Misplaced Pages

1978 Minnesota gubernatorial election

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Minnesota gubernatorial election, 1978)

1978 Minnesota gubernatorial election

← 1974 November 7, 1978 1982 →
 
Nominee Al Quie Rudy Perpich
Party Ind.-Republican Democratic (DFL)
Running mate Lou Wangberg Alec Olson
Popular vote 830,019 718,244
Percentage 52.35% 45.30%

County results

Quie:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

Perpich:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

Governor before election

Rudy Perpich
Democratic (DFL)

Elected Governor

Al Quie
Ind.-Republican

Elections in Minnesota
General elections
Federal elections
Presidential elections
Senate elections
House of Representatives
State executive elections
Gubernatorial elections
Lieutenant gubernatorial elections
Secretary of State elections
State Auditor elections
Attorney General elections
State legislative elections
Senate elections
House of Representatives elections
Special elections
Ballot questions
2012
Minneapolis
General elections
Mayoral elections
City Council elections
City ballot questions
Saint Paul
Mayoral elections

The 1978 Minnesota gubernatorial election took place on November 7, 1978. Independent-Republican Party candidate Al Quie defeated Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party incumbent Rudy Perpich.

Primary elections were held on September 12. Perpich and Quie each won their party's nomination easily over Alice Tripp and Robert W. Johnson, respectively. Richard Pedersen was unopposed for the minor American Party nomination.

DFL primary

Candidates

  • Rudy Perpich, incumbent Governor of Minnesota since 1976
    • Running mate: Alec G. Olson, incumbent Lieutenant Governor since 1976
  • Alice Tripp, Belgrade farmer and anti-power line activist
    • Running mate: Mike Casper, professor of physics

Results

1986 DFL gubernatorial primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Rudy Perpich (incumbent) 390,069 80.04%
Democratic (DFL) Alice Tripp 97,247 19.96%
Total votes 487,316 100.00%

Independent-Republican primary

Candidates

Results

1986 Ind.-Republican gubernatorial primary
Party Candidate Votes %
Ind.-Republican Al Quie 174,799 83.55%
Ind.-Republican Bob Johnson 34,406 16.45%
Total votes 209,205 100.00%

American primary

Candidates

Results

1986 DFL gubernatorial primary
Party Candidate Votes %
American Richard Pedersen 4,277 100.00%
Total votes 4,277 100.00%

General election

Candidates

  • Jill Lakowske, Minneapolis resident (Socialist Workers)
    • Marc Shaver, St. Paul steelworker
  • Tom McDonald, perennial candidate from Minneapolis (Honest Government)
    • Running mate: Russ Payzant, Minneapolis resident
  • Robin E. Miller, Anoka computer analyst (Libertarian)
  • Richard Pedersen, New Brighton electronics engineer (American)
    • Running mate: Joyce M. Baier, Minneapolis resident
  • Rudy Perpich, incumbent Governor of Minnesota since 1976 (DFL)
    • Running mate: Alec G. Olson, incumbent Lieutenant Governor since 1976
  • Edwin Pommerening, Randolph farmer (Savings Account)
  • Al Quie, U.S. Representative from Dennison (Independent-Republican)

Results

1978 Gubernatorial Election, Minnesota
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Ind.-Republican Al Quie 830,019 52.35% +22.99%
Democratic (DFL) Rudy Perpich (incumbent) 718,244 45.30% −17.51%
American Richard Pedersen 21,058 1.33% N/A
Socialist Workers Jill Lakowske 6,287 0.40% −0.34%
Independent Tom McDonald 4,254 0.27% n/a
Libertarian Robin E. Miller 3,689 0.23% +0.06%
Independent Edwin Pommerening 2,043 0.13% n/a
Majority 111,775 7.05%
Turnout 1,585,594
Ind.-Republican gain from Democratic (DFL) Swing

References

  1. ^ Libraries, University of Minnesota. "Minnesota Historical Election Archive". Minnesota Historical Election Archive. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
(1977 ←)   1978 United States elections   (→ 1979)
U.S. Senate
U.S. House
Governors
Attorneys
General
State
legislatures
Mayors
Elections in Minnesota
General elections
State elections
Executive elections
Gubernatorial elections
Lieutenant gubernatorial elections
Secretary of State elections
State Auditor elections
Attorney General elections
Legislative elections
Senate elections
House of Representatives elections
Ballot questions
Special elections
Senate
House of Representatives
Federal elections
Presidential elections
Senate elections
Class 1
Class 2
House of Representatives elections
Municipal elections
Minneapolis
General elections
Mayoral elections
City Council elections
Saint Paul
Mayoral elections


Stub icon 1 Stub icon 2

This Minnesota elections-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: