Electoral history of Bill Richardson

Electoral history of Bill Richardson, 30th Governor of New Mexico (2003–2011), 9th United States Secretary of Energy (1998–2001), 21st United States Ambassador to the United Nations (1997–1998), U.S. Representative from New Mexico's 1st district (1983–1997) and a candidate for the 2008 Democratic nomination for President of the United States

Gov. Bill Richardson (D-NM)

Congressional races (1980–1996)

New Mexico's 1st congressional district, 1980:[1]

  • Manuel Lujan, Jr. (R) (inc.) – 125,910 (51.01%)
  • Bill Richardson – 120,903 (48.99%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1982 (Democratic primary):[2]

  • Bill Richardson – 23,123 (36.22%)
  • Roberto A. Mondragon – 19,691 (30.84%)
  • George Perez – 12,412 (19.44%)
  • Tom Udall – 8,619 (13.50%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1982:[3]

  • Bill Richardson (D) – 84,669 (64.49%)
  • Marjorie Bell Chambers (R) – 46,466 (35.39%)
  • David A. Fernandez (I) – 158 (0.12%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1984:[4]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc.) – 100,470 (60.81%)
  • Louis H. Gallegos (R) – 62,351 (37.74%)
  • Shirley Machocky Jones (LBT) – 2,388 (1.45%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1986:[5]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc.) – 95,760 (71.30%)
  • David F. Cargo (R) – 38,552 (28.70%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1988:[6]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc.) – 124,938 (73.11%)
  • Cecilia M. Salazar (R) – 45,954 (26.89%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1990:[7]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc.) – 104,225 (74.46%)
  • Phil T. Archuletta (R) – 35,751 (25.54%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1992:[8]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc.) – 122,850 (67.42%)
  • F. Gregg Bemis, Jr. (R) – 54,569 (29.95%)
  • Ed Nagel (LBT) – 4,798 (2.63%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1994:[9]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc,) – 99,900 (63.59%)
  • F. Gregg Bemis, Jr. (R) – 53,515 (34.06%)
  • Ed Nagel (LBT) – 3,697 (2.35%)

New Mexico's 3rd congressional district, 1996:[10]

  • Bill Richardson (D) (inc.) – 124,594 (67.25%)
  • Bill Redmond (R) – 56,580 (30.54%)
  • Ed Nagel (LBT) – 4,097 (2.21%)

Administration appointments (1996–2001)

United States Ambassador to the United Nations, 1997 (confirmation in the United States Senate):[11]

  • Yea – 100
  • Nay – 0

United States Secretary of Energy, 1998 (confirmation in the United States Senate):[12]

  • Yea – 100
  • Nay – 0

New Mexico gubernatorial races (2002–2006)

Democratic primary for Governor of New Mexico, 2002:[13]

  • Bill Richardson – 147,524 (99.80%)
  • Mike Nalley (write-in) – 294 (0.20%)

New Mexico gubernatorial election, 2002:[14]

  • Bill Richardson/Diane Denish (D) – 268,693 (55.49%)
  • John Sanchez/Rod Adair (R) – 189,074 (39.05%)
  • David Bacon/Kathleen M. Sanchez (Green) – 26,466 (5.47%)

Democratic primary for Governor of New Mexico, 2006:[15]

  • Bill Richardson (inc.) – 107,720 (99.64%)
  • Anselmo A. Chavez (write-in) – 388 (0.36%)

New Mexico gubernatorial election, 2006:[16]

United States presidential election, 2008

2008 New Hampshire Democratic Vice Presidential primary:[17]

(* – write-in)

2008 Democratic presidential primaries:[18]

Excluding penalized contests, only primary and caucuses votes:

Including penalized contests:

(* – dropped out from race)
(PN – presumptive nominee)

gollark: It would be very hard to make one preserving all JS's weird quirks.
gollark: I mean, yes, Turing completeness means you *technically* can (except that both OC and CC have finite memory), however you practically can't.
gollark: Except very basic versions.
gollark: JS and HTML5 are highly accursed and complex so you have no chance of implementing them.
gollark: > ok fine, a microwave from the 1800s to be specific.I don't think they had those then. Modern magnetrons are IIRC a 1900s invention.

References

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