Election Name: | 2004 Kentucky's 6th congressional district special election |
Country: | Kentucky |
Type: | by-election |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2002 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky#District 6 |
Previous Year: | 2002 |
Next Election: | 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky#District 6 |
Next Year: | November 2004 |
Nominee1: | Ben Chandler |
Party1: | Democratic Party (United States) |
Popular Vote1: | 84,168 |
Percentage1: | 55.16% |
Nominee2: | Alice Kerr |
Party2: | Republican Party (United States) |
Popular Vote2: | 65,474 |
Percentage2: | 42.91% |
U.S. Representative | |
Before Election: | Ernie Fletcher |
Before Party: | Republican Party (United States) |
After Election: | Ben Chandler |
After Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
The 2004 United States House of Representatives special election in Kentucky's 6th congressional district was held on February 17, 2004, to select the successor to Ernie Fletcher (R) who resigned upon being elected Governor of Kentucky. Each party held a nominating convention to choose their nominee for the special election. Republicans selected state Senator Alice Kerr over state Representatives Stan Lee and Lonnie Napier and Lexington city councilman Charles Ellinger II as their nominee[1] while Democrats chose former state Attorney General and 2003 Democratic gubernatorial nominee Ben Chandler.
Chandler won the election to fill out the rest of Fletcher's unexpired term. This was a symbolic victory for Democrats considering that the man Chandler succeeded was the same one he lost to in the Gubernatorial election months earlier. Though Kerr was able to out raise and out spend Chandler, it was not enough to overcome his popularity, who in addition to having served as state attorney general was also the grandson of Happy Chandler, a former governor, U.S. Senator, and Commissioner of Baseball, in this conservative, but generally ticket-splitting Lexington centered District, which supported Fletcher with 71% in 2002, and George W. Bush over Al Gore by a smaller but nonetheless substantial 55% to 42% margin in the Presidential election of 2000.[2]