1984 United States Senate election in Kentucky

The 1984 United States Senate election in Kentucky was held on November 5, 1984. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Walter Huddleston ran for reelection to a third term, but was defeated by Republican Mitch McConnell by less than 0.5%. In spite of President Ronald Reagan's landslide reelection victory, this was the only Senate seat gained by Republicans in 1984.

1984 United States Senate election in Kentucky

November 5, 1984
 
Nominee Mitch McConnell Walter Huddleston
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 644,990 639,721
Percentage 49.9% 49.5%

Country results
McConnell:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Huddleston:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

U.S. senator before election

Walter Huddleston
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Mitch McConnell
Republican

Democratic primary

Candidates

  • Walter Huddleston, incumbent U.S. Senator

Results

Huddleston was unopposed in the Democratic Party's primary. Governor John Y. Brown Jr. filed to run in March 1984, but withdrew for health reasons a few weeks later.

Republican primary

Candidates

Results

Republican primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mitch McConnell 39,465 79.22%
Republican C. Roger Harker 3,798 7.62%
Republican Tommy Klein 3,352 6.73%
Republican Thurman Jerome Hamlin 3,202 6.43%
Total votes 49,817 100.00%

General election

Candidates

Results

General election results[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Republican Mitch McConnell 644,990 49.90% +13.03%
Democratic Walter Huddleston (incumbent) 639,721 49.50% -11.48%
Socialist Workers Dave Welters 7,696 0.60% +0.60%
Total votes 1,292,407 100.00% N/A
Republican gain from Democratic
gollark: You may have seen that some quadratics have """no solution""" when doing maths. This is not true. The solutions are complex numbers.
gollark: A quadratic is a polynomial of degree 2.
gollark: The "degree" is the maximum amount of variables multiplied together in a monomial; 3 there, because x³ is xxx.
gollark: A polynomial is basically something like x³ + xy² + x + 7; the sum of some monomials, which contain variables and stuff multiplied together.
gollark: Plus trigonometry and exponentials are conveniently merged.

See also

References

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