United States Senate election in North Carolina, 1996
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| Elections in North Carolina |
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Presidential elections
United States Senate elections |
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State legislature General Assembly elections
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The North Carolina United States Senate election of 1996 was held on 5 November 1996 as part of the nationwide elections to the Senate, and coinciding with the 1996 presidential election. The general election was a rematch of the 1990 election: between the Republican incumbent Jesse Helms and the Democrat nominee Harvey Gantt. Helms won re-election to a fifth and final term by a slightly wider margin than in 1990.
Democratic primary
| 1996 North Carolina U.S. Senate Democratic primary election[1] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
| Democratic | Harvey Gantt | 308,337 | 52.40 | +14.88 | |
| Democratic | Charles Sanders | 245,297 | 41.68 | N/A | |
| Democratic | Ralph McKinney | 34,829 | 5.92 | N/A | |
| Turnout | 588,463 | ||||
Republican primary
Jesse Helms won the Republican Party's nomination unopposed.
Results
| 1996 North Carolina U.S. Senate election | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
| Republican | Jesse Helms (incumbent) | 1,345,833 | 52.64 | +0.08 | |
| Democratic | Harvey Gantt | 1,173,875 | 45.92 | -1.49 | |
| Libertarian | Ray Ubinger | 25,396 | 0.99 | N/A | |
| Natural Law | Victor Pardo | 11,209 | 0.44 | N/A | |
| Turnout | 2,556,456 | ||||
Footnotes
- ↑ "North Carolina DataNet #46" (PDF). University of North Carolina. April 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-12.
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