1998 United States Senate election in Nevada

The 1998 United States Senate election in Nevada was held on November 3, 1998. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Harry Reid won re-election to a third term.

1998 United States Senate election in Nevada

November 3, 1998
 
Nominee Harry Reid John Ensign
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 208,650 208,222
Percentage 47.9% 47.8%

County results
Reid:      50–60%
Ensign:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

U.S. senator before election

Harry Reid
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Harry Reid
Democratic

Republican primary

Candidates

Results

Republican primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Ensign 105,263 80.57%
Republican Ralph W. Stephens 13,679 10.47%
Republican None of these candidates 11,704 8.96%
Total votes 130,646 100.00%

General election

Candidates

  • Michael Cloud (L)
  • John Ensign (R), U.S. Representative
  • Harry Reid (D), incumbent U.S. Senator
  • Michael Williams (NL)

Campaign

Early in the campaign, Reid held a double-digit lead over Ensign in most polls. After a fierce battle of attack ads on television by both candidates, Ensign pulled into a dead heat with Reid. This reversal of fortune was attributed to several factors. More than 125,000 new residents had arrived in Nevada since 1992, many of them settling in Ensign's suburban Clark County congressional district. As such, many of them were more familiar with Ensign than with Reid, whose previous Republican opponents had hailed from other regions of the state. Republican consultant John Maddox observed that Ensign's greater familiarity to the Las Vegas metropolitan region gave him an advantage, adding that "he has won votes from Democrats who have never voted for Reid." In contrast, Reid was believed to hold an advantage with longtime Nevada residents, particularly those in slower-growing regions of the state. In addition, the number of registered Republicans in Nevada had dramatically increased as well; in 1992, Democrats had held an advantage of approximately 40,000 registered voters, but by 1998 Republicans outnumbered Democrats by 4,000. John Ralston, a political analyst in Las Vegas, claimed that Reid was also hurt by declining voter enthusiasm in the wake of the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Reid had been one of the first senators to express dissatisfaction with President Clinton over the scandal, describing the president's behavior as "immoral."[2]

During the campaign, Reid cited his efforts to block the storage of nuclear waste at the Yucca Mountain repository, while also using the issue to attack Ensign. In one campaign speech, Reid claimed, "You send Ensign to the Senate, you send nuclear waste to Nevada." Ensign responded to the attacks by pointing out his own position against the depository and indicated he would work with Richard Bryan, the state's other senator, to stop it. "Bryan's a Democrat who works with Republicans," he said, "and I'm a Republican who works with Democrats." The Reid campaign also attacked Ensign as an "extremist" who would weaken Social Security and referred to environmentalists as "socialists." Ensign, meanwhile accused Reid of supporting tax increases in Washington even as he claimed to support lower taxes at home.[2]

Results

On November 3, 1998, Reid won by 401 votes in an exceptionally close election—even closer than South Dakota in 2002, when incumbent Senator Tim Johnson defeated Congressman John Thune by 524 votes. Ensign did not contest the results, and was elected to Nevada's other Senate seat in 2000, much like Thune who was elected to South Dakota's other Senate seat in 2004.

General election results[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Harry Reid (incumbent) 208,621 47.88% -3.19%
Republican John Ensign 208,220 47.78% +7.56%
Libertarian Michael Cloud 8,129 1.87% +0.41%
None of These Candidates 8,113 1.86% -0.79%
Natural Law Michael E. Williams 2,781 0.64% -0.83%
Turnout 435,864 100.00%
Democratic hold Swing

County breakdown

County Reid % Ensign % Others %
Carson City 7,029 42.2% 8,699 52.2% 930 5.6%
Churchill 1.594 22.0% 5,260 72.5% 402 5.5%
Clark 134,163 52.6% 111,718 43.8% 8,961 3.5%
Douglas 4,766 33.3% 8,810 61.6% 715 5.0%
Elko 2,589 25.7% 7,051 69.9% 453 4.5%
Esmeralda 151 28.0% 343 63.5% 46 8.5%
Eureka 162 24.0% 461 68.2% 53 7.8%
Humboldt 1,601 37.7% 2,428 57.1% 220 5.2%
Lander 704 34.0% 1,209 58.4% 156 7.5%
Lincoln 616 31.4% 1,238 63.1% 109 5.6%
Lyon 3,242 34.8% 5,486 58.9% 585 6.3%
Mineral 1,176 54.3% 822 37.9% 169 7.8%
Nye 4,052 42.7% 4,912 51.7% 533 5.6%
Pershing 577 36.9% 902 57.7% 85 5.4%
Storey 691 41.3% 838 50.1% 144 8.6%
Washoe 44,118 46.1% 46,300 48.4% 5,194 5.4%
White Pine 1,419 42.7% 1,745 52.4% 163 5.9%

[4][5]

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-06-21. Retrieved 2013-01-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Cannon, Lou (25 September 1998). "Demographic Changes Leave Nevada Senator in Jeopardy". Washington Post.
  3. http://clerk.house.gov/member_info/electionInfo/1998/98Stat.htm#28
  4. Leip, David. "1998 Senatorial General Election Data Graphs - Nevada". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  5. "Results of the 1998 U.S. Senate Recount". Nevada Secretary of State. December 9, 1998. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
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