Jump to content

2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Oklahoma

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Oklahoma

← 2002 November 2, 2004 (2004-11-02) 2006 →

All 5 Oklahoma seats to the United States House of Representatives
  Majority party Minority party Third party
 
Party Republican Democratic Independent
Last election 4 1 0
Seats won 4 1 0
Seat change Steady Steady Steady
Popular vote 875,033 389,029 110,548
Percentage 63.66% 28.3% 8.04%
Swing Increase 9.08% Decrease 10.82% Increase 1.74%

The 2004 House elections in Oklahoma occurred on November 2, 2004 to elect the members of the State of Oklahoma's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Oklahoma had five seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States census.

These elections were held concurrently with the United States presidential election of 2004, United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Oklahoma), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.

Overview

[edit]
United States House of Representatives elections in Oklahoma, 2004[1]
Party Votes Percentage Seats before Seats after +/–
Republican 875,033 63.66% 4 4 ±0
Democratic 389,029 28.3% 1 1 ±0
Independent 110,548 8.04% 0 0 0
Totals 1,374,610 100.00% 5 5 ±0
Voter turnout

Results

[edit]
Oklahoma congressional districts in the 2004 elections
District Incumbent Party First
elected
Result Candidates
Oklahoma 1 John Sullivan Republican 2002 Re-elected John Sullivan (R) 60.2%
Doug Dodd (D) 37.5%
John Krymski (I) 2.3%
Oklahoma 2 Brad Carson Democratic 2000 Retired to run for U.S. Senate
Democratic hold
Dan Boren (D) 65.9%
Wayland Smalley (R) 34.1%
Oklahoma 3 Frank Lucas Republican 1994 Re-elected Frank Lucas (R) 82.2%
Gregory Wilson (I) 17.8%
Oklahoma 4 Tom Cole Republican 2002 Re-elected Tom Cole (R) 77.8%
Charlene K. Bradshaw (I) 22.2%
Oklahoma 5 Ernest Istook Republican 1992 Re-elected Ernest Istook (R) 66.1%
Bert Smith (D) 33.9%
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Oklahoma Secretary of State "Official Election Results, 2004 General Election".