OREGON | 7
Electoral Votes |
Population (Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Oregon Secretary of State)
Oregon has: 36 counties, 240 incorp. cities. Largest counties: Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas, Lane, Marion. Largest cities (100,000-plus): Portland, Eugene, Salem, Gresham. Government
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State of Oregon Secretary of State Democratic
Party of OR |
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Voting Eligible Population*: 3,012,502. VEP Highest Office Turnout Rate: 66.4%. Ballots Mailed: Oct. 20-25, 2016. |
Total ballots returnedt: 2,051,448 |
Overview: As expected Oregon ended up in the
Democratic column. Clinton/Kaine won with a plurality of 219,703
votes (10.98 percentage points), carrying eight counties to 28 for
Trump/Pence. Multnomah County accounted for 399,103 of the
2,001,336 of votes tallied for president (19.94%); Clinton's plurality there was 224,607
votes (292,561 to 67,954). In terms of visits, Gary Johnson
rallied at the Benson Hotel in Portland on the evening of Nov. 3. Tim Kaine did a "Conversation with
Tim Kaine" fundraiser in
southeast Portland on Aug. 19. Donald Trump had been scheduled to
make a
general election visit at the end of August for a fundraiser and rally
but cancelled the trip due to scheduling changes. Jill Stein had
been scheduled to do an event in Portlland on the evening of Oct. 23
but was recovering from pneumonia. Clinton | Trump BALLOT [PDF] |
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Estimated eligible voters for the primary:
2,919,683. Registration: Dem. 950,829 (41.67%) Rep.684,216 (29.99%) NAff. 468,296 (20.53%) Indep. 123,573 (5.42%) Other 54,641 (2.39%) ...Total 2,281,555. Ballots cast: 1,231,843. |
Democrats
74 Delegates: 41 District, 13 At-Large, 7 PLEO and 13 Unpledged. details |
Republicans
28 Delegates: 3 RNC; 10 At-Llarge; 15 by CD (3 x 5). details |
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1992 | 1996 | 2000 | 2004 | 2008 | 2012 |
Clinton 42.48% |
Clinton 47.15% |
Gore 46.96% |
Kerry 51.35% |
Obama 56.75% |
Obama 54.24% |
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Voting Eligible Population*: 2,700,327. VEP Highest Office Turnout Rate: 67.7%. 54% of ballots returned in the Nov. 6 election were returned to a dropbox. 71.8% of ballots sent to military and overseas voters were returned and counted. Registration: Dem. 872,361 (39.66%) Rep. 684,858 (31.14%) NAff. 490,749 (22.31%) AmEl. 59 Const. 3,353 Ind. 92,958 (4.23%) Lib. 15,157 PG 10,979 Prog. 1,994 WF 3,980 Other 23,002 (1.05%) ...Total 2,199,360 |
Total ballots returned: 1,820,507. |
2012
Overview Obama-Biden carried Oregon by 216,313 votes (12.09 percentage points). Romney carried 26 counties to 10 for Obama, but Obama racked up a plurality of 199,585 votes in Multnomah County (274,887 to 75,302). There were several visits: President Obama (July 24 fundraisers in Portland), Michelle Obama (June 17 commencement address at OSU), Mitt Romney (June 4 fundraiser in Portland), Paul Ryan (Sept. 9 debate prep. and Sept. 10 fundraisers in Portland); Gary Johnson (Aug. 5-6), Jim Gray (Sept. 8 Hempstalk) and Jill Stein (Sept. 7-9, including Hempstalk). Oregon was one of only two states where Stein achieved one percent of the vote, the other being Maine. Obama | (Romney) BALLOT [PDF] |
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Voting Eligible Population*: 2,695,058. VEP Highest Office Turnout Rate: 67.8%. Registration: Dem. 929,741 (43.17%) Rep. 695,677 (32.30%) NAff. 431,922 (20.05%) Other 96,574 (4.48%) ...Total 2,153,914. |
Number voting on Nov. 4......1,845,251 |
2008
Overview Oregon was a battleground in 2000 and again tight in 2004, but this year it was not close. From June to November here were no visits by the major party principals. (In a sign of things to come, in June 2008 Sen. Gordon Smith (R), seeking re-election, ran an ad in which the announcer asked, "Who says Gordon Smith helped lead the fight for better gas mileage and a cleaner environment?" The answer: Barack Obama). Obama-Biden won Oregon with a plurality of 298,816 votes (16.35 percentage points); McCain carried 23 counties to 13 for Obama. In Multnomah County Obama amassed a plurality of more than 200,000 votes (279,696 to 75,171). Obama/Allies | McCain/Allies | Nader |
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Voting Eligible Population*: 2,550,887. VEP Highest Office Turnout Rate: 72.0%. Vote by Mail --
Ballots
mailed any time between the 14th and 18th days before election. Registration: Dem. 829,197 (38.72%) Rep. 761,717 (35.57%) NAff. 477,682 (22.31%) Others 72,653 (3.39%) ...Total 2,141,249. Registration
deadline: Oct. 12, 2004. |
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2004
Overview Oregon saw one of the most protracted battles over ballot access for Ralph Nader, as the consumer advocate went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In the end, he did not appear on the ballot. Kerry-Edwards achieved a plurality of 76,332 votes (4.16 percentage points) over the Bush-Cheney ticket. Bush carried 28 counties to 8 for Kerry, but Kerry's 161,146 vote margin in Multnomah County proved insurmountable. General Election Details Kerry/Allies | Bush/Cheney '04 |
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Voting Eligible
Population*: 2,364,402. The election was conducted entirely by mail. First day for mailing ballots: Oct. 20, 2000.
Registration deadline: Oct. 17, 2000. |
1,559,215 total ballots counted; on 25,247 ballots (1.6%) no vote for President was recorded--due to under or over votes. |
2000
Overview In 1996 Oregon provided the best showing of any state for Ralph Nader's "non-campaign." With Nader running an active campaign this time around, great attention focused on how much the Nader factor would hurt Vice President Gore's chances. Oregon became a closely fought battleground state. In the end, however, the Gore-Lieberman ticket did prevail, winning the state's 7 electoral votes by a plurality of 6,765 votes (0.44 percentage points). Bush carried 28 counties to Gore's 8, but Gore's plurality of more than 100,000 votes in Multnomah County (Portland) won the day. Voters faced "the most complex state ballot in Oregon's history;" in addition to the various candidate races, 26 state measures crowded the ballot. General Election Activity |
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1996
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Copyright © 2002-17 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action. |