65%)
 - Cynthia Sinatra – 6,931 (22.35%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2006:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 94,380 (60.19%)
 - Shane Sklar (D) – 62,429 (39.81%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2008 (Republican primary):[11]
- Ron Paul (inc.) – 37,777 (70.43%)
 - Chris Peden – 15,859 (29.56%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2008:[11]
- Ron Paul (R) (inc.) – 191,293 (100.00%)
 
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2010
- Ron Paul (inc.) – 140,441 (76.0%)
 - Robert Pruett – 44,345 (24.0%)
 
2008 presidential election
Iowa Republican straw poll, 2008:[12]
- Mitt Romney – 4,516 (31.58%)
 - Mike Huckabee – 2,587 (18.09%)
 - Sam Brownback – 2,192 (15.33%)
 - Tom Tancredo – 1,961 (13.71%)
 - Ron Paul – 1,305 (9.13%)
 - Tommy Thompson – 1,039 (7.27%)
 - Fred Thompson – 203 (1.42%)
 - Rudy Giuliani – 183 (1.28%)
 - Duncan Hunter – 174 (1.22%)
 - John McCain – 101 (0.71%)
 - John Cox – 41 (0.29%)
 
Republican New Hampshire Vice Presidential primary, 2008:[13]
- John Barnes, Jr. – 40,207 (62.43%)
 - John McCain* – 4,305 (6.68%)
 - Mike Huckabee* – 3,227 (5.01%)
 - Rudy Giuliani* – 3,164 (4.91%)
 - Mitt Romney* – 2,396 (3.72%)
 - Ron Paul* – 1,938 (3.01%)
 - Fred Thompson* – 1,496 (2.32%)
 - Duncan Hunter* – 901 (1.40%)
 - Others – 3,982 (6.18%)
 
(* – write in)
Liberty Union Party presidential primary, 2008:[14]
- Brian Moore – 178 (44.61%)
 - Barack Obama – 25 (6.27%)
 - Hillary Rodham Clinton – 15 (3.76%)
 - Ralph Nader – 5 (1.25%)
 - Eugene V. Debs – 1 (0.25%)
 - Patrick Leahy – 1 (0.25%)
 - John McCain – 1 (0.25%)
 - Richard Norford – 1 (0.25%)
 - Ron Paul – 1 (0.25%)
 - Morgan Phillips – 1 (0.25%)
 - Others – 170 (42.61%)
 
Constitution Party presidential primaries, 2008:[15]
- Don J. Grundmann – 16,105 (36.07%)
 - Diane Beall Templin – 14,835 (33.22%)
 - Max Riekse – 13,597 (30.45%)
 - Ron Paul – 65 (0.15%)
 - David Andrew Larson – 18 (0.04%)
 - Bryan Malatesta – 18 (0.04%)
 - Undecided – 7 (0.02%)
 - Mike Huckabee – 3 (0.01%)
 - Alan Keyes – 3 (0.01%)
 - Mitt Romney – 2 (0.00%)
 - Jerome Corsi – 1 (0.00%)
 - Others – 1 (0.00%)
 
Minnesota Independence Party presidential caucus, 2008:[16]
- Mike Bloomberg – 50 (50.00%)
 - Barack Obama – 20 (20.00%)
 - Ron Paul – 20 (20.00%)
 - Others – 10 (10.00%)
 
2008 Libertarian National Convention (Presidential tally):[17]
First ballot:
- Bob Barr – 153
 - Mary Ruwart – 152
 - Wayne Allyn Root – 123
 - Mike Gravel – 71
 - George Phillies – 49
 - Steve Kubby – 41
 - Michael Jingozian – 23
 - Ron Paul – 6
 - Christine Smith – 6
 - Penn Jillette – 3
 - Daniel Imperato – 1
 - William Koehler – 1
 - None of the above – 2
 
Second ballot:
- 'Bob Barr – 188
 - Mary Ruwart – 162
 - Wayne Allyn Root – 138
 - Mike Gravel – 71
 - George Phillies – 38
 - Steve Kubby – 32
 - Ron Paul – 3
 - Stephen Colbert – 1
 - Jesse Ventura – 1
 - None of the above – 1
 
Third ballot:
- Bob Barr – 186
 - Mary Ruwart – 186
 - Wayne Allyn Root – 146
 - Mike Gravel – 71
 - George Phillies – 31
 - Ron Paul – 1
 - None of the above – 2
 
Sixth ballot:
- Bob Barr – 324
 - Mary Ruwart – 276
 - Ralph Nader – 1
 - Ron Paul – 1
 - None of the above – 26
 
Republican presidential primaries, 2008:[18]
- John McCain – 9,926,234 (46.80%)
 - Mitt Romney – 4,663,847 (21.99%)
 - Mike Huckabee – 4,280,723 (20.18%)
 - Ron Paul – 1,210,022 (5.71%)
 - Rudy Giuliani – 597,494 (2.82%)
 - Fred Thompson – 294,607 (1.39%)
 - Uncommitted – 70,866 (0.33%)
 - Alan Keyes – 59,637 (0.28%)
 - Scattering – 42,822 (0.20%)
 - Duncan Hunter – 39,895 (0.19%)
 - Tom Tancredo – 8,595 (0.04%)
 - John Cox – 3,351 (0.02%)
 - Sam Brownback – 2,838 (0.01%)
 
2008 Republican National Convention (Presidential tally):[19]
- John McCain – 2,343 (99.28%)
 - Ron Paul – 15 (0.64%)
 - Mitt Romney – 2 (0.09%)
 
United States presidential election, 2008:
- Barack Obama/Joe Biden (D) – 69,498,215 (52.91%) and 365 electoral votes (28 states+D.C.+NE-02 carried)
 - John McCain/Sarah Palin (R) – 59,948,240 (45.66%) and 173 electoral votes (22 states carried)
 - Ralph Nader/Matt Gonzales (I) – 738,475 (0.56%)
 - Bob Barr/Wayne Allyn Root (LBT) – 523,686 (0.40%)
 - Chuck Baldwin/Darrell Castle (CST) – 199,314 (0.15%)
 - Cynthia McKinney/Rosa Clemente (Green) – 161,603 (0.12%)
 - Alan Keyes/Brian Rohrbough – 47,694 (0.04%)
 - Ron Paul/With Multiple VP candidates – 42,426 (0.03%)
 - Gloria La Riva/Eugene Puryear (Socialism & Liberation) – 6,808 (0.01%)
 - Brian Moore/Stewart Alexander (Socialist) – 6,528 (0.01%)
 
See also
- Hart's Location, New Hampshire
 - Ron Paul presidential campaign, 1988
 - Ron Paul presidential campaign, 2008
 
References
- ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=32976
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=373577
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=175886
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=31630
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=53682
 - ↑ http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth113816/m1/502/
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=37265
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=255583
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=58527
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=264087
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "1992 – Current Election History". Texas Secretary of State. Retrieved 2009-03-07.
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=381359
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=411803
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=421598
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=431856
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=419259
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=279988
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=6314
 - ↑ http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=279987
 
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