(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
1988 Washington gubernatorial election - Wikipedia Jump to content

1988 Washington gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1988 Washington gubernatorial election

← 1984 November 8, 1988 1992 →
 
Nominee Booth Gardner Bob Williams
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 1,166,448 708,481
Percentage 62.21% 37.79%

County results
Gardner:      50–60%      60–70%
Williams:      50–60%      60–70%

Governor before election

Booth Gardner
Democratic

Elected Governor

Booth Gardner
Democratic

The 1988 Washington gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 1988. Incumbent Democratic Governor Booth Gardner won a second term, defeating Republican State Representative Bob Williams in a landslide. This election was the first time since 1960 that an incumbent Democratic Governor of Washington was re-elected.

Gardner won the highest share of the vote since Clarence Martin in 1936. Gardner's 62.21% of the vote is third-highest of any gubernatorial candidate in Washington's history.[a]

Primary election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Democratic

[edit]
  • Jeanne Dixon
  • Ted Parker Fix
  • Booth Gardner, incumbent governor of Washington
  • Richard "Onery Dick" Short

Republican

[edit]

Independent

[edit]
  • Baba Jeanne "BJ" Mangaoang, party leader

Results

[edit]
Blanket primary results by county:
  Gardner
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Williams
  •   40–50%
Blanket primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Booth Gardner (incumbent) 539,243 57.64%
Republican Bob Williams 187,797 22.07%
Republican Norm Maleng 139,274 14.89%
Democratic Jeanne Dixon 31,917 3.41%
Democratic Richard "Onery Dick" Short 14,782 1.58%
Democratic Ted Parker Fix 9,302 0.99%
Republican Paul Dean Santos 7,370 0.79%
Independent Baba Jeanne Mangaoang 5,818 0.62%
Total votes 935,503 100.00%

General election

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Debates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
1988 Washington gubernatorial election[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Booth Gardner (incumbent) 1,166,448 62.21% +8.90%
Republican Bob Williams 708,481 37.79% −8.90%
Majority 457,967 24.43%
Total votes 1,874,929 100.00%
Democratic hold Swing +17.81%

Results by county

[edit]

Gardner's landslide win made him the first Democrat since Clarence Martin in 1936 to carry Chelan County, Garfield County, Lincoln County, San Juan County, Walla Walla County, and Whitman County. However, since this election, no Democrat has won Chelan County, Douglas County, Ferry County, Garfield County, Grant County, Lincoln County, and Okanogan County.

County[2] Booth Gardner
Democratic
Bob Williams
Republican
Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # %
Adams 2,228 49.83% 2,243 50.17% -15 -0.34% 4,471
Asotin 4,345 65.74% 2,264 34.26% 2,081 31.49% 6,609
Benton 15,407 34.44% 29,333 65.56% -13,926 -31.13% 44,740
Chelan 11,037 58.10% 7,961 41.90% 3,076 16.19% 18,998
Clallam 13,776 59.43% 9,406 40.57% 4,370 18.85% 23,182
Clark 45,072 57.67% 33,086 42.33% 11,986 15.34% 78,158
Columbia 918 46.55% 1,054 53.45% -136 -6.90% 1,972
Cowlitz 14,154 49.25% 14,584 50.75% -430 -1.50% 28,738
Douglas 5,208 54.80% 4,296 45.20% 912 9.60% 9,504
Ferry 1,161 57.16% 870 42.84% 291 14.33% 2,031
Franklin 4,438 40.25% 6,587 59.75% -2,149 -19.49% 11,025
Garfield 783 58.26% 561 41.74% 222 16.52% 1,344
Grant 9,383 51.52% 8,830 48.48% 553 3.04% 18,213
Grays Harbor 16,951 69.79% 7,336 30.21% 9,615 39.59% 24,287
Island 12,369 57.14% 9,277 42.86% 3,092 14.28% 21,646
Jefferson 6,378 65.90% 3,300 34.10% 3,078 31.80% 9,678
King 453,572 69.89% 195,378 30.11% 258,194 39.79% 648,950
Kitsap 42,616 60.62% 27,683 39.38% 14,933 21.24% 70,299
Kittitas 6,723 63.37% 3,886 36.63% 2,837 26.74% 10,609
Klickitat 3,482 57.09% 2,617 42.91% 865 14.18% 6,099
Lewis 10,256 43.39% 13,380 56.61% -3,124 -13.22% 23,636
Lincoln 2,423 51.12% 2,317 48.88% 106 2.24% 4,740
Mason 9,699 60.94% 6,217 39.06% 3,482 21.88% 15,916
Okanogan 6,824 57.33% 5,078 42.67% 1,746 14.67% 11,902
Pacific 5,513 67.39% 2,668 32.61% 2,845 34.78% 8,181
Pend Oreille 2,317 60.43% 1,517 39.57% 800 20.87% 3,834
Pierce 119,459 63.28% 69,307 36.72% 50,152 26.57% 188,766
San Juan 3,814 65.87% 1,976 34.13% 1,838 31.74% 5,790
Skagit 19,902 60.33% 13,089 39.67% 6,813 20.65% 32,991
Skamania 1,653 52.36% 1,504 47.64% 149 4.72% 3,157
Snohomish 105,357 62.53% 63,123 37.47% 42,234 25.07% 168,480
Spokane 80,678 56.72% 61,571 43.28% 19,107 13.43% 142,249
Stevens 5,880 48.48% 6,249 51.52% -369 -3.04% 12,129
Thurston 42,583 62.74% 25,292 37.26% 17,291 25.47% 67,875
Wahkiakum 820 52.06% 755 47.94% 65 4.13% 1,575
Walla Walla 8,916 50.36% 8,789 49.64% 127 0.72% 17,705
Whatcom 31,321 62.32% 18,934 37.68% 12,387 24.65% 50,255
Whitman 9,337 60.78% 6,026 39.22% 3,311 21.55% 15,363
Yakima 29,695 49.63% 30,137 50.37% -442 -0.74% 59,832
Totals 1,166,448 62.21% 708,481 37.79% 457,967 24.43% 1,874,929

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

[edit]

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Martin received 69.36% in 1936 and Samuel G. Cosgrove received 62.56% in 1908.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Elections Search Results September 1988 Primary". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved August 12, 2024.
  2. ^ a b "Elections Search Results November 1988 General". Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved August 12, 2024.