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1996 United States Senate election in Arkansas

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FieldValue
election_name1996 United States Senate election in Arkansas
countryArkansas
flag_year1924
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1990 United States Senate election in Arkansas
previous_year1990
next_election2002 United States Senate election in Arkansas
next_year2002
election_dateNovember 5, 1996
image_size150x150px
image1File:Timothy Hutchinson, official Senate photo portrait (cropped).jpg
nominee1**Tim Hutchinson**
party1Republican Party (United States)
popular_vote1**445,942**
percentage1**52.70%**
image2File:Winston Bryant (cropped).png
nominee2Winston Bryant
party2Democratic Party (United States)
popular_vote2400,241
percentage247.30%
map_image1996 United States Senate election in Arkansas results map by county.svg
map_size210px
map_captionCounty results
titleU.S. Senator
before_electionDavid Pryor
before_partyDemocratic Party (United States)
after_electionTim Hutchinson
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)

Hutchinson:
Bryant:
The 1996 United States Senate election in Arkansas was held on November 5, 1996. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator David Pryor decided to retire. Republican Tim Hutchinson won the open seat, becoming the first Republican to win a U.S. Senate seat in Arkansas since Reconstruction in 1872 and the first to ever be popularly elected in the state. He was the first to win this seat since 1870. Hutchinson lost re-election in 2002 to David Pryor's son Mark Pryor.

In the concurrent presidential election in Arkansas, Democrat Bill Clinton — a native Arkansan who had previously served as governor — defeated Republican Bob Dole. To date, this is the last time that Republicans flipped a Senate seat in a presidential election year despite losing the state in the presidential election.

Democratic primary

Candidates

  • Bill Bristow, attorney
  • Winston Bryant, Arkansas Attorney General
  • Lu Hardin, state senator
  • Sandy McMath, attorney and son of former governor Sidney Sanders McMath
  • Kevin Smith, state senator

Withdrew

  • Jay Bradford, state senator from Pine Bluff, Senate Majority Whip, and Democratic nominee for U.S. representative in 1994 (endorsed Bryant)
  • Pat Hays, mayor of North Little Rock (endorsed Bryant)

Declined

  • Mike Beebe, then a state senator in the Arkansas General Assembly and a future governor; explored a bid but didn't announce
  • Mack McLarty, 17th White House Chief of Staff (endorsed McMath)
  • Lamar Pettus, associate justice of the Supreme Court of Arkansas (ran for chief justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court)

Arkansas Attorney General Winston Bryant and Arkansas State Senator Lu Hardin finished in the top two in the primary, and Bryant narrowly defeated Hardin in the runoff.

Results (primary)

Runoff

Republican primary

Candidates

  • Mike Huckabee, lieutenant governor of Arkansas

Results

Huckabee was unopposed for the nomination.

Huckabee withdrawal

Although Huckabee won the Senate nomination unopposed in the May primary, he abandoned his Senate bid when Governor Jim Guy Tucker resigned from office and he became governor of Arkansas.

Replacement selection

Following Huckabee's withdrawal, several candidates announced their interest in running:

  • John E. Brown, state senator from Siloam Springs
  • Jay Dickey, U.S. representative from Pine Bluff
  • Tim Hutchinson, U.S. representative from Fort Smith
  • Julia Hughes Jones, former Arkansas State Auditor (1980—1994)

The main candidates were Dickey and Hutchinson, but in light of a potential impasse, some compromise candidates were floated:

  • Ed Bethune, former U.S. representative from Searcy and nominee for Senate in 1984
  • Steve Luelf, former state senator and candidate for governor in 1994
  • Sheffield Nelson, chair of the Arkansas Republican Party and gubernatorial nominee in 1990 and 1994
  • Tommy F. Robinson, former U.S. representative and candidate for governor in 1990
  • Frank D. White, former governor of Arkansas (1980–1982)

On June 11, White, Nelson, and Bethune all endorsed Hutchinson. Shortly thereafter, Jones and Dickey withdrew and endorsed Hutchinson. Brown also withdrew his candidacy to seek Hutchinson's open House seat, which he lost to Hutchinson's younger brother Asa Hutchinson in a special convention. Hutchinson was ratified as the nominee by the Arkansas Republican State Committee.

Results

Hutchinson won election to the U.S. Senate, receiving just over 5% more of the vote than his opponent Bryant. This was despite incumbent U.S. President Bill Clinton being re-elected by a 17-point margin in his home state of Arkansas, though the state had begun to trend more Republican at the time.

Notes

References

References

  1. "AR US Senate - D Primary 1996".
  2. (17 May 1996). "Who are these guys?". Arkansas Times.
  3. "Access Books, Audiobooks, Magazines and More!".
  4. (21 April 1995). "Senate Demos Lining up to Retire -- Pryor the Fifth".
  5. (1995-04-22). "Pryor Makes It Official, He'S Leaving The Senate". The Washington Post.
  6. (1 May 1995). "Democrats See 'Solid South' Slipping Away". Christian Science Monitor.
  7. (29 April 2019). "Mack the Nice: Thomas F. "Mack" McLarty, III".
  8. (28 April 2021). "Other days".
  9. "AR US Senate - D Runoff 1996".
  10. "AllPolitics - Wanted: A Senate Candidate - May 31, 1996".
  11. "Encyclopedia of Arkansas".
  12. "Encyclopedia of Arkansas".
  13. "AllPolitics - Arkansas GOP Gets Top State Office but Loses Top Senate Candidate".
  14. "AllPolitics - Bryant, Hutchinson Contend for Open Senate Seat in Arkansas".
  15. "Our Campaigns - AR US Senate Race - Nov 05, 1996".
  16. "Our Campaigns - AR US Senate Race - Nov 05, 2002".
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