List of third party performances in United States elections
In the United States, it is rare for third party and independent candidates to take large shares of the vote in elections, and even rarer for such candidates to actually win elections. This article covers any federal or gubernatorial U.S. election in which a candidate that was not a Republican, Democrat, Whig, or Federalist obtained at least 5.0% of the vote.
Since 1990, candidates in 32 (8%) of the 380 Senate elections have won at least five percent of the vote, and two (0.5%) have won, both in 2006. In six of the 32 races, one or the other of the major parties failed to nominate any candidate, allowing third-party candidates to perform better than usual.
In the 302 gubernatorial elections since 1990 have won at least five percent of the vote 49 times (16%), while six candidates have won election (2%). Until Lincoln Chafee's victory in 2010, no third-party or independent governor had been elected since the 1990s. In the 38 presidential elections since 1856, the criterion has been met in eleven (29%) elections, with no third-party or independent candidate being elected president.
Contents
Statistics
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Note: Prior to the passage of the 17th Amendment, most states did not hold direct elections to the Senate.
Legend: | 1st | 2nd | 3rd |
---|
Elections with Notable Third Party Electoral Performances (1900–Present)[1] | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gubernatorial Elections | Senatorial Elections | Total Elections | |||||||
State | Threshold Reached | Threshold Candidates | Third Party Victory | Threshold Reached | Threshold Candidates | Third Party Victory | Threshold Reached | Threshold Candidates | Third Party Victory |
Alabama | 5 | 6 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 9 | 10 | 0 |
Alaska | 9 | 10 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 1 | 14 | 15 | 3 |
Arizona | 5 | 5 | 0 | 7 | 11 | 0 | 12 | 16 | 0 |
Arkansas | 10 | 11 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 1 | 15 | 16 | 1 |
California | 8 | 10 | 1 | 9 | 11 | 0 | 17 | 21 | 1 |
Colorado | 4 | 6 | 0 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 8 | 11 | 0 |
Connecticut | 7 | 9 | 1 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 11 | 13 | 2 |
Delaware | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
Florida | 3 | 3 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 6 | 6 | 1 |
Georgia | 4 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Hawaii | 3 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 0 |
Idaho | 13 | 16 | 0 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 17 | 21 | 0 |
Illinois | 4 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 7 | 0 |
Indiana | 1 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 5 | 6 | 0 |
Iowa | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Kansas | 6 | 7 | 0 | 5 | 6 | 0 | 11 | 13 | 0 |
Kentucky | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Louisiana | 3 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 0 |
Maine | 12 | 17 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 16 | 21 | 4 |
Maryland | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 0 |
Massachusetts | 10 | 10 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 14 | 14 | 0 |
Michigan | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Minnesota | 21 | 25 | 5 | 18 | 21 | 5 | 39 | 46 | 10 |
Mississippi | 2 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Missouri | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
Nebraska | 10 | 10 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 13 | 13 | 2 |
Nevada | 6 | 7 | 2 | 7 | 8 | 0 | 13 | 15 | 2 |
New Hampshire | 4 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 0 |
New Jersey | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
New Mexico | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 0 |
New York | 11 | 12 | 0 | 8 | 8 | 1 | 19 | 20 | 1 |
North Carolina | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
North Dakota | 7 | 8 | 1 | 9 | 11 | 1 | 16 | 19 | 2 |
Ohio | 3 | 4 | 0 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 6 | 8 | 0 |
Oklahoma | 7 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 10 | 10 | 0 |
Oregon | 6 | 7 | 1 | 9 | 14 | 0 | 15 | 20 | 1 |
Pennsylvania | 3 | 3 | 0 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 7 | 8 | 0 |
Rhode Island | 7 | 9 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 8 | 10 | 0 |
South Carolina | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
South Dakota | 7 | 9 | 0 | 5 | 7 | 0 | 12 | 16 | 0 |
Tennessee | 7 | 8 | 0 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 11 | 12 | 0 |
Texas | 9 | 12 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 10 | 13 | 0 |
Utah | 6 | 7 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 9 | 10 | 0 |
Vermont | 10 | 10 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 13 | 13 | 2 |
Virginia | 4 | 4 | 0 | 14 | 18 | 2 | 18 | 22 | 2 |
Washington | 7 | 8 | 0 | 5 | 6 | 0 | 12 | 14 | 0 |
West Virginia | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
Wisconsin | 18 | 21 | 3 | 12 | 15 | 2 | 30 | 36 | 5 |
Wyoming | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
Total | 280 | 322 | 21 | 196 | 228 | 19 | 476 | 550 | 40 |
Gubernatorial
Listed below are gubernatorial elections since 1900 in which an independent or third party candidate won greater than 5% of the vote. Elections in which a third party candidate won are marked with bold typeface.
Notable Third Party Gubernatorial Performances (1900-1929) - 178 Entries | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | State | Party | Nominee | Running Mate | # Votes | % Votes | Place | Notes |
1900 | Alabama | People's | Grattan B. Crowe | 17,444 |
10.84 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Georgia | People's | George W. Trayler | 25,285 |
21.43 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Kansas | People's | John W. Breidenthal | 164,793 |
47.33 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Louisiana | Fusion[2] | Donelson Caffery | 14,215 |
18.49 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Minnesota | Democratic People's[3] | John Lind | 150,651 |
47.95 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Montana | Independent Democratic | Thomas S. Hogan | 9,188 |
14.40 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Nebraska | Fusion[4] | William A. Poynter | 113,018 |
48.51 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
North Dakota | Fusion[5] | M. Wipperman | 22,275 |
38.72 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
Rhode Island | Socialist Labor | James P. Reid | 2,858 |
5.96 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
South Dakota | Fusion[6] | Burre H. Lien | 40,091 |
41.97 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Texas | People's | T.J. McMinn | 26,579 |
5.92 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
1902 | Arkansas | Independent Republican | Charles D. Greaves | 8,345 |
6.97 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Georgia | People's | J.K. Hines | 5,566 |
6.39 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Massachusetts | Socialist | John C. Chase | 33,629 |
8.44 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Nebraska | Fusion[7] | William Henry Thompson | 91,116 |
46.79 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Nevada | Silver-Democratic[8] | John Sparks | 6,540 |
57.78 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Vermont | Local Option[9] | Percival W. Clement | 28,201 |
40.33 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
1903 | Massachusetts | Socialist | John C. Chase | 25,251 |
6.37 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
1904 | Idaho | Socialist | Theodore B. Shaw | 4,000 |
5.61 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Illinois | Socialist | John Collins | 59,062 |
5.51 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
Montana | Socialist | Malcolm A. O'Malley | 3,431 |
5.22 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Nebraska | Fusion[10] | George W. Berge | 102,568 |
45.61 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Utah | American | William Montague Ferry | 7,959 |
7.82 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Washington | Socialist | David Burgess | 7,420 |
5.13 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic[11] | William A. Arnold | 24,857 |
5.53 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1906 | California | Independence League | William H. Langdon | 45,008 |
14.43 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Socialist | Austin Lewis | 16,036 |
5.14 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Colorado | Independent | Ben Lindsey | 18,014 |
8.87 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Socialist | Bill Haywood | 16,015 |
7.88 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Idaho | Socialist | Thomas F. Kelley | 4,650 |
6.32 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Nebraska | Fusion[12] | Ashton C. Shallenberger | 84,885 |
44.48 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Nevada | Silver-Democratic[13] | John Sparks | 8,686 |
58.54 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
Socialist | Thomas B. Casey | 815 |
5.49 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||||
Vermont | Independent | Percival W. Clement | 26,912 |
38.18 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
1907 | Massachusetts | Independence League | Thomas L. Hisgen | 75,499 |
20.20 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | ||
1908 | Florida | Socialist | A.J. Pettigrew | 2,427 |
5.79 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Georgia | Independent | Yancy Carter | 11,746 |
9.47 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Idaho | Socialist | Ernest Untermann | 6,155 |
6.38 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Massachusetts | Independence League | William N. Osgood | 23,101 |
5.22 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Montana | Socialist | Harry Hazelton | 5,122 |
7.50 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Nebraska | Fusion[14] | Ashton C. Shallenberger | 132,960 |
49.90 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Utah | American | John A. Street | 11,404 |
10.23 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic[15] | H.D. Brown | 28,583 |
6.36 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1910 | Arkansas | Socialist | Dan Hogan | 9,196 |
6.10 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
California | Socialist | Jackson Stitt Wilson | 47,819 |
12.40 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Connecticut | Socialist | Robert Hunter | 12,179 |
7.33 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Idaho | Socialist | S.W. Motley | 5,342 |
6.20 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Nevada | Socialist | Henry F. Gegax | 1,393 |
6.75 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Ohio | Socialist | Tom Clifford | 60,637 |
6.56 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Oklahoma | Socialist | J.T. Cumbie | 24,457 |
9.91 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Oregon | Socialist | W.S. Richards | 8,040 |
6.83 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Prohibition | A.E. Eaton | 6,046 |
5.14 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Pennsylvania | Keystone | William H. Berry | 382,127 |
38.27 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Texas | Socialist | Reddin Andrews, Jr. | 11,538 |
5.27 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic[16] | William A. Jacobs | 39,547 |
12.38 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1911 | Arizona | Socialist | P.W. Gallentine | 1,247 |
5.77 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
1912 | Arkansas | Socialist | G.E. Mikel | 13,384 |
7.89 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Colorado | Progressive | Edward P. Costigan | 66,132 |
24.88 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Charles A. Ashelstrom | 16,189 |
6.09 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Connecticut | Progressive | Herbert Smith | 31,020 |
16.29 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Samuel E. Beardsley | 10,236 |
5.38 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Delaware | Progressive | George Beswick Hynson | 3,019 |
6.23 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Florida | Socialist | Thomas W. Cox | 3,467 |
7.15 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
Idaho | Progressive | G. H. Martin | 24,325 |
23.05 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Socialist | L.A. Coblentz | 11,094 |
10.51 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Illinois | Progressive | Frank H. Funk | 303,401 |
26.09 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Socialist | John C. Kennedy | 78,679 |
6.77 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Indiana | Progressive | Albert J. Beveridge | 166,654 |
25.99 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Stephen N. Reynolds | 35,464 |
5.53 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Iowa | Progressive | John L. Stevens | 71,879 |
15.59 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Kansas | Socialist | George W. Kleihege | 24,767 |
6.89 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Massachusetts | Progressive | Charles S. Bird | 126,602 |
26.39 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Michigan | Progressive | L. Whitney Watkins | 155,372 |
28.31 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Minnesota | Progressive | Paul V. Collins | 33,455 |
10.51 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Prohibition | Engebret E. Lobeck | 29,876 |
9.38 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Public Ownership[17] | David Morgan | 25,769 |
8.09 / 100
|
5th of 5 | ||||
Missouri | Progressive | Albert D. Nortoni | 109,146 |
15.61 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Montana | Progressive | Frank J. Edwards | 18,881 |
23.61 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Socialist | Lewis J. Duncan | 12,766 |
15.96 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
New Hampshire | Progressive | Winston Churchill | 14,401 |
17.29 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
New York | Progressive | Oscar Straus | 393,183 |
25.10 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
North Carolina | Progressive | Iredell Meares | 49,930 |
20.42 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
North Dakota | Progressive | W.D. Sweet | 9,406 |
10.74 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Socialist | A.E. Bowen, Jr. | 6,835 |
7.80 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Ohio | Progressive | Arthur Lovett Garford | 217,903 |
21.02 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Charles Emil Ruthenberg | 87,709 |
8.46 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Rhode Island | Progressive | Albert H. Humes | 8,457 |
10.82 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Texas | Socialist | Reddin Andrews, Jr. | 25,258 |
8.39 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Progressive | Ed C. Lasater | 15,794 |
5.24 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Utah | Progressive | Nephi L. Morris | 23,591 |
21.16 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Socialist | Homer P. Burt | 8,797 |
7.89 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Vermont | Progressive | Fraser Metzger | 15,629 |
24.10 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Washington | Progressive | Robert T. Hodge | 77,792 |
24.44 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Anna A. Maley | 37,155 |
11.67 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
West Virginia | Socialist | Walter B. Hilton | 15,048 |
5.61 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Wisconsin | Social-Democratic[18] | Carl D. Thompson | 34,468 |
8.75 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1913 | Arkansas | Progressive | George W. Murphy | 8,431 |
10.10 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Socialist | J. Emil Webber | 4,378 |
5.24 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Massachusetts | Progressive | Charles S. Bird | 127,755 |
27.72 / 100
|
2nd of 7 | |||
New Jersey | Progressive | Everett Colby | 41,132 |
10.96 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
Virginia | Socialist | C. Campbell | 3,789 |
5.23 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
1914 | Arizona | Progressive | George U. Young | 5,206 |
10.21 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Arkansas | Socialist | Dan Hogan | 10,434 |
7.70 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
California | Progressive | Hiram Johnson | 460,495 |
49.69 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
Socialist | Noble A. Richardson | 50,716 |
5.47 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Colorado | Progressive | Edward P. Costigan | 32,920 |
12.41 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Idaho | Progressive | Hugh E. McElroy | 10,583 |
9.81 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Socialist | L.A. Coblentz | 7,967 |
7.38 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Kansas | Progressive | Henry Justin Allen | 84,060 |
15.91 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Independent | Julius B. Billiard | 7,967 |
7.38 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Maine | Progressive | Halbert P. Gardner | 18,226 |
12.87 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Massachusetts | Progressive | Joseph Walker | 32,145 |
7.02 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Michigan | Progressive | Henry R. Pattengill | 36,747 |
8.34 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Minnesota | Prohibition | Willis Greenleaf Calderwood | 18,582 |
5.41 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Thomas J. "Tom" Lewis | 17,225 |
5.02 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Nevada | Socialist | W.A. Morgan | 3,391 |
15.74 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
New York | American | William Sulzer | 126,270 |
8.77 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
North Dakota | Socialist | J.A. Williams | 6,019 |
6.74 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Ohio | Progressive | James Rudolph Garfield | 60,904 |
5.39 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Oklahoma | Socialist | Fred W. Holt | 52,704 |
20.78 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Oregon | Socialist | W.J. Smith | 14,284 |
5.76 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
South Dakota | Independent | Richard Olsen Richards | 9,725 |
9.91 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Texas | Socialist | E.R. Meitzen | 24,977 |
11.59 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
Vermont | Progressive | Walter J. Aldrich | 6,969 |
11.22 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Wisconsin | Progressive[19] | John J. Blaine | 32,560 |
10.01 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Social-Democratic[20] | Oscar T. Ameringer | 25,917 |
7.96 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
1915 | Mississippi | Socialist | J.T. Lester | 4,046 |
7.41 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
1916 | Arkansas | Socialist | William Davis | 9,730 |
5.54 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Florida | Prohibition | Sidney Johnston Catts | 39,546 |
47.71 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Idaho | Socialist | Annie E. Triplow | 7,321 |
5.44 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Louisiana | Progressive | John M. Parker | 48,085 |
37.20 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
Minnesota | Socialist | J.O. Bentall | 26,306 |
6.73 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Prohibition | Thomas J. Anderson | 19,884 |
5.09 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Montana | Socialist | Lewis J. Duncan | 11,342 |
6.53 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Washington | Socialist | Ludwig E. Katterfield | 21,167 |
5.61 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Wisconsin | Socialist | Rae Weaver | 30,649 |
7.06 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1918 | Alabama | Independent | Dallas B. Smith | 13,497 |
19.79 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
Arkansas | Socialist | Clay Fulks | 4,792 |
6.57 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
California | Independent | Theodore Arlington Bell | 251,189 |
36.48 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | David H. Evans | 111,948 |
30.28 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
New York | Socialist | Joseph Cannon | 159,804 |
7.36 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
South Dakota | Independent | Mark P. Bates | 25,118 |
26.12 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
Wisconsin | Socialist | Emil Seidel | 57,523 |
17.35 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1920 | Arkansas | Independent[21] | J.H. Blount | 15,627 |
8.22 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Idaho | Independent | Sherman D. Fairchild | 28,752 |
20.11 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Minnesota | Independent[22] | Henrik Shipstead | 281,402 |
35.91 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Nebraska | Nonpartisan League | Arthur G. Wray | 88,905 |
23.51 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
New York | Socialist | Joseph Cannon | 159,804 |
5.57 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
South Dakota | Nonpartisan League | Mark P. Bates | 48,426 |
26.34 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
Texas | American | T.H. McGregor | 69,380 |
14.40 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Black and Tan Republican | H. Capers | 26,091 |
5.42 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Washington | Farmer–Labor | Robert Bridges | 121,371 |
30.10 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Wisconsin | Socialist | William Coleman | 71,126 |
10.29 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1922 | Idaho | Progressive | H. F. Samuels | 40,516 |
31.69 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Magnus Johnson | 295,479 |
43.13 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
North Dakota | Nonpartisan League | William Lemke | 81,048 |
42.35 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
South Dakota | Nonpartisan League | Alice Lorraine Daily | 46,033 |
26.24 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Wisconsin | Independent Democratic | Arthur A. Bentley | 51,061 |
10.60 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
Socialist | Louis A. Arnold | 39,570 |
8.21 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||||
1924 | Idaho | Progressive | H. F. Samuels | 58,163 |
39.04 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
Kansas | Independent | William Allen White | 149,811 |
22.71 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 366,029 |
43.84 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
Montana | Farmer–Labor | Frank J. Edwards | 10,576 |
6.08 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Nebraska | Progressive | Dan Butler | 35,594 |
7.94 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
South Dakota | Farmer–Labor | A.L. Putnam | 27,027 |
13.25 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Independent | Richard Olsen Richards | 20,359 |
9.98 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Washington | Progressive | J.R. "Bob" Oman | 40,073 |
10.27 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Wisconsin | Socialist | William F. Quick | 45,268 |
5.68 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
1926 | Idaho | Progressive | W. Scott Hall | 34,208 |
28.36 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Magnus Johnson | 266,845 |
38.09 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
Oregon | Independent | H.H. Stallard | 12,402 |
5.49 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
South Dakota | Farmer–Labor | Tom Ayres | 11,958 |
6.51 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Independent | John E. Hipple | 10,637 |
5.79 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Wisconsin | Independent | Charles Perry | 76,507 |
13.84 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Socialist | Herman O. Kent | 40,293 |
7.29 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
1928 | Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Ernest Lundeen | 227,193 |
22.72 / 100
|
2nd of 5 |
Notable Third Party Gubernatorial Performances (1930-1959) - 45 Entries | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | State | Party | Nominee | Running Mate | # Votes | % Votes | Place | Notes |
1930 | Alabama | Independent | Hugh A. Locke | 95,745 |
38.18 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
Kansas | Independent (Write-In) | John R. Brinkley | 183,278 |
29.50 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 473,154 |
59.34 / 100
|
Elected | |||
New York | Law Preservation[23] | Robert P Carroll | 190,666 |
6.08 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Oregon | Independent | Julius Meier | 135,608 |
54.51 / 100
|
Elected | |||
1932 | Kansas | Independent | John R. Brinkley | 244,607 |
30.58 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 522,438 |
50.57 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
Tennessee | Independent | Lewis S. Pope | 106,990 |
27.05 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Washington | Liberty | Luvern Clyde Hicks | 41,710 |
6.79 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
Wisconsin | Socialist | Frank Metcalfe | 56,965 |
5.07 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
1934 | California | Progressive | Raymond L. Haight | 302,519 |
12.99 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Connecticut | Socialist | Jasper McLevy | 38,438 |
6.96 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Massachusetts | Equal Tax | Frank A. Goodwin | 94,141 |
6.35 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Floyd B. Olson | 468,812 |
44.61 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
Nevada | Independent | Lindley C. Branson | 4,940 |
11.54 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Oregon | Independent | Peter Zimmerman | 95,519 |
31.57 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Tennessee | Fusion[24] | Lewis S. Pope | 122,965 |
38.22 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Philip La Follette | 373,093 |
39.12 / 100
|
Elected | |||
1936 | Delaware | Independent Republican | Isaac Dolphus Short | 8,400 |
6.62 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Elmer Austin Benson | 680,342 |
60.74 / 100
|
Elected | |||
North Dakota | Nonpartisan League | William Langer | 98,750 |
35.80 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Philip La Follette | 573,724 |
46.38 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
1938 | Arkansas | Independent | Charles F. Cole | 12,077 |
8.78 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
Connecticut | Socialist | Jasper McLevy | 166,253 |
26.30 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Elmer Austin Benson | 387,263 |
34.18 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Nebraska | Independent | Charles W. Bryan | 76,258 |
15.35 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Philip La Follette | 353,381 |
36.00 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
1940 | Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Hjalmar Petersen | 459,609 |
36.55 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Orland Steen Loomis | 546,436 |
39.78 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | |||
1942 | Connecticut | Socialist | Jasper McLevy | 34,537 |
6.01 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Farmer–Labor | Hjalmar Petersen | 299,917 |
37.76 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
New York | American Labor | Dean Alfange | 403,626 |
9.79 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Orland Steen Loomis | 397,664 |
49.65 / 100
|
Elected | |||
1944 | North Dakota | Independent | Alvin C. Strutz | 38,997 |
18.81 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Wisconsin | Progressive | Alexander O. Benz | 76,028 |
5.76 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1946 | California | Prohibition | Henry R. Schmidt | 180,579 |
7.06 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
1950 | Tennessee | Independent[25] | John Randolph Neal, Jr. | 51,757 |
21.91 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
1952 | Maine | Independent Republican | Neil S. Bishop | 35,732 |
14.38 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Vermont | Republican (Write-In) | Henry D. Vail | 12,447 |
8.25 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
1954 | Tennessee | Independent | John Randolph Neal, Jr. | 39,574 |
12.27 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
1956 | Nebraska | Independent | George Morris | 31,592 |
5.56 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Texas | Democratic (Write-In) | W. Lee O'Daniel | 110,234 |
6.39 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Utah | Independent | J. Bracken Lee | 94,428 |
28.37 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
1958 | Oklahoma | Independent | D.A. "Jelly" Bryce | 31,840 |
5.91 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Tennessee | Independent | Jim Nance McCord | 136,406 |
31.54 / 100
|
2nd of 9 |
Notable Third Party Gubernatorial Performances (1960-1989) - 44 Entries | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | State | Party | Nominee | Running Mate | # Votes | % Votes | Place | Notes |
1960 | North Dakota | Independent | Herschel Lashkowitz | 16,741 |
6.08 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
1962 | Tennessee | Independent | William Anderson | 203,765 |
32.83 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | ||
1965 | Virginia | Virginia Conservative | William J. Story, Jr. | 75,307 |
13.38 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
1966 | Alabama | Independent | Carl Robinson | 47,653 |
5.62 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Georgia | Democratic (Write-In) | Ellis Arnall | 51,947 |
5.43 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Idaho | Independent | Perry Swisher | 30,913 |
12.24 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Independent | Philip Jungert | 23,139 |
9.16 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Maryland | Independent | Hyman A. Pressman | 90,899 |
9.88 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
New York | Conservative | Paul Adams | 510,023 |
8.46 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Liberal | Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr. | 507,234 |
8.41 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Tennessee | Independent | H.L. Crowder | 64,602 |
9.84 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | |||
Independent | Charlie Moffett | 50,221 |
7.65 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||||
1970 | Alabama | National Democratic | John L. Cashin, Jr. | 125,491 |
14.68 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | ||
Independent | A.C. Shelton | 75,679 |
8.85 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | ||||
Arkansas | American | Walter L. Carruth | 36,132 |
5.93 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
New Hampshire | American | Meldrim Thomson, Jr. | 22,033 |
9.91 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
New York | Conservative | Paul Adams | 422,514 |
7.03 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
1971 | Mississippi | Independent | Charles Evers | 172,762 |
22.13 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
1972 | New Hampshire | Independent | Malcolm McLane | 63,199 |
19.56 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Texas | Raza Unida | Ramsey Muñiz | 214,118 |
6.28 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Washington | Taxpayers | Vick Gould | 86,843 |
5.90 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1973 | Virginia | Independent | Henry Howell | 510,103 |
49.28 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
1974 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Joe Vogler | 4,770 |
4.96 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Maine | Independent | James B. Longley | 142,464 |
39.14 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Nebraska | Independent | Ernie Chambers | 24,320 |
5.39 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Nevada | Independent American | James Ray Houston | 26,285 |
15.52 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Texas | Raza Unida | Ramsey Muñiz | 93,295 |
5.64 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
1976 | Vermont | Liberty Union | Bernie Sanders | 11,317 |
6.09 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
1978 | Alaska | Republican (Write-In) | Wally Hickel | 33,555 |
26.44 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | ||
Independent | Tom Kelly | 15,656 |
12.34 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
California | Independent[26] | Ed Clark | 377,960 |
5.46 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Maine | Independent | Herman C. Frankland | 65,889 |
17.80 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Rhode Island | Independent | Joseph A. Doorley | 20,381 |
6.48 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
1982 | Alaska | Libertarian | Dick Randolph | 29,067 |
14.92 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Arizona | Libertarian | Sam Steiger | 36,649 |
5.05 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Hawaii | Independent[27] | Frank Fasi | 89,303 |
28.64 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
1986 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Joe Vogler | 10,013 |
5.58 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Arizona | Independent | Bill Schulz | 224,085 |
25.85 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Illinois | Solidarity | Adlai Stevenson III | Mike Howlett | 1,256,626 |
39.97 / 100
|
2nd of 5 | ||
Maine | Independent | Sherry Huber | 64,317 |
15.07 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Independent | John Menario | 63,747 |
14.87 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Oklahoma | Independent | Jerry Brown | 60,115 |
6.61 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Vermont | Independent | Bernie Sanders | 28,418 |
14.45 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1988 | Utah | Independent | Merrill Cook | 136,651 |
21.05 / 100
|
3rd of 5 |
Notable Third Party Gubernatorial Performances (1990–Present) - 64 Entries | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | State | Party | Nominee | Running Mate | # Votes | % Votes | Place | Notes |
1990 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Wally Hickel | Jack Coghill | 75,721 |
38.88 / 100
|
Elected | |
Connecticut | A Connecticut Party | Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. | Eunice Groark | 460,576 |
40.36 / 100
|
Elected | ||
Kansas | Independent | Christina Campbell-Cline | Benton | 69,127 |
8.82 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Maine | Independent | Andrew Adam | 48,377 |
9.26 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
New York | Conservative | Herbert London | Anthony Diperna | 827,614 |
20.40 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | ||
Oklahoma | Independent[28] | Thomas D. Ledgerwood II | 90,534 |
9.93 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Oregon | Independent | Al Mobley | 144,062 |
12.95 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1992 | Utah | Independent | Merrill Cook | Frances Hatch Merrill | 255,753 |
33.54 / 100
|
2nd of 8 | |
West Virginia | Independent (Write-In) | Charlotte Pritt | 48,873 |
7.43 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
1994 | Alaska | Alaskan Independence | Jack Coghill | Margaret Ward | 27,838 |
13.04 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |
Connecticut | A Connecticut Party | Eunice Groark | Audrey Rowe | 216,585 |
18.88 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Independent | Tom Scott | Glen R. O'Keefe | 130,128 |
11.34 / 100
|
4th of 5 | |||
Hawaii | Best Party of Hawaii | Frank Fasi | Danny Kaleikini | 113,158 |
30.67 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | ||
Maine | Independent | Angus King | 180,829 |
35.37 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Green | Jonathan Carter | 32,695 |
6.39 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
New Mexico | Green | Roberto Mondragón | Steven Schmidt | 47,990 |
10.26 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Oklahoma | Independent | Wes Watkins | 233,336 |
23.45 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Pennsylvania | Constitution | Peg Luksik | Jim Clymer | 460,269 |
12.84 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Rhode Island | Independent | Robert J. Healey | 32,822 |
9.08 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Vermont | Independent | Thomas J. Morse | 15,000 |
7.07 / 100
|
3rd of 8 | |||
1998 | Alaska | Republican Moderate | Ray Metcalfe | Clyde Baxley | 13,540 |
6.15 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |
Maine | Independent | Angus King | 246,772 |
58.61 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
Green | Pat LaMarche | 28,722 |
6.82 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
Minnesota | Reform | Jesse Ventura | Mae Schunk | 773,713 |
36.99 / 100
|
Elected | ||
New York | Independence | Tom Golisano | Laureen Oliver | 364,056 |
7.69 / 100
|
3rd of 10 | ||
Pennsylvania | Constitution | Peg Luksik | Jim Clymer | 315,761 |
10.44 / 100
|
3rd of 10 | ||
Rhode Island | Cool Moose | Robert J. Healey | 19,250 |
6.28 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1999 | Kentucky | Reform | Gatewood Galbraith | Kathy Lyons | 88,930 |
6.28 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |
2000 | New Hampshire | Independent | Mary Brown | 35,904 |
6.36 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Vermont | Vermont Progressive | Anthony Pollina | 28,116 |
9.58 / 100
|
3rd of 8 | |||
2002 | Arizona | Independent | Richard Mahoney | 84,947 |
6.93 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
California | Green | Peter Camejo | 393,036 |
5.26 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Maine | Green | Jonathan Carter | 46,903 |
9.28 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Minnesota | Independence | Tim Penny | Martha Robertson | 364,534 |
16.18 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | ||
New Mexico | Green | David Bacon | Kathleen Sanchez | 26,465 |
5.47 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
New York | Independence | Tom Golisano | Mary Donohue | 654,016 |
14.28 / 100
|
3rd of 8 | ||
Oklahoma | Independent | Gary Richardson | 146,200 |
14.12 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Wisconsin | Libertarian | Ed Thompson | Martin Reynolds | 185,455 |
10.45 / 100
|
3rd of 8 | ||
2006 | Alaska | Independent | Andrew Halcro | Fay Von Gemmingen | 22,443 |
9.46 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |
Illinois | Green | Rich Whitney | Julie Samuels | 361,336 |
10.36 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Maine | Independent | Barbara Merrill | 118,720 |
21.55 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Green | Pat LaMarche | 52,690 |
9.56 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||||
Massachusetts | Independent | Christy Mihos | John J. Sullivan | 154,628 |
6.97 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Independence | Peter Hutchinson | Maureen Reed | 141,735 |
6.43 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | ||
Texas | Independent | Carole Keeton Strayhorn | 797,577 |
18.13 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Independent | Kinky Friedman | 546,869 |
12.43 / 100
|
4th of 5 | ||||
2007 | Louisiana | Independent | John Georges | 186,682 |
14.38 / 100
|
3rd of 12 | ||
2008 | Vermont | Independent | Anthony Pollina | 69,791 |
21.87 / 100
|
2nd of 7 | ||
2009 | New Jersey | Independent | Chris Daggett | Frank J. Esposito | 139,579 |
5.75 / 100
|
3rd of 12 | |
2010 | Colorado | Constitution | Tom Tancredo | Pat Miller | 652,376 |
36.38 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |
Idaho | Independent | Jana M. Kemp | 26,655 |
5.89 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Maine | Independent | Eliot Cutler | 208,270 |
36.36 / 100
|
2nd of 6 | |||
Independent | Shawn Moody | 28,756 |
5.02 / 100
|
4th of 6 | ||||
Massachusetts | Independent | Tim Cahill | Paul Loscocco | 184,387 |
8.03 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Minnesota | Independence | Tom Horner | James A. Mulder | 251,487 |
11.94 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | ||
Rhode Island | Independent | Lincoln Chafee | 123,571 |
36.10 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Moderate | Ken Block | 22,146 |
6.47 / 100
|
4th of 7 | ||||
Wyoming | Independent | Taylor Haynes | 13,796 |
7.32 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
2013 | Virginia | Libertarian | Robert Sarvis | 146,084 |
6.52 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
2014 | Alaska | Independent | Bill Walker | Byron Mallott | 134,658 |
48.10 / 100
|
Elected | |
Hawaii | Independent | Mufi Hannemann | Les Chang | 42,934 |
11.72 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||
Maine | Independent | Eliot Cutler | 51,518 |
8.43 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Rhode Island | Moderate | Robert J. Healey | 69,278 |
21.38 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Wyoming | Independent | Don Wills | 9,895 |
5.89 / 100
|
3rd of 4 |
Senatorial
Listed below are Senate elections since 1990 in which an independent or third party candidate won greater than 5% of the vote. Elections in which a third party candidate won are marked with bold typeface.
Notable Third Party Senatorial Performances (1990–Present) - 49 Entries | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | State | Party | Nominee | # Votes | % Votes | Place | Notes | |
1990 | Virginia | Independent | Nancy B. Spannaus | 196,755 |
18.16 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
1992 | Alaska | Green | Mary Jordan | 20,019 |
8.35 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Arizona | Independent | Evan Mecham | 145,361 |
10.52 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Hawaii | Green | Linda B. Martin | 49,921 |
13.73 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Louisiana | Independent | Jon Khachaturian | 74,785 |
8.87 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Ohio | Independent[29] | Martha Grevatt | 331,125 |
6.89 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
1994 | Arizona | Libertarian | Scott Grainger | 75,493 |
6.75 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Independence | Dean Barkley | 95,400 |
5.38 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Ohio | Independent | Joseph J. Slovenec | 252,031 |
7.33 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Vermont | Independent | Gavin T. Mills | 12,465 |
5.89 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
Virginia | Independent | Marshall Coleman | 235,324 |
11.44 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
1996 | Alaska | Green | Scott Grainger | 29,037 |
12.52 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
Minnesota | Reform | Dean Barkley | 152,333 |
6.98 / 100
|
3rd of 8 | |||
2000 | Arizona | Independent | William Toel | 109,230 |
7.82 / 100
|
2nd of 4 | ||
Green | Vance Hansen | 108,926 |
7.80 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | ||||
Libertarian | Barry J. Hess, II | 70,724 |
5.06 / 100
|
4th of 4 | ||||
Massachusetts | Libertarian | Carla Howell | 308,860 |
11.88 / 100
|
3rd of 6 | |||
Minnesota | Independence | James Gibson | 140,583 |
6.98 / 100
|
3rd of 7 | |||
2002 | Alaska | Green | Jim Sykes | 16,608 |
7.24 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | ||
Kansas | Libertarian | Steven A. Rosile | 70,725 |
9.10 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
Reform | George Cook | 65,050 |
8.37 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||||
Massachusetts | Libertarian | Michael E. Cloud | 369,807 |
18.43 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Mississippi | Reform | Shawn O'Hara | 97,226 |
15.42 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Oklahoma | Independent | James Germalic | 65,056 |
6.39 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Virginia | Independent | Nancy B. Spannaus | 145,102 |
9.74 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | |||
Independent[30] | Jacob G. Hornberger, Jr. | 106,055 |
7.12 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||||
2004 | Oklahoma | Independent | Sheila Bilyeu | 86,663 |
5.99 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
2006 | Connecticut | Connecticut for Lieberman | Joe Lieberman | 564,095 |
49.71 / 100
|
Re-Elected | ||
Indiana | Libertarian | Steve Osborn | 168,820 |
12.59 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | |||
Maine | Independent | William H. Slavick | 29,230 |
5.37 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Vermont | Independent | Bernie Sanders | 171,638 |
65.41 / 100
|
Elected | |||
2008 | Arkansas | Green | Rebekah Kennedy | 207,076 |
20.47 / 100
|
2nd of 2 | ||
Idaho | Independent | Rex Rammell | 34,510 |
5.35 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Minnesota | Independence | Dean Barkley | 437,505 |
15.15 / 100
|
3rd of 5 | |||
Oregon | Constitution | Dave Brownlow | 92,565 |
5.24 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
2010 | Alaska | Republican (Write-In) | Lisa Murkowski | 101,091 |
39.49 / 100
|
Re-Elected | ||
Florida | Independent | Charlie Crist | 1,607,549 |
29.71 / 100
|
2nd of 10 | |||
Indiana | Libertarian | Rebecca Sink-Burris | 94,330 |
5.41 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
South Carolina | Green | Tom Clements | 121,472 |
9.21 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Utah | Constitution | Scott N. Bradley | 35,937 |
5.67 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
2012 | Indiana | Libertarian | Andy Horning | 145,374 |
5.67 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | ||
Maine | Independent | Angus King | 370,580 |
52.89 / 100
|
Elected | |||
Maryland | Independent | Rob Sobhani | 430,934 |
16.37 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Missouri | Libertarian | Jonathan Dine | 165,468 |
6.07 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Montana | Libertarian | Dan Cox | 31,892 |
6.56 / 100
|
3rd of 3 | |||
Vermont | Independent | Bernie Sanders | 209,053 |
71.04 / 100
|
Re-Elected | |||
2014 | Kansas | Independent | Greg Orman | 368,372 |
42.53 / 100
|
2nd of 3 | ||
South Dakota | Independent | Larry Pressler | 47,741 |
17.09 / 100
|
3rd of 4 | |||
Wyoming | Independent | Curt Gottshall | 13,311 |
7.90 / 100
|
3rd of 4 |
Presidential
Listed below is any election since 1856. Elections where a candidate won electoral votes (excepting faithless electors) are marked with an asterisk (*).
1856*
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In 1856 the two-party system of Democrats and Whigs collapsed. The Whigs, who had been one-half of the two-party system since 1832 and had won the presidency in 1840 and 1848, disintegrated. Southern Whigs and a minority of northern Whigs coalesced around the anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic American Party, better known as the "Know Nothing" movement. Their candidate was former President Millard Fillmore, who won 22% but carried only one state, Maryland, thus winning 8 electoral votes. Many Northern Whigs, such as Abraham Lincoln, joined the newly formed Republican Party. The Republicans ran John C. Frémont, who finished second with 33.1% and 114 electoral votes. Democrat James Buchanan won the election.
1860*
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John C. Breckinridge, the third party candidate of southern Democrats, got 18.2% of the popular vote and won 72 electoral votes from several south states. John Bell of the Constitutional Union Party finished with 12.6% of the popular vote, but only won 39 electoral votes from three states. Though both Bell and Breckinridge were unable to capture as many popular votes as the two main presidential candidates (Republican Abraham Lincoln and Democrat Stephen A. Douglas), this election would mark the first time any third party received more electoral votes than one of the major candidates in a US presidential election. Douglas finished with 29.5% of the popular vote, but only won 12 electoral votes from two states.
1872
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In the 1872 election, newspaper publisher and former Congressman Horace Greeley was nominated by the Liberal Republicans to oppose incumbent Republican President Ulysses S. Grant. The Liberal Republicans were a breakaway faction of the Republican Party that was dissatisfied with Grant's presidency. Determined to defeat Grant, the Democratic Party also nominated Greeley, making Greeley both a third party nominee and a major party nominee. Greeley won six states and 43.8% of the popular vote, but died shortly after election day, so most of the electoral votes that were pledged to Greeley instead went to Democrat Thomas Hendricks or Greeley's running mate, Liberal Republican Benjamin Gratz Brown.
1892*
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James B. Weaver, the Greenback Labor nominee in 1880, ran as presidential candidate for the Populist Party. The Populist Party won 22 electoral votes and 8.51 percent of the popular vote [1]. The Democratic Party eventually adopted many Populist Party positions after this election, notably the Populist call for the free coinage of silver, making this contest a prominent example of a delayed vote for change.
1912*
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Republican Theodore Roosevelt ran as the "Bull Moose Party" (Progressive Party) nominee in the 1912 election. Roosevelt won 27.4% of the popular vote and carried six states totaling 88 electoral votes. Overall, Roosevelt's effort was the most successful third-party candidacy in American history. It was also the only third-party effort to finish higher than third in the popular votes and only the second to do so in electoral votes. Instead incumbent Republican President William Howard Taft finished third, taking only 23% of the popular vote and 8 electoral votes. The split in the Republican vote gave Democrat Woodrow Wilson victory with 42% of the popular vote, but 435 electoral votes.
Eugene V. Debs, running in his fourth consecutive Presidential election as the Socialist Party candidate, won 6% of the vote, an all-time high for the Socialists. The elections of 1860 and 1912 are the only two times that four candidates each cleared 5% of the popular vote in a Presidential election.
1924*
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Erstwhile Republican Robert M. La Follette ran as a Progressive. After the Democrats nominated conservative John W. Davis, many liberal Democrats turned to La Follette. He received 4,831,706 votes for 16.6% of the popular vote and won his home state of Wisconsin receiving 13 electoral votes. With the Democrats split, incumbent President Calvin Coolidge won election by a wide margin.
1948*
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Democrat Strom Thurmond ran on the segregationist States' Rights ("Dixiecrat") ticket. Former Vice President Henry A. Wallace ran on the liberal left as the candidate of a new Progressive Party. Thus the Democratic vote was split three ways, between Thurmond on the right, Wallace on the left, and incumbent President Harry S. Truman in the center. Thurmond received 1,175,930 votes (2.4%) and 39 votes in the electoral college from Southern states. Wallace earned 1,157,328 votes for an identical 2.4% of the popular vote, but no votes in the Electoral College due to his support being mostly concentrated in the more populous states of New York and California.
1968*
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Former Democratic Governor of Alabama George Wallace ran on the American Independent Party line. Wallace received 9,901,118 votes for 13.5% of the popular vote, receiving 45 electoral votes in the South and many votes in the North. Wallace remains the only third party candidate since 1948 to win a state.
1980
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Congressman John B. Anderson received 5,719,850 votes, for 6.6% of the vote, as an independent candidate for President. Libertarian Party candidate Ed Clark won 921,128 votes, or 1.1% of the total. No other Libertarian candidate has ever gotten more than 0.5% in a presidential election until Gary Johnson won 1% in 2012.
1992
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Ross Perot, an independent, won 18.9% of the popular vote (but no electoral votes). His was the best popular vote showing ever for an independent candidate who stood alone on no third party ticket. Not until four years later would Perot seek to run for the first time on a third party ticket. As an independent, however, Perot finished second in two states: in Utah ahead of election winner Bill Clinton, and in Maine ahead of incumbent President George H. W. Bush.
1996
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Ross Perot ran for president again, this time as the candidate of the newly founded Reform Party. He won 8% of the popular vote.
Tables
Notable Third Party Presidential Performances (1832–Present) Captured at least 1 electoral vote or more than (or reasonably close to) 5% of the popular vote. |
|||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Party | Nominee | Running-Mate | # Votes | % Votes | % Votes Where Balloted |
Electoral Votes | Place | Notes |
1832 | Nullifier | John Floyd | Henry Lee | 0[31] |
0 / 100
|
N/A[32] |
11 / 286
|
3rd of 4 | |
Anti-Masonic | William Wirt | Amos Ellmaker | 99,817 |
7.78 / 100
|
15.93 / 100
|
7 / 286
|
4th of 4 | ||
1848 | Free Soil | Martin Van Buren | Charles F. Adams | 291,475 |
10.13 / 100
|
13.79 / 100
|
0 / 290
|
3rd of 4 | |
1852 | Free Soil | John P. Hale | George W. Julian | 155,799 |
4.93 / 100
|
6.15 / 100
|
0 / 296
|
3rd of 6 | |
1856 | American | Millard Fillmore | Andrew J. Donelson | 872,703 |
21.54 / 100
|
21.54 / 100
|
8 / 296
|
3rd of 3 | |
1860 | Constitutional Democratic | John C. Breckinridge | Joseph Lane | 851,844 |
18.20 / 100
|
22.04 / 100
|
72 / 303
|
2nd of 4 | |
Constitutional Union | John Bell | Edward Everett | 590,946 |
12.62 / 100
|
15.43 / 100
|
39 / 303
|
3rd of 4 | ||
1892 | People's | James B. Weaver | James G. Field | 1,026,595 |
8.51 / 100
|
8.62 / 100
|
22 / 444
|
3rd of 5 | |
1912 | Progressive | Theodore Roosevelt | Hiram Johnson | 4,120,609 |
27.39 / 100
|
27.86 / 100
|
88 / 531
|
2nd of 6 | |
Socialist | Eugene V. Debs | Emil Seidel | 900,742 |
5.99 / 100
|
5.99 / 100
|
0 / 531
|
4th of 6 | ||
1924 | Progressive | Robert M. La Follette | Burton K. Wheeler | 4,833,821 |
16.62 / 100
|
16.69 / 100
|
13 / 531
|
3rd of 8 | |
1948 | States' Rights Democratic | Strom Thurmond | Fielding L. Wright | 1,175,946 |
2.41 / 100
|
17.70 / 100
|
39 / 531
|
3rd of 8 | |
1968 | American Independent | George Wallace | Curtis LeMay | 9,901,118 |
13.53 / 100
|
13.56 / 100
|
46 / 538
|
3rd of 12 | |
1980 | Independent | John B. Anderson | Patrick Lucey | 5,719,850 |
6.61 / 100
|
6.61 / 100
|
0 / 538
|
3rd of 19 | |
1992 | Independent | Ross Perot | James Stockdale | 19,743,821 |
18.91 / 100
|
18.91 / 100
|
0 / 538
|
3rd of 23 | |
1996 | Reform | Ross Perot | Pat Choate | 8,085,402 |
8.40 / 100
|
8.40 / 100
|
0 / 538
|
3rd of 21 |
Other Third Party Presidential Candidacies (1832–Present) Captured less than 5% but more than (or reasonably close to) 1% of the popular vote. |
|||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Party | Nominee | Running-Mate | # Votes | % Votes | % Votes Where Balloted |
Place | Note | |
1844 | Liberty Party | James G. Birney | Thomas Morris | 62,300 |
2.31 / 100
|
3.28 / 100
|
3rd | [33] | |
1876 | Greenback | Peter Cooper | Samuel Fenton Cary | 81,737 |
0.97 / 100
|
1.24 / 100
|
3rd | [34] | |
1880 | Greenback | James B. Weaver | Benjamin J. Chambers | 308,578 |
3.35 / 100
|
3.45 / 100
|
3rd | [35] | |
1884 | Greenback | Benajamin F. Butler | Absolom M. West | 175,370 |
1.74 / 100
|
2.16 / 100
|
3rd | [36] | |
Prohibition | John St. John | William Daniel | 150,369 |
1.50 / 100
|
1.57 / 100
|
4th | [37] | ||
1888 | Prohibition | Clinton Fisk | John A. Brooks | 249,506 |
2.19 / 100
|
2.21 / 100
|
3rd | [38] | |
Union Labor | Alson Streeter | Charles E. Cunningham | 146,935 |
1.29 / 100
|
1.54 / 100
|
4th | [39] | ||
1892 | Prohibition | John Bidwell | James Cranfill | 255,841 |
2.12 / 100
|
2.17 / 100
|
4th | [40] | |
1896 | National Democratic | John M. Palmer | Simon Bolivar Buckner | 134,645 |
0.97 / 100
|
0.99 / 100
|
3rd | [41] | |
Prohibition | Joshua Levering | Hale Johnson | 131,312 |
0.94 / 100
|
0.96 / 100
|
4th | [42] | ||
1900 | Prohibition | John G. Woolley | Henry B. Metcalf | 209,157 |
1.50 / 100
|
1.52 / 100
|
3rd | [43] | |
1904 | Socialist | Eugene V. Debs | Benjamin Hanford | 402,895 |
2.98 / 100
|
2.98 / 100
|
3rd | [44] | |
Prohibition | Silas C. Swallow | George W. Carroll | 258,950 |
1.91 / 100
|
1.96 / 100
|
4th | [45] | ||
1908 | Socialist | Eugene V. Debs | Benjamin Hanford | 420,890 |
2.83 / 100
|
2.84 / 100
|
3rd | [46] | |
Prohibition | Eugene W. Chafin | Aaron S. Watkins | 252,511 |
1.70 / 100
|
1.80 / 100
|
4th | [47] | ||
1912 | Prohibition | Eugene W. Chafin | Aaron S. Watkins | 207,828 |
1.38 / 100
|
1.46 / 100
|
5th | [48] | |
1916 | Socialist | Allan L. Benson | George R. Kirkpatrick | 585,113 |
3.17 / 100
|
3.19 / 100
|
3rd | [49] | |
Prohibition | Frank Hanly | Ira Landrith | 220,506 |
1.19 / 100
|
1.24 / 100
|
4th | [50] | ||
1920 | Socialist | Eugene V. Debs | Seymour Stedman | 919,799 |
3.44 / 100
|
3.53 / 100
|
3rd | [51] | |
Farmer–Labor | Parley P. Christensen | Max S. Hayes | 265,411 |
0.99 / 100
|
1.77 / 100
|
4th | [52] | ||
1932 | Socialist | Norman Thomas | James H. Maurer | 884,781 |
2.22 / 100
|
2.28 / 100
|
3rd | [53] | |
1936 | Union | William Lemke | Thomas O'Brien | 882,479 |
1.93 / 100
|
2.88 / 100
|
3rd | [54] | |
1948 | Progressive | Henry A. Wallace | Glen H. Taylor | 1,157,172 |
2.37 / 100
|
2.65 / 100
|
4th | [55] | |
1972 | American Independent | John G. Schmitz | Thomas J. Anderson | 1,100,868 |
1.42 / 100
|
1.79 / 100
|
3rd | ||
1976 | Independent | Eugene McCarthy | Various | 740,640 |
0.91 / 100
|
1.20 / 100
|
3rd | ||
1980 | Libertarian | Ed Clark | David H. Koch | 921,128 |
1.06 / 100
|
1.06 / 100
|
4th | ||
2000 | Green | Ralph Nader | Winona LaDuke | 2,882,955 |
2.74 / 100
|
2.86 / 100
|
3rd | ||
2012 | Libertarian | Gary Johnson | James P. Gray | 1,275,971 |
0.99 / 100
|
1.03 / 100
|
3rd |
Others
- Maine Green Party State Representative John Eder, 2002
- San Francisco mayoral election, 2003
- Richmond, California municipal elections, 2006
- Burlington, Vermont mayoral election, 2009
- New York City mayoral election, 2009
See also
References
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- ↑ The threshold is >5% of the vote.
- ↑ While Caffery is listed as running on a Fusion Ticket, the nature of the electoral alliance is not yet determined.
- ↑ A Fusion of the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ A Fusion of the state Democratic and Silver Parties
- ↑ A short-lived party formed by Anti-Prohibition Republicans which desired to see Prohibition legislated at the local level rather than at the state level.
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ The State Affiliate of the Socialist Party
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ A Fusion of the state Democratic and Silver Parties
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance between the state Democratic and Peoples' Parties
- ↑ The State Affiliate of the Socialist Party
- ↑ The State Affiliate of the Socialist Party
- ↑ State Affiliate of the Socialist Party
- ↑ The State Affiliate of the Socialist Party
- ↑ On Ballot as "Independent Progressive"
- ↑ The State Affiliate of the Socialist Party
- ↑ On Ballot as "Negro Independent"
- ↑ Affiliated with the Farmer–Labor Party
- ↑ State Affiliate of the Prohibition Party
- ↑ An Electoral Alliance Between Lewis Pope and the Republican Party
- ↑ On the Ballot as "Good Government, Good Elections"
- ↑ Affiliated with the Libertarian Party
- ↑ On Ballot as an Independent Democrat
- ↑ Was on Ballot as "Reform"
- ↑ Affiliated with the Workers World Party
- ↑ Affiliated with the Libertarian Party
- ↑ All of John Floyd's electoral votes came from South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislatures rather than by popular vote
- ↑ All of John Floyd's electoral votes came from South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislatures rather than by popular vote
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume I 1789-1844, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 861
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1487
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1558
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1611
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1611
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1700
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1700
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1784
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1874
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume II 1848-1896, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1874
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 1962
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2046
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2046
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2131
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2131
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2242
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2345
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2345
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2456
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2456
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2806
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume III 1900-1936, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 2914
- ↑ "History of American Presidential Elections, Volume IV 1940-1968, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., Pg 3211