1996 United States presidential election in New Jersey explained

Election Name:1996 United States presidential election in New Jersey
Country:New Jersey
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1992 United States presidential election in New Jersey
Previous Year:1992
Next Election:2000 United States presidential election in New Jersey
Next Year:2000
Election Date:November 5, 1996
Image1:File:Bill Clinton.jpg
Nominee1:Bill Clinton
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:Arkansas
Running Mate1:Al Gore
Electoral Vote1:15
Popular Vote1:1,652,329
Percentage1:53.72%
Nominee2:Bob Dole
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:Kansas
Running Mate2:Jack Kemp
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:1,103,078
Percentage2:35.86%
Image3:File:RossPerotColor.jpg
Nominee3:Ross Perot
Party3:Independent politician
Home State3:Texas
Running Mate3:Pat Choate
Electoral Vote3:0
Popular Vote3:262,134
Percentage3:8.52%
Map Size:350px
President
Before Election:Bill Clinton
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Bill Clinton
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1996 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 5, 1996, and was part of the 1996 United States presidential election. Voters chose 15 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. The major contenders were incumbent Democratic President Bill Clinton and Republican Senator from Kansas Bob Dole, with Reform Party candidate Ross Perot – listed as an "Independent" in New Jersey – running a distant third.

New Jersey voted decisively to re-elect Democrat Bill Clinton, giving him 53.72% of the vote over Republican Bob Dole's 35.86%, a margin of 17.86%. This double-digit win indicated a major shift in New Jersey politics toward the Democratic Party. As recently as the 1980s, Republican presidential candidates had easily carried the state by double-digit margins. In 1992, Bill Clinton had won the state with a narrow 43-41 plurality over George H. W. Bush, however, the state was still 3% more Republican than the nation at large. However, in 1996, New Jersey voted 9.33% more Democratic than the rest of the nation, which represented the first time the state voted more Democratic than the nation since 1964 and only the third time since 1904, and a distinction the state has held ever since.

As in neighboring New York and many other states, Clinton in 1996 drastically improved his electoral performance among suburban voters, a key voting bloc in New Jersey. Following this election, New Jersey has become a reliable blue state in presidential elections, not being seriously contested by Republicans since. Despite this, Dole is currently the only Republican to fail to garner 40 percent of the New Jersey ballot since Barry Goldwater in 1964.

As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time that Cape May and Ocean Counties voted for a Democratic presidential candidate.

Results

1996 United States presidential election in New Jersey[1]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticBill Clinton (incumbent)1,652,32953.72%15
Republican1,103,07835.86%0
IndependentRoss Perot262,1348.52%0
GreenRalph Nader32,465 1.06%0
LibertarianHarry Browne14,7630.48%0
Natural LawJohn Hagelin3,8870.13%0
ConstitutionHoward Phillips3,4400.11%0
Socialist WorkersJames Harris1,8370.06%0
Workers World1,3370.04%0
Socialist EqualityJerome White5370.02%0
Totals3,075,807100.00%15
Voter Turnout (Voting age/Registered)51%/71%

Results by county

CountyBill Clinton
Democratic
Bob Dole
Republican
Ross Perot
Independent
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%%
Atlantic44,43453.15%29,53835.33%8,2619.88%1,3681.64%14,89617.82%83,601
Bergen191,08552.66%141,16438.90%25,5127.03%5,1261.41%49,92113.76%362,887
Burlington85,08651.94%57,33735.00%18,40711.24%2,9791.82%27,74916.94%163,809
Camden114,96260.59%52,79127.83%17,4339.19%4,5372.39%62,17132.76%189,723
Cape May19,84944.07%19,35742.98%4,97811.05%8521.89%4921.09%45,036
Cumberland25,44454.68%14,74431.69%5,34811.49%9972.14%10,70022.99%46,533
Essex175,36868.99%65,16225.63%9,5133.74%4,1531.63%110,20643.36%254,196
Gloucester51,91551.66%32,11631.96%14,36114.29%2,1032.09%19,79919.70%100,495
Hudson116,12169.95%38,28823.06%8,9655.40%2,6351.59%77,83346.89%166,009
Hunterdon18,44635.66%26,37951.00%5,68610.99%1,2162.35%-7,933-15.34%51,727
Mercer77,64158.94%40,55930.79%10,5368.00%2,9902.27%37,08228.15%131,726
Middlesex145,20156.20%82,43331.90%24,6439.54%6,1092.36%62,76824.30%258,386
Monmouth120,41448.37%99,97540.16%22,7549.14%5,8182.34%20,4398.21%248,961
Morris81,09241.43%95,83048.96%15,2997.82%3,5241.80%-14,738-7.53%195,745
Ocean94,24346.43%82,83040.81%22,86411.26%3,0391.50%11,4135.62%202,976
Passaic85,87956.15%53,59435.04%10,9447.16%2,5341.66%32,28521.11%152,951
Salem12,04446.34%9,29435.76%4,12415.87%5302.04%2,75010.58%25,992
Somerset50,67344.87%51,86945.93%8,3777.42%2,0101.78%-1,196-1.06%112,929
Sussex19,52536.04%26,74649.36%6,70512.37%1,2072.23%-7,221-13.32%54,183
Union108,10256.82%65,91234.65%12,4326.53%3,7951.99%42,19022.17%190,241
Warren14,80539.27%17,16045.52%4,99213.24%7441.97%-2,355-6.25%37,701
Totals1,652,32953.72%1,103,07835.86%262,1348.52%58,2661.89%549,25117.86%3,075,807

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Results by municipality

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1996 Presidential General Election Results - New Jersey. U.S. Election Atlas. 5 February 2013.