1992 United States presidential election in Utah

Summary

The 1992 United States presidential election in Utah took place on November 3, 1992, and was part of the 1992 United States presidential election. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1992 United States presidential election in Utah

← 1988 November 3, 1992 1996 →
 
Nominee George H. W. Bush Ross Perot Bill Clinton
Party Republican Independent Democratic
Home state Texas Texas Arkansas
Running mate Dan Quayle James Stockdale Al Gore
Electoral vote 5 0 0
Popular vote 322,332 203,400 183,429
Percentage 43.36% 27.34% 24.65%

County Results

President before election

George Bush
Republican

Elected President

Bill Clinton
Democratic

Utah was won by President George H. W. Bush (R-TX) by a 16.0 percent margin of victory. This was one of only two states, the other one being Maine, to have Ross Perot (I-TX) come in second place. Unlike Maine, Perot did not win any counties, though he placed second in nineteen of twenty-nine to overcome Bill Clinton (D-AR) in the popular vote. Likewise it was the only time Bill Clinton finished third in a state, in either the 1992 or 1996 election, despite winning two counties. Utah and Maine (the latter of which where Bush finished third behind Perot) in 1992 constitute the last time (as of the 2020 presidential election) that any major party candidate has finished third in a state, and the only time in a non-Confederate state since Robert M. La Follette finished ahead of John W. Davis in twelve states[a] in 1924.[1]

Utah was Perot’s third-highest vote percentage behind Maine and Alaska.[2]

Results edit

1992 United States presidential election in Utah[3]
Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Republican George H. W. Bush (incumbent) 322,332 43.36% 5
Independent Ross Perot 203,400 27.34% 0
Democratic Bill Clinton 183,429 24.65% 0
Populist James "Bo" Gritz 28,602 3.84% 0
Libertarian Andre Marrou 1,900 0.26% 0
Natural Law Dr. John Hagelin 1,319 0.18% 0
Democrats for Economic Recovery Lyndon LaRouche 1,089 0.15% 0
New Alliance Lenora Fulani 414 0.06% 0
Taxpayers’ Howard Phillips 393 0.05% 0
American Feimer Smith 292 0.04% 0
Socialist Workers James Warren 270 0.04% 0
Independent/Peace and Freedom Party Ron Daniels 177 0.02% 0
Socialist J. Quinn Brisben 151 0.02% 0
Totals - 100.00% 5
Voter turnout (Voting age population)

Results by county edit

County George H.W. Bush
Republican
Ross Perot
Independent
Bill Clinton
Democratic
Bo Gritz[4]
Populist
Various candidates[4]
Other parties
Margin[b] Total votes cast
# % # % # % # % # % # %
Beaver 1,040 49.27% 330 15.63% 668 31.64% 52 2.46% 21 0.99% 372[c] 17.63% 2,111
Box Elder 7,712 49.58% 4,507 28.97% 2,186 14.05% 1,013 6.51% 137 0.88% 3,205 20.61% 15,555
Cache 15,971 51.98% 8,032 26.14% 4,973 16.19% 1,511 4.92% 238 0.77% 7,939 25.84% 30,725
Carbon 2,038 23.11% 2,002 22.71% 4,480 50.81% 235 2.67% 62 0.70% -2,442[c] -27.70% 8,817
Daggett 172 38.91% 117 26.47% 122 27.60% 30 6.79% 1 0.23% 50[c] 11.31% 442
Davis 39,087 48.05% 24,105 29.63% 14,924 18.35% 2,723 3.35% 510 0.63% 14,982 18.42% 81,350
Duchesne 1,983 43.44% 1,229 26.92% 772 16.91% 537 11.76% 44 0.96% 754 16.52% 4,565
Emery 1,643 36.43% 1,138 25.23% 1,349 29.91% 364 8.07% 16 0.35% 294[c] 6.52% 4,510
Garfield 1,235 62.28% 355 17.90% 309 15.58% 79 3.98% 5 0.25% 880 44.38% 1,983
Grand 1,100 32.91% 991 29.65% 1,160 34.71% 44 1.32% 47 1.41% -60[c] -1.80% 3,342
Iron 5,616 59.88% 1,693 18.05% 1,537 16.39% 440 4.69% 92 0.98% 3,923 41.83% 9,378
Juab 1,237 42.73% 616 21.28% 823 28.43% 209 7.22% 10 0.35% 414[c] 14.30% 2,895
Kane 1,241 57.14% 534 24.59% 295 13.58% 85 3.91% 17 0.78% 707 32.55% 2,172
Millard 2,496 52.33% 1,064 22.31% 742 15.56% 417 8.74% 51 1.07% 1,432 30.02% 4,770
Morgan 1,339 45.54% 851 28.95% 520 17.69% 225 7.65% 5 0.17% 488 16.59% 2,940
Piute 429 56.97% 146 19.39% 169 22.44% 9 1.20% 0 0.00% 260[c] 34.53% 753
Rich 525 59.93% 187 21.35% 154 17.58% 10 1.14% 0 0.00% 338 38.58% 876
Salt Lake 117,247 36.79% 91,968 28.85% 100,082 31.40% 6,444 2.02% 2,920 0.92% 17,165[c] 5.39% 318,731
San Juan 2,004 46.23% 576 13.29% 1,639 37.81% 111 2.56% 5 0.12% 365[c] 8.42% 4,335
Sanpete 2,995 44.80% 1,742 26.06% 1,302 19.48% 575 8.60% 71 1.06% 1,253 18.74% 6,685
Sevier 3,160 50.50% 1,671 26.70% 1,039 16.60% 329 5.26% 59 0.94% 1,489 23.80% 6,258
Summit 3,133 33.33% 3,060 32.56% 3,013 32.06% 128 1.36% 65 0.69% 73 0.77% 9,399
Tooele 3,676 35.79% 3,011 29.32% 3,270 31.84% 224 2.18% 90 0.88% 406[c] 3.95% 10,271
Uintah 3,505 45.09% 2,250 28.94% 1,374 17.67% 589 7.58% 56 0.72% 1,255 16.15% 7,774
Utah 61,398 56.76% 24,558 22.70% 14,090 13.02% 7,410 6.85% 722 0.67% 36,840 34.06% 108,178
Wasatch 1,822 42.02% 1,234 28.46% 1,042 24.03% 178 4.11% 60 1.38% 588 13.56% 4,336
Washington 11,310 52.66% 4,623 21.53% 3,364 15.66% 2,037 9.49% 142 0.66% 6,687 31.13% 21,476
Wayne 706 57.63% 251 20.49% 236 19.27% 30 2.45% 2 0.16% 455 37.14% 1,225
Weber 26,812 39.30% 20,559 30.14% 17,795 26.09% 2,564 3.76% 486 0.71% 6,253 9.16% 68,216
Totals 322,632 43.36% 203,400 27.34% 183,429 24.65% 28,602 3.84% 6,006 0.81% 119,232 16.02% 744,069

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit

Electors edit

Technically the voters of Utah cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Utah is allocated five electors because it has three congressional districts and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of five electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins a plurality of votes in the state is awarded all five electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.

The electors of each state and the District of Columbia met in December 1992 to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.

All electors from Utah were pledged to and voted for George H. W. Bush and Dan Quayle.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ States where La Follette finished ahead of Davis in 1924 were Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin, California, Washington, South Dakota, Wyoming, Idaho, Iowa, Montana, Nevada and Oregon.
  2. ^ Because Perot finished ahead of Clinton in Utah as a whole, all margins given are Bush minus Perot unless stated in the total for the county in question.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j In this county where Clinton ran ahead of Perot, the margin given is Bush vote minus Clinton vote.

References edit

  1. ^ Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004, pp. 55, 109 ISBN 0786422173
  2. ^ "1992 Presidential Election Statistics". Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  3. ^ Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas; 1992 Presidential General Election Results – Utah
  4. ^ a b Our Campaigns; UT US Presidential Election November 03, 1992