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2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election

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FieldValue
election_name2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election
countryNorth Dakota
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election2000 North Dakota gubernatorial election
previous_year2000
next_election2008 North Dakota gubernatorial election
next_year2008
election_dateNovember 2, 2004
image1File:John Hoeven.jpg
image_size150x150px
nominee1**John Hoeven**
party1Republican Party (United States)
running_mate1**Jack Dalrymple**
popular_vote1**220,803**
percentage1**71.26%**
image23x4.svg
nominee2Joe Satrom
party2North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party
running_mate2Deb Mathern
popular_vote284,877
percentage227.39%
titleGovernor
before_electionJohn Hoeven
before_partyRepublican Party (United States)
after_electionJohn Hoeven
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)
map_image2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election results map by county.svg
map_captionCounty results
**Hoeven**:
map_size250px

Hoeven:

Satrom: The 2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election took place on 2 November 2004 for the post of Governor of North Dakota. Incumbent Republican governor John Hoeven was easily re-elected defeating Democratic-NPL former state senator Joe Satrom.

Republican nomination

Incumbent governor John Hoeven was unopposed for the Republican nomination and accepted the nomination by stating that the economy of North Dakota was his priority.

Democratic-NPL nomination

Former state senator Joe Satrom defeated North Dakota House of Representatives minority leader Merle Boucher for the Democratic-NPL nomination. Satrom began campaigning for the nomination almost a year before the North Dakota Democratic-NPL Convention would choose the parties candidate for governor. Boucher announced his candidacy in December 2003 but struggled to make up ground against Satrom.

The two candidates debated at the University of North Dakota, just before the convention, with education and the future of the state's youth the main topics. The Democratic-NPL Convention voted by 632 to 341 to endorse Satrom as their candidate for governor.

General election

Campaign

The two candidates met in three debates during the campaign, during the final debate on 9 October 2004 they clashed over a smoking ban, outmigration and a proposed constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage.

Satrom called for North Dakota to introduce a one thousand dollar donation limit, for individuals and political action committees, to avoid any perception of conflict of interest. Hoeven named education, growth and jobs as his priorities but faced anger from some hunting groups over changes to hunt seasons.

Opinion polls gave Hoeven a strong lead over Satrom with one in October 2004 showing Hoeven on 70% as against 22% for Satrom. Hoeven raised far more money than his challenger and even a normally Democratic supporting teachers union, the North Dakota Education Association, endorsed Hoeven for governor.

Predictions

SourceRankingAs of
Sabato's Crystal BallNovember 1, 2004

Results

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Divide (largest city: Crosby)
  • Benson (Largest CDP: Fort Totten)
  • Name (Largest city: Stanley)
  • Nelson (Largest city: Lakota)
  • Ransom (Largest city: Lisbon)
  • Richland (largest city: Wahpeton)
  • Sargent (Largest city: Gwinner)
  • Steele (Largest city: Finley)
  • Towner (Largest city: Cando)
  • Traill (Largest city: Mayville)

References

References

  1. (June 2013). "No Surprise: Hoeven GOP's Man". [[KXMC-TV]]}} {{dead link.
  2. (June 2013). "Candidates for governor make stop at UND". [[Dakota Student]]}} {{dead link.
  3. (June 2013). "Satrom to Face Hoeven". [[KXMC-TV]]}} {{dead link.
  4. (2004-10-09). "Hoeven, Satrom argue outlet, smoking limits". RiverWatchOnline.
  5. (July 2018). "Satrom – Campaign Donations". [[KXMC-TV]] }}{{Dead link.
  6. (2004-10-20). "A look at the 11 governor jobs up for grabs this year".
  7. (July 2018). "A new poll says Governor Hoeven has a commanding lead over his Democratic challenger". [[KXMC-TV]] }}{{Dead link.
  8. (2004-10-21). "Gov. Hoeven Leads North Dakota Money Race". [[Fox News Channel]].
  9. (July 2018). "Teachers endorse Hoeven". [[KXMC-TV]] }}{{Dead link.
  10. (November 2004). "The Final Predictions".
  11. "Election Results Portal".
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