1984 United States gubernatorial elections

United States gubernatorial elections were held on November 6, 1984, in 13 states and two territories. The Republicans had a net gain of one seat in this election, which coincided with the Senate, House elections and presidential election.

1984 United States gubernatorial elections

November 6, 1984

15 governorships
13 states; 2 territories
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party Democratic Republican
Last election 35 governorships 15 governorships
Seats before 35 15
Seats after 34 16
Seat change 1 1

  Republican holds
  Republican pickups
  Democratic holds
  Democratic pickups

This was the last year in which Arkansas held a gubernatorial election in the same year as the presidential election. The length of gubernatorial terms for Arkansas' governor would be extended from two years to four years with elections taking place in midterm election years following the passage of the Sixty-third Amendment to the Arkansas Constitution.[1]

Election results

State Incumbent Party Status Opposing candidates
Arkansas Bill Clinton Democratic Re-elected, 62.5% Woody Freeman (Republican) 37.4%
Delaware Pete du Pont Republican Term-limited, Republican victory Mike Castle (Republican) 55.0%
William J. Quillen (Democratic) 45.0%
Indiana Robert D. Orr Republican Re-elected, 52.16% Wayne Townsend (Democratic) 47.18%
Rockland Snyder (American) 0.34%
James A. Ridenour (Libertarian) 0.32%
Missouri Kit Bond Republican Retired, Republican victory John Ashcroft (Republican) 56.7%
Ken Rothman (Democratic) 43.3%
Montana Ted Schwinden Democratic Re-elected, 70.3% Pat M. Goodover (Republican) 26.4%
Larry Dodge (Libertarian) 3.3%
New Hampshire John H. Sununu Republican Re-elected, 66.8% Chris Spirou (Democratic) 33.1%
North Carolina Jim Hunt Democratic Term-limited, Republican victory James G. Martin (Republican) 54.3%
Rufus L. Edmisten (Democratic) 45.4%
North Dakota Allen I. Olson Republican Defeated, 44.7% George A. Sinner (Democratic) 55.3%
Rhode Island J. Joseph Garrahy Democratic Retired, Republican victory Edward D. DiPrete (Republican) 60.0%
Anthony J. Solomon (Democratic) 40.0%
Utah Scott M. Matheson Democratic Retired, Republican victory Norman H. Bangerter (Republican) 55.9%
Wayne Owens (Democratic) 43.8%
Vermont Richard A. Snelling Republican Retired, Democratic victory Madeleine Kunin (Democratic) 50.0%
John J. Easton Jr. (Republican) 48.5%
William E. Wicker (Libertarian) 0.8%
Washington John Spellman Republican Defeated, 46.7% Booth Gardner (Democratic) 53.3%
West Virginia Jay Rockefeller Democratic Term-limited, Republican victory Arch A. Moore Jr. (Republican) 53.3%
Clyde See (Democratic) 46.7%
gollark: Also, you won't have to hand-write some assembly, which is a bonus.
gollark: If you use an optimized library someone else has written for your task, it can be faster and more reliable than some hand-written C or assembly.
gollark: The testing thing was, if I remember right, only proposed for lasery and chemistry stuff.
gollark: The simulation theory is just "what if the universe is a simulation", which is basically unfalsifiable.
gollark: ... what?

See also

References

  1. AR Const. amendment 63


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.