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1996 Democratic Party presidential primaries

Selection of the Democratic Party nominee


Selection of the Democratic Party nominee

FieldValue
election_name1996 Democratic Party presidential primaries
countryUnited States
typeprimary
ongoingno
previous_election1992 Democratic Party presidential primaries
previous_year1992
election_dateJanuary 29 to June 4, 1996
<!-- Bill Clinton -->next_election2000 Democratic Party presidential primaries
next_year2000
image1Image:Bill Clinton.jpg
image_size150x150px
candidate1**Bill Clinton**
color16c00e8
home_state1Arkansas
states_carried1**34**
popular_vote1**9,706,802**
percentage1**89.0%**
<!-- Uncommitted -->image2File:NOTA Option Logo 3x4.svg
candidate2Uncommitted
color2000000
home_state2
states_carried2[1](1996-michigan-democratic-presidential-primary)
popular_vote2411,270
percentage23.8%
<!-- Roland Riemers -->image4File:3x4.svg
candidate4Roland Riemers
color4ea5b00
home_state4North Dakota
states_carried4[1](1996-north-dakota-democratic-presidential-primary)
popular_vote4651
percentage40.006%
<!-- Lyndon LaRouche -->image5Image:Lyndon LaRouche (cropped).jpg
candidate5Lyndon LaRouche
colour5668c63
home_state5Virginia
states_carried50
popular_vote5596,422
percentage55.5%
map_image
map_caption
{{legend#6c00e8Bill Clintonborder1}}
{{legend#000000Uncommittedborder1}}
{{legend#ea5b00Roland Riemersborder1}}
{{legend#d3d3d3No Primary Heldborder1}}
titleDemocratic nominee
before_electionBill Clinton
after_electionBill Clinton

From January 29 to June 4, 1996, voters of the Democratic Party chose its nominee for president in the 1996 United States presidential election. Incumbent President Bill Clinton was again selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 1996 Democratic National Convention held from August 26 to August 29, 1996, in Chicago, Illinois.

This was the first Democratic presidential primary in 16 years in which an incumbent president was a candidate. Clinton went on to win reelection, thereby becoming the first Democratic president since Franklin D. Roosevelt to win two consecutive presidential elections.

Primary race overview

With the advantage of incumbency, Bill Clinton's path to renomination by the Democratic Party was uneventful. At the 1996 Democratic National Convention, Clinton - along with incumbent Vice President Al Gore - was renominated following a primary race in which he faced only token opposition. Perennial candidate Lyndon LaRouche qualified for one delegate from Virginia and one delegate from Louisiana, but the state parties refused to award him delegates and the First District Court of Appeals upheld their decision. Former Pennsylvania governor Bob Casey contemplated a challenge to Clinton, but health problems forced Casey to abandon a bid. That left Jimmy Griffin, the former mayor of Buffalo, New York, as the highest-ranking challenger still in the race. After finishing in eighth place, behind even the perennial candidates, in the New Hampshire primaries, Griffin dropped out of the race. Clinton easily won primaries nationwide, with margins consistently higher than 80%.

Roland Riemers scored a victory in the North Dakota primary, where Clinton did not file to appear on the ballot.

Backed by a loyal following, LaRouche managed to get on the ballot in most states and amassed over half a million votes nationwide in the primary. His highest percentage was 13.4% in West Virginia and received over a hundred thousand votes in California.

Another notable campaign besides LaRouche's to challenge President Clinton was Chicago housewife Elvena Lloyd-Duffie, who was reported to have outraised him at one point and got as high as 11% of the vote in Oklahoma and 7% in Louisiana.

Candidates

Nominee

CandidateMost recent officeHome stateCampaignPopularContests wonRunning mateBill Clinton
[[File:Bill Clinton.jpg127x127px]]**President of the United States**
(1993–2001)Arkansas[[File:Clinton Gore 96.svg149x149px]]**9,706,802****34**
Al Gore

Withdrew during primaries

  • Activist Lyndon LaRouche from Virginia
  • Former Mayor of Buffalo Jimmy Griffin from New York

Declined

  • Bill Bradley, U.S. senator from New Jersey
  • Bob Casey Sr., former governor of Pennsylvania
  • Mario Cuomo, former governor of New York
  • Dick Gephardt, House minority leader and U.S. representative from Missouri
  • Gary Hart, former U.S. senator from Colorado
  • Jesse Jackson, 1984 and 1988 candidate
  • Bob Kerrey, U.S. senator from Nebraska
  • Colin Powell, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (Republican)

Results

With a number of non-notable people running against Clinton and LaRouche in several states, The nationwide totals went as follows:

CandidatePopular voteContests won**Total**
**Bill Clinton**9,706,802 (88.94%)34
Lyndon H. LaRouche, Jr.596,422 (5.47%)
*Uncommitted*411,270 (3.77%)[1](1996-michigan-democratic-primary)
Elvena Lloyd-Duffie92,324 (0.85%)
Fred Hudson32,232 (0.30%)
Heather Anne Harder29,147 (0.27%)
Ted Gunderson15,712 (0.14%)
Sal Casamassima9,693 (0.08%)
Ralph Nader†6,786 (0.06%)
Pat Buchanan†3,362 (0.03%)
Lamar Alexander†1,888 (0.02%)
Pat Paulsen1,317 (0.01%)
Steve Forbes†1,297 (0.01%)
Bob Dole†1,257 (0.01%)
Al Gore†679 (0.006%)
Carmen C. Chimento656 (0.006%)
Roland Riemers651 (0.006%)[1](1996-north-dakota-democratic-primary)
Richard Lugar†410 (0.004%)
Vernon Clemenson384 (0.004%)
Bruce C. Daniels312 (0.003%)
James D. Griffin307 (0.003%)
Alan L. Keyes†281 (0.003%)
Colin Powell†280 (0.003%)
Steve Michael94 (0.0008%)
Willie Felix Carter85 (0.0008%)
Robert D. Rucker81 (0.0007%)
David S. Pauling74 (0.0007%)
Vincent S. Hamm72 (0.0007%)
Frank Legas63 (0.0006%)
Ronald Spangler62 (0.0006%)
Michael E. Dass57 (0.0005%)
Ben J. Tomeo47 (0.0004%)
John Safran42 (0.0004%)
10,914,14636

† Indicates a write-in candidate

References

References

  1. [http://pacer.cadc.uscourts.gov/common/opinions/199808/96-7191a.txt LaRouche v. Fowler]. ''United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit''. 2008-08-28
  2. (May 1, 1995). "Anyone left? The search for a Clinton challenger in 1996.". TheFreeLibrary.com.
  3. Newton-Small, Jay. (November 24, 2009). "Can a Pro-Life Dem Bridge the Health-Care Divide?".
  4. [https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=55214 US President - D Primaries]. ''OurCampaigns''.
  5. "Ballot Access News -- March 6, 1996".
  6. [https://transition.fec.gov/pubrec/fe1996/presprim.htm#nd FEC: 1996 Presidential Primary Results]
  7. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2015/12/18/lqeither-a-woman-youve-never-heard-of-outraised-bill-clinton-in-1996-or-campaign-finance-reports-are-murky/ The Washington Post]{{dead link. (June 2021)
  8. "Election and voting information".
  9. (1997). "Toward the millennium: the elections of 1996". [[Allyn & Bacon]].
  10. "Our Campaigns - US President - D Primaries Race - Feb 01, 1996".
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