Election Name: | 1990 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont |
Country: | Vermont |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1988 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont |
Previous Year: | 1988 |
Next Election: | 1992 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont |
Next Year: | 1992 |
Election Date: | November 6, 1990 |
Image1: | File:Bernie Sanders 104th Congress.jpg |
Nominee1: | Bernie Sanders |
Party1: | Independent (United States) |
Popular Vote1: | 117,522 |
Percentage1: | 56.0% |
Nominee2: | Peter Plympton Smith |
Party2: | Republican Party (United States) |
Popular Vote2: | 82,938 |
Percentage2: | 39.5% |
Representative At-large | |
Before Election: | Peter Plympton Smith |
Before Party: | Republican Party (United States) |
After Election: | Bernie Sanders |
After Party: | Independent (politician) |
The 1990 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont was held on Tuesday, November 6, 1990, to elect the U.S. representative from the state's at-large congressional district. The election coincided with the elections of other federal and state offices.
Smith, a liberal Republican, was considered to have acquitted himself well in his first congressional term, and The Washington Post noted that under most circumstances he would have been considered safely assured of re-election.[3] However, the presence of Sanders, who was well known in Vermont and who was considered more famous than Smith, meant that he faced a tough re-election battle.[3] Sanders, a democratic socialist, had narrowly lost to Smith in 1988, which was widely attributed to the presence of a strong Democratic candidate in the form of Vermont House Majority Leader Paul N. Poirier.[3] No such event occurred during the 1990 cycle, as the Democratic nominee, Professor Dolores Sandoval, held positions to the left of Sanders on several issues, with her advocating for the legalisation of heroin.[3]
Despite this Smith had an advantage in the polls until March 1990, when he backed a series of bills designed to alleviate the savings and loan crisis, including a bailout bill and a bill that cut funding for social programs. Sanders used Smith's support for these plans to tie him to President George H. W. Bush, who was unpopular in Vermont, and to portray him as overly supportive of the rich.[4] Smith also faced backlash from voters for his support for extensive restrictions on guns, which earned him the enmity of several gun rights organizations. These organizations turned to Sanders as the only viable alternative even though his positions on guns were not radically different from Smith's. Feeling that he was losing ground in the race, Smith ran an ad campaign attempting to tie Sanders to left-wing authoritarian regimes such as Cuba, and attacking him for his self-declared democratic socialist views. This decision backfired, as Smith's tactics were denounced as "red-baiting" and "McCarthyism" in the press, and many Smith backers voiced their displeasure with the campaign.