1980 United States presidential election in Maine
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Elections in Maine |
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The 1980 United States presidential election in Maine took place on November 4, 1980. All fifty states and The District of Columbia were part of the 1980 United States presidential election. Voters chose four electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Maine was won by former California Governor Ronald Reagan (R) by a slim margin of 3%,[1] carrying fourteen out of sixteen counties. In recent years, however, the state has grown much more liberal, and no Republican presidential nominee has carried it since 1988.[2]
The already embattled incumbent Democratic president Carter was hurt in the state by the strong third party candidacy of John B. Anderson, a liberal Republican Congressman who ran in 1980 as an independent after failing to win the Republican Party's own presidential nomination. Anderson proved very popular with liberal and moderate voters in New England who normally leaned Democratic but were dissatisfied with the policies of the Carter administration and viewed Reagan as too far to the right. New England overall would prove to be Anderson's strongest region in the nation, with all six New England states giving double-digit percentages to Anderson. However, Maine would prove to be Anderson's weakest state in New England with only 10.20% of the popular vote, whereas all five of the other states in New England gave Anderson over 12% of the popular vote, peaking at 15.15% in Massachusetts.
Along with Michigan, New York, Mississippi and Vermont, Maine was one of the few states in which President Carter won counties that had gone to Ford in the previous presidential election, as Carter flipped Cumberland County. As a result, Reagan was the first Republican to ever win a presidential election without this county. This was the last presidential election in which Hancock County was the most Republican county in Maine.
Primaries
[edit]Candidate | CDE | Delegates |
---|---|---|
Jimmy Carter (incumbent) | 13,660 | 10 |
Ted Kennedy | 12,041 | 10 |
Jerry Brown | 4,494 | 3 |
Totals | 30,195 | 23 |
Results
[edit]Presidential candidate | Party | Home state | Popular vote | Electoral vote |
Running mate | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Count | Percentage | Vice-presidential candidate | Home state | Electoral vote | ||||
Ronald Reagan | Republican | California | 238,522 | 45.61% | 4 | George H. W. Bush | Texas | 4 |
Jimmy Carter (incumbent) | Democrat | Georgia | 220,974 | 42.25% | 0 | Walter Mondale (incumbent) | Minnesota | 0 |
John B. Anderson | Independent | Illinois | 53,327 | 10.20% | 0 | Patrick Lucey | Wisconsin | 0 |
Ed Clark | Libertarian | California | 5,119 | 0.98% | 0 | David Koch | New York | 0 |
Barry Commoner | Citizens | New York | 4,394 | 0.84% | 0 | LaDonna Harris | Oklahoma | 0 |
Gus Hall | Communist | New York | 591 | 0.11% | 0 | Angela Davis | California | 0 |
Write-in candidates | — | — | 84 | 0.02% | 0 | — | — | 0 |
Total | 523,011 | 100% | 4 | 4 | ||||
Needed to win | 270 | 270 |
Results by congressional district
[edit]Reagan won both of Maine's congressional districts.[3]
District | Reagan | Carter | Representative |
---|---|---|---|
1st | 45.02% | 41.93% | David F. Emery |
2nd | 46.29% | 42.62% | Olympia Snowe |
Results by county
[edit]County[4] | Ronald Reagan Republican |
Jimmy Carter Democratic |
John B. Anderson Independent |
Ed Clark Libertarian |
Barry Commoner Citizens |
Various candidates Other parties |
Margin | Total votes cast | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Androscoggin | 18,399 | 39.93% | 22,715 | 49.29% | 4,300 | 9.33% | 414 | 0.90% | 218 | 0.47% | 34 | 0.07% | -4,316 | -9.36% | 46,080 |
Aroostook | 16,343 | 48.29% | 14,492 | 42.82% | 2,528 | 7.47% | 275 | 0.81% | 107 | 0.32% | 101 | 0.30% | 1,851 | 5.47% | 33,846 |
Cumberland | 45,820 | 42.64% | 47,337 | 44.05% | 12,214 | 11.37% | 870 | 0.81% | 1,088 | 1.01% | 132 | 0.12% | -1,517 | -1.41% | 107,461 |
Franklin | 5,680 | 46.83% | 4,979 | 41.05% | 1,205 | 9.94% | 108 | 0.89% | 145 | 1.20% | 11 | 0.09% | 701 | 5.78% | 12,128 |
Hancock | 11,435 | 53.60% | 7,027 | 32.94% | 2,300 | 10.78% | 270 | 1.27% | 259 | 1.21% | 43 | 0.20% | 4,408 | 20.66% | 21,334 |
Kennebec | 21,517 | 43.84% | 20,943 | 42.67% | 5,553 | 11.31% | 505 | 1.03% | 500 | 1.02% | 59 | 0.12% | 574 | 1.17% | 49,077 |
Knox | 7,631 | 48.98% | 5,732 | 36.79% | 1,842 | 11.82% | 165 | 1.06% | 194 | 1.25% | 17 | 0.11% | 1,899 | 12.19% | 15,581 |
Lincoln | 7,434 | 52.14% | 4,776 | 33.49% | 1,556 | 10.91% | 237 | 1.66% | 240 | 1.68% | 16 | 0.11% | 2,658 | 18.65% | 14,259 |
Oxford | 11,041 | 47.04% | 9,914 | 42.23% | 2,063 | 8.79% | 237 | 1.01% | 186 | 0.79% | 33 | 0.14% | 1,127 | 4.81% | 23,474 |
Penobscot | 28,869 | 45.97% | 26,519 | 42.23% | 6,287 | 10.01% | 642 | 1.02% | 393 | 0.63% | 83 | 0.13% | 2,350 | 3.74% | 62,793 |
Piscataquis | 4,015 | 46.93% | 3,550 | 41.50% | 781 | 9.13% | 147 | 1.72% | 56 | 0.65% | 6 | 0.07% | 465 | 5.43% | 8,555 |
Sagadahoc | 5,946 | 45.23% | 5,663 | 43.08% | 1,252 | 9.52% | 124 | 0.94% | 151 | 1.15% | 9 | 0.07% | 283 | 2.15% | 13,145 |
Somerset | 9,286 | 47.59% | 8,115 | 41.59% | 1,673 | 8.57% | 250 | 1.28% | 166 | 0.85% | 23 | 0.12% | 1,171 | 6.00% | 19,513 |
Waldo | 6,514 | 49.57% | 4,883 | 37.16% | 1,304 | 9.92% | 203 | 1.54% | 212 | 1.61% | 24 | 0.18% | 1,631 | 12.41% | 13,140 |
Washington | 7,180 | 48.55% | 6,050 | 40.91% | 1,301 | 8.80% | 130 | 0.88% | 108 | 0.73% | 19 | 0.13% | 1,130 | 7.64% | 14,788 |
York | 31,412 | 46.31% | 28,279 | 41.69% | 7,168 | 10.57% | 542 | 0.80% | 371 | 0.55% | 65 | 0.10% | 3,133 | 4.62% | 67,837 |
Totals | 238,522 | 45.61% | 220,974 | 42.25% | 53,327 | 10.20% | 5,119 | 0.98% | 4,394 | 0.84% | 675 | 0.13% | 17,548 | 3.36% | 523,011 |
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
[edit]Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "1980 Presidential General Election Results – Maine". uselectionatlas.org.
- ^ Brownstein, Ronald (May 10, 2012). "Playing Their Hand". National Journal. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
- ^ 1980 General Election: Presidential (Report). Bureau of Corporations, Elections and Commissions. 1980.
- ^ Our Campaigns; ME US President Race, November 04, 1980