Election Name: | 1988 United States Senate election in North Dakota |
Country: | North Dakota |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1982 United States Senate election in North Dakota |
Previous Year: | 1982 |
Next Election: | 1992 United States Senate special election in North Dakota |
Next Year: | 1992 (special) |
Election Date: | November 8, 1988 |
Image1: | File:BurdickQN_(D-ND) (cropped 2).jpg |
Nominee1: | Quentin Burdick |
Party1: | North Dakota Democratic-NPL Party |
Popular Vote1: | 171,899 |
Percentage1: | 59.45% |
Nominee2: | Earl Strinden |
Party2: | North Dakota Republican Party |
Popular Vote2: | 112,937 |
Percentage2: | 39.06% |
Map Size: | 250px |
U.S. Senator | |
Before Election: | Quentin Burdick |
Posttitle: | Elected U.S. Senator |
Before Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
After Election: | Quentin Burdick |
After Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
The 1988 U.S. Senate election for the state of North Dakota was held November 8, 1988. Incumbent (Democratic-NPL Senator Quentin Burdick won re-election to his sixth term, defeating Republican candidate Earl Strinden.[1]
Only Burdick filed as a Dem-NPLer, and the endorsed Republican candidate was Earl Strinden of Grand Forks, North Dakota, who was President of the University of North Dakota Alumni Association. As in the Burdick's previous re-election campaign, the senator's age became an issue for voters as he was 80 years old during the campaign. However, challenger Strinden commented that he did not want to raise the age issue. Burdick and Strinden won the primary elections for their respective parties.
The Burdick campaign hired high-profile Washington, D.C. campaign consultant Bob Squire of Squire Eskew Communications. To counter the potential age issue, Burdick successfully focused the message on the "clout" he had earned over decades in the Senate, as well as his Chairmanship of Senate Agricultural Appropriations sub-committee and his Chairmanship of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.
One independent candidate, Kenneth C. Gardner, also filed before the deadline, officially calling himself a libertarian. Gardner had previously run for North Dakota's other United States Senate seat as an independent in 1974, challenging Milton Young. He only received 853 votes in that election.