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1998 United States Senate election in California

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1998 United States Senate election in California

← 1992November 3, 19982004 →
 
NomineeBarbara BoxerMatt Fong
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote4,411,7053,576,351
Percentage53.06%43.01%

County results
Boxer:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%
Fong:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%

U.S. senator before election

Barbara Boxer
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Barbara Boxer
Democratic

Elections in California
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U.S. President primary
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Elections by year

The1998 United States Senate election in California was held November 3, 1998. Incumbent Democratic SenatorBarbara Boxer won re-election to a second term, defeating Republican Matt Fong.

Democratic primary

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Candidates

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Results

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1998 California Democratic primary[citation needed]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticBarbara Boxer (incumbent)2,574,26492.15%
DemocraticJohn Pinkerton219,2507.85%
Total votes2,793,514100.00%

Republican primary

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Candidates

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Results

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1998 California Republican primary[citation needed]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanMatt Fong1,292,66245.28%
RepublicanDarrell Issa1,142,56740.02%
RepublicanFrank Riggs295,88610.36%
RepublicanJohn M. Brown48,9411.71%
RepublicanMark Raus45,4801.59%
RepublicanLinh Dao29,2411.02%
Total votes2,854,777100.00%

Other primaries

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1998 United States Senate primary, California (Others)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LibertarianTed Brown67,408100.00%
Peace and FreedomOphie C. Beltran52,306100.00%
ReformTimothy R. Erich45,601100.00%
American IndependentJoseph Perrin, Sr.24,026100.00%
Natural LawBrian M. Rees23,945100.00%

General election

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Candidates

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  • Ophie C. Beltran (Peace & Freedom)
  • Barbara Boxer, incumbent U.S. Senator (Democratic)
  • Ted Brown, perennial candidate (Libertarian)
  • Timothy R. Erich (Reform)
  • Matt Fong, State Treasurer (Republican)
  • Joseph Perrin Sr. (American Independent)
  • Brian M. Rees (Natural Law)

Results

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Although the race was predicted to be fairly close, Boxer still defeated Fong by a ten-point margin. As expected, Boxer did very well inLos Angeles County and theSan Francisco Bay Area.

1998 United States Senate election, California[1]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticBarbara Boxer (Incumbent)4,410,05653.06%
RepublicanMatt Fong3,575,07843.01%
LibertarianTed Brown93,9261.13%
ReformTimothy R. Erich82,9181.00%
American IndependentJoseph Perrin, Sr.54,6990.66%
Peace and FreedomOphie C. Beltran48,6850.56%
Natural LawBrian M. Rees46,5430.59%
Total votes8,311,905100.00%
Turnout 
Democratichold

Results by county

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Final results from theSecretary of State of California.[2]

Shift by county
Trend by county
Legend
  •   Republican — >15%
  •   Republican — +12.5−15%
  •   Republican — +10−12.5%
  •   Republican — +7.5−10%
  •   Republican — +5−7.5%
  •   Republican — +2.5−5%
  •   Republican — +0−2.5%
  •   Democratic — +0−2.5%
  •   Democratic — +2.5−5%
  •   Democratic — +5−7.5%
  •   Democratic — +7.5-10%
  •   Democratic — +10−12.5%
  •   Democratic — +12.5−15%
  •   Democratic — >15%
CountyBoxerVotesFongVotesOthersVotes
San Francisco75.23%179,88921.93%52,4432.83%6,777
Alameda69.62%266,32927.37%104,6993.00%11,520
Marin65.41%66,16031.76%32,1182.83%2,861
San Mateo63.14%130,06433.87%69,7762.98%6,146
Santa Cruz62.75%53,36332.09%27,2935.16%4,391
Sonoma61.14%96,17034.14%53,6954.72%7,424
Los Angeles60.84%1,198,40335.78%704,7823.37%66,603
Yolo58.12%28,49138.10%18,6803.78%1,852
Santa Clara57.81%242,60038.21%160,3503.99%16,733
Mendocino57.73%16,34635.84%10,1476.44%1,822
Contra Costa57.52%172,59539.30%117,9223.18%9,519
Solano56.29%56,77239.71%40,0513.98%4,027
Lake54.84%10,10440.19%7,4064.97%916
Napa54.48%22,65441.01%17,0524.50%1,874
Monterey53.17%46,65142.63%37,3994.19%3,688
Imperial51.45%11,59741.47%9,3467.09%1,596
San Benito51.05%6,42844.02%5,5434.93%620
Humboldt50.60%23,34244.16%20,3715.25%2,414
Sacramento50.46%180,38945.86%163,9573.68%13,144
Santa Barbara49.53%60,91146.77%57,5123.71%4,554
Merced48.39%19,00847.45%18,6384.17%1,634
San Joaquin48.00%59,31248.10%59,4343.91%4,830
San Bernardino47.47%155,09347.32%154,5915.21%17,033
Stanislaus47.41%47,23848.74%48,5603.86%3,841
Ventura46.88%97,20748.92%101,4404.21%8,716
San Diego46.21%339,65849.22%361,8124.58%33,575
Alpine45.86%24949.17%2674.96%27
Riverside45.78%151,28749.63%164,0194.58%15,152
Fresno44.28%75,57051.81%88,4123.91%6,670
San Luis Obispo44.16%37,17851.93%43,7193.92%3,293
Tuolumne43.74%8,75251.43%10,2894.82%966
Mono42.84%1,40452.46%1,7194.70%154
Kings42.75%9,33852.87%11,5474.38%957
Amador42.21%5,61454.11%7,1973.68%489
Del Norte41.79%2,99252.84%3,7835.36%384
Calaveras41.44%6,50253.04%8,3215.53%866
Nevada41.17%15,90354.88%21,2003.95%1,525
Yuba41.01%5,35553.38%6,9715.60%732
Butte40.73%26,54053.89%35,1125.36%3,503
Trinity39.27%1,87552.06%2,4868.66%414
Siskiyou39.22%6,16255.17%8,6695.62%882
Tulare39.16%28,28456.99%41,1673.84%2,782
Orange39.05%276,59456.75%401,9604.19%29,734
Placer38.60%34,16057.70%51,0633.71%3,278
El Dorado38.54%21,69757.46%32,3454.00%2,254
Mariposa38.23%2,69056.05%3,9445.72%402
Madera37.55%9,71558.13%15,0424.32%1,118
Inyo37.25%2,44357.40%3,7645.35%351
Colusa37.08%1,73458.97%2,7583.95%185
Tehama36.98%6,59856.68%10,1126.34%1,131
Kern36.58%51,47659.25%83,3914.17%5,870
Sutter35.58%7,71660.81%13,1883.61%783
Sierra34.36%58259.50%1,0086.14%104
Shasta33.97%17,79060.01%31,4286.03%3,151
Plumas33.05%2,71861.52%5,0595.43%446
Lassen32.92%2,62460.34%4,8106.75%538
Glenn31.97%2,32162.47%4,5365.57%404
Modoc31.80%1,06860.99%2,0487.21%242

See also

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References

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  1. ^"STATISTICS OF THE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION OF NOVEMBER 3, 1998".Clerk.House.gov. RetrievedAugust 7, 2023.
  2. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on March 25, 2009. RetrievedJuly 31, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links

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