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1988 United States presidential election in Louisiana

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Main article:1988 United States presidential election
1988United States presidential election in Louisiana

← 1984November 8, 19881992 →
 
NomineeGeorge H. W. BushMichael Dukakis
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Home stateTexasMassachusetts
Running mateDan QuayleLloyd Bentsen
Electoral vote100
Popular vote883,702717,460
Percentage54.27%44.06%

Parish Results

Bush

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%

Dukakis

  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%


President before election

Ronald Reagan
Republican

Elected President

George H. W. Bush
Republican

Elections in Louisiana
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The1988 United States presidential election in Louisiana took place on November 8, 1988, as part of the1988 United States presidential election. State voters chose ten representatives, or electors to theElectoral College, who voted forpresident andvice president.

Louisiana strongly voted for theRepublican nominee,Vice PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush, over theDemocratic nominee,Massachusetts governorMichael Dukakis. The margin was 10%, which was nonetheless the best showing for Dukakis in a formerConfederate state. This result made Louisiana 2.4% more Republican than the nation-at-large.

Background

[edit]

The percentage of registered voters in Louisiana who were Republicans rose from 11.3% in 1984 to 16.4% in 1988 while the Democratic figure fell from 80.6% to 75.2%.[1]

Campaign

[edit]

Republican primary

[edit]

The Southern Republican Leadership Conference had all of the presidential candidates committed to attend its February meeting in New Orleans, but none of them came as they were instead focused on the New Hampshire primary.[2]

The Republicans conducted a voter registration campaign that increased the amount of registered Republicans by 25,063 between the1987 gubernatorial primary and Super Tuesday and an additional 36,100 were registered before the presidential election. Turnout in the Republican primary rose to 19% from 5% in 1984, and 10% in 1980. In the Republican primaryGeorge H. W. Bush earned all of the delegates by placing first in every congressional district;[3] 27% of white voters participated in the Republican primary.[4]

Seven uncommitted delegates were selected by the central committeeRepublican Party of Louisiana on March 19. Supporters ofPat Robertson andJack Kemp, who totaled 58 of the 140 committee members, formed a coalition to take over the party. The coalition failed to gain the position of chair, but won the position of secretary, national committeeman, and three of the seven alternate delegates.[5]

1988 Louisiana Republican presidential primary[6]
CandidateVotes%Delegates[7]
George H. W. Bush83,68457.8034[a][b]
Pat Robertson26,29418.160
Bob Dole25,62417.700
Jack Kemp7,7225.330
Pete du Pont(withdrawn)8510.590
Alexander Haig(withdrawn)5980.410
Total144,773100%34

Democratic primary

[edit]

TheLouisiana Democratic Party planned a Summit on Super Tuesday event in January, which all of the presidential candidates agreed to attend, but onlyAl Gore came.[2]

Turnout in the Democratic primary rose to 24% from 14% in 1984, and 11% in 1980.Jesse Jackson and Gore were the only Democratic candidates to receive more than 15% in the primary and received 21 and 15 delegates respectively.Michael Dukakis andDick Gephardt both won two delegates.[9] The racial composition of the primary was 62% white and 38% black.[10]

The central committee of the Louisiana Democratic Party allocated an additional 10 at-large delegates to Jackson, 8 to Gore, and four to Dukakis on June 4, 1988. The state's delegation also included 14 uncommittedsuperdelegates. Endorsements resulted in the delegation being divided between 41 delegates for Jackson, 33 for Dukakis, and one for Gephardt.John Breaux was selected as the delegation's chair while negotiations with the Jackson delegation producedWilliam Jefferson as co-chair andSidney Barthelemy as a member of the Democratic National Committee.[7]

GovernorBuddy Roemer stated that he would vote for Dukakis, but not support him and stated that he had "never seen a more unfocused, unorganized, non-issue campaign" in his life.[11]

1988 Louisiana Democratic presidential primary[6]
CandidateVotes%Delegates[12]
Jesse Jackson221,52235.4421[c]
Al Gore174,97127.9915[d]
Michael Dukakis95,66115.312[e]
Dick Gephardt67,02910.722
Gary Hart26,4374.230
David Duke23,3913.740
Paul Simon5,1530.820
Frank Ahern3,7020.590
Bruce Babbitt(withdrawn)3,0760.490
Lyndon LaRouche1,6810.270
Norbert G. Dennerll Jr.1,5740.250
Richard B. Kay8220.130
Total625,019100%40

General

[edit]

Among white voters, 68% supported Bush while 30% supported Dukakis.[14][15]

The Democrats maintained their control over theLouisiana House of Representatives, with 90 seats to the Republicans' 17 seats, andLouisiana State Senate, with 37 seats to the Republicans' 2 seats, despite Bush's victory in the presidential race.[16]

Results

[edit]
1988 United States presidential election in Louisiana[17]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
RepublicanGeorge H. W. Bush883,70254.27%10
DemocraticMichael Dukakis717,46044.06%0
Independent PopulistDavid Duke18,6121.14%0
LibertarianRon Paul4,1150.25%0
New AllianceLenora Fulani2,3550.14%0
Democrats for Economic RecoveryLyndon LaRouche1,9580.12%0
Invalid or blank votes
Totals1,628,202100.00%10
Voter turnout

Results by parish

[edit]
Parish[18]George H.W. Bush
Republican
Michael Dukakis
Democratic
David Duke
Independent Populist
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%#%#%
Acadia11,27949.21%11,35949.56%1830.80%980.43%-80-0.35%22,919
Allen3,67440.87%5,20457.89%640.71%470.52%-1,530-17.02%8,989
Ascension10,72646.15%12,14752.27%2190.94%1480.64%-1,421-6.12%23,240
Assumption4,01740.19%5,61056.13%3003.00%680.68%-1,593-15.94%9,995
Avoyelles7,65949.08%7,35347.12%4662.99%1280.82%3061.96%15,606
Beauregard6,46657.30%4,70441.68%590.52%560.50%1,76215.62%11,285
Bienville3,68048.83%3,70549.16%901.19%620.82%-25-0.33%7,537
Bossier20,80769.16%9,03530.03%1350.45%1080.36%11,77239.13%30,085
Caddo54,49857.73%39,20441.53%3630.38%3370.36%15,29416.20%94,402
Calcasieu29,64946.25%33,93252.94%3020.47%2170.34%-4,283-6.69%64,100
Caldwell2,99765.74%1,42331.21%1182.59%210.46%1,57434.53%4,559
Cameron1,77543.61%2,25755.45%180.44%200.49%-482-11.84%4,070
Catahoula2,86257.82%1,91638.71%1372.77%350.71%94619.11%4,950
Claiborne3,75653.60%3,15845.07%600.86%330.47%5988.53%7,007
Concordia5,03757.49%3,46139.50%2012.29%620.71%1,57617.99%8,761
DeSoto5,02247.76%5,36651.03%820.78%460.44%-344-3.27%10,516
East Baton Rouge86,79158.81%59,27040.16%6280.43%8950.61%27,52118.65%147,584
East Carroll1,53644.39%1,80952.28%882.54%270.78%-273-7.89%3,460
East Feliciana3,53748.06%3,65949.72%991.35%640.87%-122-1.66%7,359
Evangeline7,43748.29%7,69349.95%1861.21%840.55%-256-1.66%15,400
Franklin5,52062.20%3,04334.29%2622.95%500.56%2,47727.91%8,875
Grant4,40260.76%2,62836.27%1722.37%430.59%1,77424.49%7,245
Iberia15,43854.49%12,16642.94%5982.11%1290.46%3,27211.55%28,331
Iberville5,85539.46%8,67858.49%2001.35%1030.69%-2,823-19.03%14,836
Jackson4,25158.64%2,84239.21%1021.41%540.74%1,40919.43%7,249
Jefferson110,94266.68%53,03531.88%1,7831.07%6120.37%57,90734.80%166,372
Jefferson Davis5,85145.74%6,79953.15%800.63%610.48%-948-7.41%12,791
Lafayette36,64859.44%24,13339.14%5150.84%3620.59%12,51520.30%61,658
Lafourche16,15250.19%15,01346.65%8412.61%1730.54%1,1393.54%32,179
LaSalle4,55971.69%1,62225.51%1492.34%290.46%2,93746.18%6,359
Lincoln8,85360.40%5,42737.03%2551.74%1220.83%3,42623.37%14,657
Livingston15,77961.29%9,65937.52%2170.84%880.34%6,12023.77%25,743
Madison2,33447.53%2,41649.20%1232.50%380.77%-82-1.67%4,911
Morehouse7,33560.43%4,49637.04%2512.07%570.47%2,83923.39%12,139
Natchitoches7,22452.60%6,15144.79%2782.02%800.58%1,0737.81%13,733
Orleans64,76335.24%116,85163.58%1,2330.67%9530.52%-52,088-28.34%183,800
Ouachita33,85867.32%15,42930.68%7031.40%3020.60%18,42936.64%50,292
Plaquemines6,08459.11%3,99738.83%1631.58%490.48%2,08720.28%10,293
Pointe Coupee4,33339.64%6,30857.71%1511.38%1381.26%-1,975-18.07%10,930
Rapides29,97761.31%17,92836.67%7431.52%2430.50%12,04924.64%48,891
Red River2,26649.41%2,25449.15%481.05%180.39%120.26%4,586
Richland5,22662.85%2,83334.07%1912.30%650.78%2,39328.78%8,315
Sabine4,76755.81%3,53241.35%2002.34%420.49%1,23514.46%8,541
St. Bernard19,60961.79%11,40635.94%5981.88%1230.39%8,20325.85%31,736
St. Charles9,68553.82%7,97344.31%2591.44%780.43%1,7129.51%17,995
St. Helena2,00638.93%3,01358.47%851.65%490.95%-1,007-19.54%5,153
St. James3,79935.44%6,70762.57%1441.34%690.64%-2,908-27.13%10,719
St. John the Baptist7,46446.02%8,36651.58%2761.70%1130.70%-902-5.56%16,219
St. Landry15,79044.53%19,09153.84%3230.91%2530.71%-3,301-9.31%35,457
St. Martin7,54141.60%10,14855.98%2831.56%1570.87%-2,607-14.38%18,129
St. Mary11,54051.71%10,36446.44%2951.32%1190.53%1,1765.27%22,318
St. Tammany38,33469.92%15,63828.52%6511.19%2000.36%22,69641.40%54,823
Tangipahoa16,66954.32%13,52744.08%3251.06%1670.54%3,14210.24%30,688
Tensas1,64550.00%1,55647.29%692.10%200.61%892.71%3,290
Terrebonne18,74558.19%12,68639.38%6361.97%1450.45%6,05918.81%32,212
Union5,90062.97%3,21034.26%1992.12%600.64%2,69028.71%9,369
Vermilion9,22441.99%12,18055.45%4402.00%1220.56%-2,956-13.46%21,966
Vernon7,45358.40%4,99839.17%2401.88%700.55%2,45519.23%12,761
Washington9,37451.81%8,36946.25%2601.44%910.50%1,0055.56%18,094
Webster10,20457.31%7,43441.75%1080.61%590.33%2,77015.56%17,805
West Baton Rouge3,97245.13%4,68653.24%810.92%620.70%-714-8.11%8,801
West Carroll3,07764.14%1,60733.50%972.02%160.33%1,47030.64%4,797
West Feliciana1,85445.34%2,14652.48%461.12%431.05%-292-7.14%4,089
Winn4,16559.02%2,69938.25%1472.08%460.65%1,46620.77%7,057
Totals883,70254.27%717,46044.06%18,6121.14%8,4280.52%166,24210.21%1,628,202

Parishes that flipped from Republican to Democratic

[edit]

[19][20]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^24 delegates allocated through congressional districts and 10 delegates allocated statewide[8]
  2. ^Final delegate total of 41 after addition of at-large delegates at state convention[8]
  3. ^Final delegate total of 31 after addition of at-large delegates at state convention[8]
  4. ^Final delegate total of 31 after addition of at-large delegates at state convention[13]
  5. ^Final delegate total of 6 after addition of at-large delegates at state convention[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Steed, Moreland & Baker 1994, p. 62.
  2. ^abHadley & Stanley 1989, p. 26.
  3. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 82-83.
  4. ^Black & Black 1992, p. 288.
  5. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 83-84.
  6. ^ab"1988 presidential primary results in Louisiana".Secretary of State of Louisiana.Archived from the original on July 29, 2023.
  7. ^abMoreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 85-86.
  8. ^abcdMoreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 86.
  9. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 83-85.
  10. ^Black & Black 1992, p. 263.
  11. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 87.
  12. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 84.
  13. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. 23.
  14. ^Black & Black 1992, p. 295.
  15. ^Black & Black 1992, p. 335.
  16. ^Moreland, Steed & Baker 1991, p. xii.
  17. ^"1988 Presidential General Election Results – Louisiana". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas. RetrievedAugust 25, 2008.
  18. ^"LA US President Race, November 08, 1988". Our Campaigns.
  19. ^"1984 Presidential General Election Results - Louisiana".Dave Leip's election atlas.
  20. ^"1988 Presidential General Election Results - Louisiana".Dave Leip's election atlas.

Works cited

[edit]
General
State Senate
State House
Governor
U.S. President
U.S. Senate
Class 2
Class 3
U.S. House
State and district results of the1988 U.S. presidential election
Electoral map, 1988 election
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