Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2000 United States presidential election in Tennessee

none


none

FieldValue
election_name2000 United States presidential election in Tennessee
countryTennessee
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1996 United States presidential election in Tennessee
previous_year1996
next_election2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee
next_year2004
election_dateNovember 7, 2000
image_sizex200px
image1File:GeorgeWBush (1).jpg
nominee1**George W. Bush**
party1Republican Party (United States)
home_state1Texas
running_mate1**Dick Cheney**
electoral_vote1**11**
popular_vote1**1,061,949**
percentage1**51.15%**
image2Al Gore, Vice President of the United States, official portrait 1994 (3x4 close cropped).jpg
nominee2Al Gore
party2Democratic Party (United States)
home_state2Tennessee
running_mate2Joe Lieberman
electoral_vote20
popular_vote2981,720
percentage247.28%
map_image
map_caption
titlePresident
before_electionBill Clinton
before_partyDemocratic Party (United States)
after_electionGeorge W. Bush
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)
turnout63.03% 0.26 pp

Main article: 2000 United States presidential election

Bush Gore The 2000 United States presidential election in Tennessee was held on November 7, 2000, and was part of the 2000 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Tennessee was won by Texas Governor George W. Bush by a 3.87% margin of victory, despite having voted for President Bill Clinton in 1992 and 1996 and being the home state of Vice President Al Gore. If Gore had carried his home state, he, instead of Bush, would have been elected president.

Gore's defeat was considered an upset, as he had previously won every county in Tennessee in 1990 in his Senate bid and was popular in the state prior to his election as vice president.

This was the last of three consecutive elections in which Tennessee was decided by single-digit margins, and as of 2024, this is the last election in which Tennessee was decided by less than 10%. Since 2000, Tennessee has rapidly moved away from swing state status and become a Republican stronghold. Gore was the first major party nominee to lose his home state since George McGovern lost South Dakota in 1972. Additionally, this was the first election where a presidential nominee won the state with more than a million votes.

, this is the last election in which Campbell County, Lewis County, Robertson County, Gibson County, Dickson County, Bedford County, Franklin County, Warren County, Henry County, Marshall County, Giles County, Marion County, White County, Hickman County, DeKalb County, Crockett County, Cannon County, and Decatur County voted for the Democratic nominee. Gore's victories in Marion and Campbell remain the last time that a Democrat has carried any county in staunchly Republican East Tennessee, this was also the last time a Democrat crossed 40% in East Tennessee. The election served as the last in which Tennessee was regarded as a swing state in some outlets.

Primary elections

Democratic primary

Main article: 2000 Tennessee Democratic presidential primary

(withdrawn) Gore:
The number of pledged delegates received is determined by the popular vote

Vice president Al Gore easily decided the primary in his home state, winning 92.1% of the vote and all 68 delegates. Senator Bill Bradley took only 5.3% of the vote and earned 0 delegates, while Lyndon LaRouche Jr. only got 0.5% of the vote.

CandidateVotes%url=https://www.thegreenpapers.com/PCC/TN-D.htmltitle=Election 2000: Tennessee Democratwebsite=The Green Papersaccess-date=September 15, 2023}}Total215,203100%81
**Al Gore****198,264****92.13****68**
Bill Bradley (withdrawn)11,3235.26}}
*Uncommitted*4,4072.0513
Lyndon LaRouche Jr.1,0310.48}}
*Write-in votes*1780.08

Republican primary

Main article: 2000 Tennessee Republican presidential primary

Bush:

George W. Bush won the primary with 77.0% of the vote and all 37 of the state's delegates. John McCain came second with 14.5% of the vote. Alan Keyes came third with 6.8% of the vote.

CandidateVotesPercentageDelegates
**George W. Bush****193,166****77.02%****37**
John McCain36,43614.53%0
Alan Keyes16,9166.75%0
Gary Bauer1,3050.52%0
Steve Forbes1,0180.41%0
Orrin Hatch2520.10%0
Write-ins750.03%0
Uncommitted1,6230.65%0
**Total****250,791****100.00%****37**

Results

By county

CountyGeorge W. Bush
RepublicanAl Gore
DemocraticVarious candidates
Other partiesMarginTotal#%#%#%#%Totals1,061,94951.15%981,72047.28%32,5121.57%80,2293.87%2,076,181
Anderson14,68851.04%13,55647.10%5351.86%1,1323.94%28,779
Bedford5,91148.42%6,13650.27%1601.31%-225-1.85%12,207
Benton2,48439.36%3,70058.63%1272.01%-1,216-19.27%6,311
Bledsoe2,38056.72%1,75641.85%601.43%62414.87%4,196
Blount25,27362.15%14,68836.12%7011.72%10,58526.03%40,662
Bradley20,16768.50%8,76829.78%5081.73%11,39938.72%29,443
Campbell5,78446.57%6,49252.27%1451.17%-708-5.70%12,421
Cannon1,92440.96%2,69757.42%761.62%-773-16.46%4,697
Carroll5,46550.48%5,23948.39%1231.14%2262.09%10,827
Carter12,11163.40%6,72435.20%2671.40%5,38728.20%19,102
Cheatham6,35650.38%6,06248.05%1981.57%2942.33%12,616
Chester3,48760.88%2,19238.27%490.86%1,29522.61%5,728
Claiborne5,02355.81%3,84142.68%1361.51%1,18213.13%9,000
Clay1,46842.65%1,93156.10%431.25%-463-13.45%3,442
Cocke6,18560.41%3,87237.82%1821.78%2,31322.59%10,239
Coffee8,78849.40%8,74149.14%2591.46%470.26%17,788
Crockett2,67649.19%2,70549.72%591.08%-29-0.53%5,440
Cumberland10,99457.81%7,64440.20%3791.99%3,35017.61%19,017
Davidson84,11740.33%120,50857.77%3,9631.90%-36,391-17.44%208,588
Decatur2,04646.82%2,27852.13%461.05%-232-5.31%4,370
DeKalb2,41138.48%3,76560.10%891.42%-1,354-21.62%6,265
Dickson7,01645.10%8,33253.56%2081.34%-1,316-8.46%15,556
Dyer6,28253.05%5,42545.82%1341.13%8577.23%11,841
Fayette6,40255.53%5,03743.69%900.78%1,36511.84%11,529
Fentress3,41756.68%2,52941.95%831.38%88814.73%6,029
Franklin6,56044.65%7,82853.28%3032.06%-1,268-8.63%14,691
Gibson8,28648.35%8,66350.55%1881.10%-377-2.20%17,137
Giles4,37743.48%5,52754.91%1621.61%-1,150-11.43%10,066
Grainger3,74660.48%2,36138.12%871.40%1,38522.36%6,194
Greene12,54060.24%7,90937.99%3671.76%4,63122.25%20,816
Grundy1,55333.79%2,97064.62%731.59%-1,417-30.83%4,596
Hamblen11,82460.02%7,56438.40%3111.58%4,26021.62%19,699
Hamilton66,60555.33%51,70842.95%2,0661.72%14,89712.38%120,379
Hancock1,34364.72%69033.25%422.02%65331.47%2,075
Hardeman3,72942.36%4,95356.26%1211.37%-1,224-13.90%8,803
Hardin4,95156.38%3,73542.53%961.09%1,21613.85%8,782
Hawkins10,07158.90%6,75339.50%2741.60%3,31819.40%17,098
Haywood2,55439.43%3,88760.00%370.57%-1,333-20.57%6,478
Henderson5,15361.35%3,16637.69%800.95%1,98723.66%8,399
Henry5,94448.29%6,09349.50%2722.21%-149-1.21%12,309
Hickman2,91440.12%4,23958.36%1111.53%-1,325-18.24%7,264
Houston99331.76%2,08166.55%531.69%-1,088-34.79%3,127
Humphreys2,38735.73%4,20562.94%891.33%-1,818-27.21%6,681
Jackson1,38429.11%3,30469.50%661.39%-1,920-40.39%4,754
Jefferson8,65761.45%5,22637.10%2041.45%3,43124.35%14,087
Johnson3,74066.11%1,81332.05%1041.84%1,92734.06%5,657
Knox86,85157.68%60,96940.49%2,7661.84%25,88217.19%150,586
Lake78135.12%1,41963.80%241.08%-638-28.68%2,224
Lauderdale3,32943.70%4,22455.45%650.85%-895-11.75%7,618
Lawrence7,61352.61%6,64345.91%2141.48%9706.70%14,470
Lewis2,03746.09%2,28151.61%1022.31%-244-5.52%4,420
Lincoln5,43550.99%5,06047.47%1641.54%3753.52%10,659
Loudon10,26662.57%5,90535.99%2351.43%4,36126.58%16,406
Macon3,36651.86%3,05947.13%661.02%3074.73%6,491
Madison17,86252.64%15,78146.51%2870.85%2,0816.13%33,930
Marion4,65145.38%5,44153.08%1581.54%-790-7.70%10,250
Marshall4,10543.86%5,10754.57%1471.57%-1,002-10.71%9,359
Maury11,93050.98%11,12747.55%3431.47%8033.43%23,400
McMinn10,15561.17%6,14237.00%3031.83%4,01324.17%16,600
McNairy4,89754.48%4,00344.53%890.99%8949.95%8,989
Meigs1,79753.01%1,55545.87%381.12%2427.14%3,390
Monroe7,51457.79%5,32740.97%1621.25%2,18716.82%13,003
Montgomery19,64450.31%18,81848.20%5821.49%8262.11%39,044
Moore1,14549.76%1,10748.11%492.13%381.65%2,301
Morgan3,14451.02%2,92147.40%971.57%2233.62%6,162
Obion6,16849.58%6,05648.68%2161.74%1120.90%12,440
Overton2,87538.35%4,50760.13%1141.52%-1,632-21.78%7,496
Perry1,16540.65%1,65057.57%511.78%-485-16.92%2,866
Pickett1,28157.21%93941.94%190.85%34215.27%2,239
Polk2,90751.97%2,57446.01%1132.02%3335.96%5,594
Putnam11,24850.13%10,78548.07%4051.80%4632.06%22,438
Rhea5,90060.38%3,72238.09%1501.53%2,17822.29%9,772
Roane11,34553.20%9,57544.90%4061.90%1,7708.30%21,326
Robertson9,67547.98%10,24950.83%2401.19%-574-2.85%20,164
Rutherford33,44553.79%27,36044.00%1,3772.21%6,0859.79%62,182
Scott3,57954.10%2,96744.85%691.04%6129.25%6,615
Sequatchie2,16955.80%1,64842.40%701.80%52113.40%3,887
Sevier16,73465.97%8,20832.36%4231.67%8,52633.61%25,365
Shelby141,75642.09%190,40456.54%4,5951.36%-48,648-14.45%336,755
Smith2,38432.44%4,88466.47%801.09%-2,500-34.03%7,348
Stewart1,82638.18%2,87060.02%861.80%-1,044-21.84%4,782
Sullivan33,48260.08%21,35438.32%8911.60%12,12821.76%55,727
Sumner27,60154.68%22,11843.82%7581.50%5,48310.86%50,477
Tipton10,07060.84%6,30038.06%1821.10%3,77022.78%16,552
Trousdale95032.26%1,96666.76%290.98%-1,016-34.50%2,945
Unicoi3,78058.80%2,56639.91%831.29%1,21518.89%6,429
Union3,19954.96%2,56444.05%581.00%63510.91%5,821
Van Buren84539.65%1,25558.89%311.45%-410-19.24%2,131
Warren5,55242.28%7,37856.19%2011.53%-1,826-13.91%13,131
Washington22,57959.51%14,76938.93%5941.57%7,81020.58%37,942
Wayne3,37063.51%1,85935.04%771.45%1,51128.47%5,306
Weakley6,10651.55%5,57047.03%1681.42%5364.52%11,844
White3,52545.34%4,13553.18%1151.48%-610-7.84%7,775
Williamson38,90166.58%18,74532.08%7831.34%20,15634.50%58,429
Wilson18,84452.47%16,56146.11%5111.42%2,2836.36%35,916

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Anderson (Largest city: Oak Ridge)
  • Carroll (Largest city: McKenzie)
  • Cheatham (Largest city: Ashland City)
  • Coffee (Largest city: Tullahoma)
  • Dyer (Largest city: Dyersburg)
  • Fayette (Largest town: Oakland)
  • Fentress (Largest city: Jamestown)
  • Lawrence (Largest city: Lawrenceburg)
  • Maury (Largest city: Columbia)
  • McNairy (Largest city: Selmer)
  • Meigs (Largest city: Decatur)
  • Montgomery (Largest city: Clarksville)
  • Moore (Largest city: Lynchburg)
  • Morgan (Largest city: Coalfield)
  • Obion (Largest city: Union City)
  • Polk (Largest city: Benton)
  • Putnam (Largest city: Cookeville)
  • Roane (Largest city: Oak Ridge)
  • Sequatchie (Largest city: Dunlap)
  • Union (Largest city: Maynardville)
  • Weakley (Largest city: Martin)

By congressional district

Bush won six of nine congressional districts, including one held by a Democrat.

DistrictGoreBushRepresentative
37%**61%**Bill Jenkins
40%**58%**Jimmy Duncan
45%**53%**Zach Wamp
46%**52%**Van Hilleary
**58%**40%Bob Clement
45%**54%**Bart Gordon
44%**54%**Ed Bryant
**50%**49%John S. Tanner
**77%**22%Harold Ford Jr.

Electors

Main article: List of 2000 United States presidential electors

The electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 18, 2000 to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.

The following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for George Bush and Dick Cheney:

  1. Lamar Alexander
  2. Daniel Dirksen Baker
  3. Lana Bowman Ball
  4. Nancy Cunningham
  5. Winfield Dunn
  6. Jimmy Exum
  7. Jim Henry
  8. Raja Jubran
  9. Anie Kent
  10. Patti Saliba
  11. Mamon Wright

Analysis

Along with his razor-thin loss in Florida, this was the closest Gore came to winning any Southern state. Gore lost his home state due to Bush's gains in rural counties, overcoming Gore's gains in Davidson County (home to Nashville, Tennessee) and Shelby County (home to Memphis). In the concurrent 2000 United States Senate election in Tennessee, Republican Bill Frist won the state by 33%, a harbinger of the state's further shift rightward in future years.

At the time, Virginia, North Carolina, and Georgia were considered reliably red states in presidential elections. Virginia has been won by every Democratic nominee since the 2008 United States presidential election.

References

References

  1. (November 7, 2000). "Tennessee Voter Turnout in 2000". Tennessee Secretary of State.
  2. (9 November 2000). "THE 2000 ELECTIONS: TENNESSEE; Loss in Home State Leaves Gore Depending on Florida". The New York Times.
  3. "Our Campaigns - Container Detail Page".
  4. "March 14, 2000 Presidential Preference Primary". Tennessee Secretary of State.
  5. "Election 2000: Tennessee Democrat".
  6. "2000 Tennessee Republican presidential primary election results".
  7. "Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections - County Data".
  8. [http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?year=2000&fips=42&f=0&off=0&elect=0 2000 Presidential General Election Results - Pennsylvania]
  9. "President Elect - 2000".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2000 United States presidential election in Tennessee — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report