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U.S. Senate election, 2000

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Republican hold in light red, Republican pickup in dark red, Democratic hold in light blue, Democratic pickup in dark blue.
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Republican hold in light red, Republican pickup in dark red, Democratic hold in light blue, Democratic pickup in dark blue.

The U.S. Senate election, 2000 was an election for United States Senate which coincided with the election of George W. Bush as president. It was a fiercely-contested race that resulted in a victory for the Democratic Party, which gained four net seats from the Republican Party in the Senate. (Democrats had already gained one seat since the 1998 elections when Zell B. Miller (D-Ga.) was appointed following the death of Paul M. Coverdell (R-Ga.).)

This was six years after many Republicans had been swept into the Senate in the elections of 1994, and most of the races which were considered to be in play were won by Democrats. They defeated Republican senators William Roth (R-Del.), E. Spencer Abraham (R-Mich.), Rod Grams (R-Minn.), John D. Ashcroft (R-Mo.), and T. Slade Gorton III (R-Wash.), as well as winning the open seat in Florida. Ashcroft's defeat was noteworthy in that his opponent, Mel Carnahan, had died before the election, but still won. (The Democratic governor had promised to appoint Carnahan's wife to the seat if he won). The Republicans did defeat one incumbent, Charles S. Robb (D-Va.), and win an open seat in Nevada.

This left the Senate a 50-50 tie between Republicans and Democrats, which meant Republicans could control the chamber with the tie-breaking vote of the new Vice President Richard B. Cheney. But before Cheney took the vice presidency on January 20th, after the new senators took office on January 3rd, Al Gore was still the vice president, which means that the Democrats had the majority during that time. This state of affairs lasted until James M. Jeffords of Vermont, who left the Republican party, became an independent caucusing with the Democrats.

Senate contests in 2000

StateIncumbentPartyStatusOpposing Candidates
ArizonaJon KylRepublicanRe-elected, 79 - 8 - 5Vance Hansen (Green)
Barry Hess (Libertarian)
CaliforniaDianne FeinsteinDemocratRe-elected, 56 - 37Tom Campbell (Republican)
ConnecticutJoe LiebermanDemocratRe-elected, 63 - 34Phil Giordano (Republican)
DelawareWilliam RothRepublicanDefeated, 56 - 44Thomas R. Carper (Democrat)
FloridaConnie MackRepublicanRetired, Democratic victory, 51 - 46Bill Nelson (Democrat)
Bill McCollum (Republican)
Georgia1Zell MillerDemocratRe-elected, 58 - 38Matt Mattingly (Republican)
HawaiiDaniel AkakaDemocratRe-elected, 73 - 25John Carroll (Republican)
IndianaDick LugarRepublicanRe-elected, 67 - 32David Johnson (Democrat)
MaineOlympia SnoweRepublicanRe-elected, 69 - 31Mark Lawrence (Democrat)
MarylandPaul SarbanesDemocratRe-elected, 63 - 37Paul Rappaport (Republican)
MassachusettsTed KennedyDemocratRe-elected, 73 - 13 - 12Jack Robinson (Republican)
Carla Howell (Libertarian)
MichiganSpencer AbrahamRepublicanDefeated, 50 - 48Debbie Stabenow (Democrat)
MinnesotaRod GramsRepublicanDefeated, 49 - 43Mark Dayton (Democrat)
MississippiTrent LottRepublicanRe-elected, 66 - 32Troy Brown (Democrat)
MissouriJohn AshcroftRepublicanDefeated, 51 - 48Mel Carnahan (Democrat)
MontanaConrad BurnsRepublicanRe-elected, 51 - 47Brian Schweitzer (Democrat)
NebraskaBob KerreyDemocratRetired: Democratic victory, 51 - 49Ben Nelson (Democrat)
Don Stenberg (Republican)
NevadaRichard BryanDemocratRetired: Republican victory, 55 - 40John Ensign (Republican)
Ed Bernstein (Democrat)
New JerseyFrank LautenbergDemocratRetired: Democratic victory, 50 - 47Jon Corzine (Democrat)
Bob Franks (Republican)
New MexicoJeff BingamanDemocratRe-elected, 62 - 38Bill Redmond (Republican)
New YorkDaniel Patrick MoynihanDemocratRetired: Democratic victory, 55 - 43Hillary Clinton (Democrat)
Rick Lazio (Republican)
North DakotaKent ConradDemocratRe-elected, 62 - 39Duane Sand (Republican)
OhioMike DeWineRepublicanRe-elected, 60 - 36Ted Celeste (Democrat)
PennsylvaniaRick SantorumRepublicanRe-elected, 52 - 46Ron Klink (Democrat)
Rhode IslandLincoln ChafeeRepublicanRe-elected, 57 - 41John Weygand (Democrat)
TennesseeBill FristRepublicanRe-elected, 65 - 32Jeff Clark (Democrat)
TexasKay Bailey HutchisonRepublicanRe-elected, 65 - 32Gene Kelly (Democrat)
UtahOrrin G. HatchRepublicanRe-elected, 66 - 32Scott Howell (Democrat)
VermontJim JeffordsRepublicanRe-elected, 66 - 25Ed Flanagan (Democrat)
VirginiaChuck RobbDemocratDefeated, 52 - 48George F. Allen (Republican)
WashingtonSlade GortonRepublicanDefeated, 49 - 49Maria Cantwell (Democrat)
West VirginiaRobert ByrdDemocratRe-elected, 78 - 20David Gallaher (Republican)
WisconsinHerb KohlDemocratRe-elected, 62 - 37John Gillespie (Republican)
WyomingCraig ThomasRepublicanRe-elected, 74 - 23Mel Logan (Democrat)

1 special election held due to death of Paul Coverdell (R-Ga.) -- next regular election held in 2004.

See also

Senate composition before and after elections

106th Congress Senate Composition   107th Congress Senate Composition
                                                                                                     
                                                                                                     
                                                                                                     
                                                                                                     
Color Key: Republicans Democrats


U.S. Senate elections

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Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page) U.S._Senate_election,_2000 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Senate_election,_2000) version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=U.S._Senate_election,_2000&action=history) GNU Free Documentation Lizenz (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License) CC-by-sa (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/)

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