U.S. Senate election, 2004 Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Elections to the United States Senate were held on November 2, 2004, with 34 of the 100 seats in the Senate being contested. Since Senators are elected for six-year terms, those elected will serve from January 3, 2005 until January 3, 2011. Those Senators who were elected in 1998 sought re-election (or retired) in 2004.
On the same date were held:
as well as many state and local elections.
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2 Third and minor parties 3 Close races 4 Senate contests in 2004 5 See also 6 External link |
Major parties
The Senate, as of the pre-election 108th Congress, was composed of 51 Republicanss, 48 Democratss, and 1 independent. (The independent, Jim Jeffords of Vermont, is allied with the Democratic caucus and has voted with Democrats to give them the majority in the past.) The Democrats, therefore, needed to make a net gain of at least two seats from retiring or incumbent Republicans to gain control of the Senate. In the election, incumbent senators won reelection in all races but one (Democratic leader Tom Daschle, in South Dakota, lost to Republican John Thune). The seats of retiring senators were taken by the opposing party in Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, North Carolina, and South Carolina. In fact, the only retiring senator whose seat was taken by a member of his party was Republican Don Nickles of Oklahoma, who was succeeded by Tom Coburn.
Republicans gained four seats in the 2004 elections, and will enter the 109th Congress with a 55-44-1 lead. While such a majority is formidable, it is still less than the 60 seats needed to override a filibuster and completely control the body's agenda and procedures.
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The Libertarian, Constitution, and Green parties contested many of the seats. No candidate from any of these parties received significant support, but some may have affected the outcome of races by drawing votes away from the major parties.
Minor parties in a number of states contested one or more Senate seats. Examples include the American First Party, the Labor Party, the Peace and Freedom Party, and the Socialist Workers Party. None of these parties gained a seat in this election nor received a significant number of votes.
One Republican seat, that of retiring Senator Peter Fitzgerald in Illinois, was easily taken by Democrat Barack Obama. In Colorado, retiring Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell's seat was narrowly taken by Democrat Ken Salazar. In Alaska, Republican Lisa Murkowski won reelection in a tight race. In Oklahoma, Tom Coburn kept Don Nickles' seat in Republican hands, while in Kentucky, the ailing Republican Jim Bunning won a second term by a very narrow margin.
The Democrats' prospects were weakened by the fact that five of their six incumbent Senators in Southern states were retiring (the sixth, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, easily won reelection.). Retiring Georgia Sen. Zell Miller's seat, contested by Denise Majette, was lost in a landslide, as was that of South Carolina Sen. Ernest Hollings. In North Carolina, Democrat Erskine Bowles lost John Edwards's seat to Republican Richard Burr. Especially close races, in Florida, Louisiana, and South Dakota, all resulted in turnovers to the Republicans.
Third and minor parties
Close races
Close Republican seats
Close Democratic seats
Senate contests in 2004
| State | Incumbent | Party | Status | Outcome |
| Alabama | Richard Shelby | Republican | Re-elected to 4th term | Richard Shelby (R) 68% Wayne Sowell (D) 32% |
| Alaska | Lisa Murkowski | Republican | Elected to 1st full term | Lisa Murkowski (R) 49% Tony Knowles (D) 45% Marc Millican (I) 3% |
| Arizona | John McCain | Republican | Re-elected to 4th term | John McCain (R) 76% Stuart Starky (D) 21% |
| Arkansas | Blanche Lincoln | Democrat | Re-elected to 2nd term | Blanche Lincoln (D) 56% Jim Holt (R) 44% |
| California | Barbara Boxer | Democrat | Re-elected to 3rd term | Barbara Boxer (D) 58% Bill Jones (R) 38% Marsha J. Feinland (PFP) 2% James P. Gray (L) 2% |
| Colorado | Ben Nighthorse Campbell | Republican | Retired | Ken Salazar (D) 50% Pete Coors (R) 48% |
| Connecticut | Christopher Dodd | Democrat | Re-elected to 5th term | Christopher Dodd (D) 66% Jack Orchulli (R) 32% |
| Florida | Bob Graham | Democrat | Retired | Mel Martinez (R) 50% Betty Castor (D) 48% Dennis Bradley (V) 2% |
| Georgia | Zell Miller | Democrat | Retired | Johnny Isakson (R) 59% Denise Majette (D) 39% Allen Buckley (L) 2% |
| Hawaii | Daniel Inouye | Democrat | Re-elected to 8th term | Daniel Inouye (D) 76% Campbell Cavasso (R) 21% Jim Brewer 2% |
| Idaho | Mike Crapo | Republican | Re-elected to 2nd term | Mike Crapo (R) 99% |
| Illinois | Peter Fitzgerald | Republican | Retired | Barack Obama (D) 70% Alan Keyes (R) 27% Albert Franzen 2% |
| Indiana | Evan Bayh | Democrat | Re-elected to 2nd term | Evan Bayh (D) 62% Marvin Scott (R) 37% |
| Iowa | Charles Grassley | Republican | Re-elected to 5th term | Charles Grassley (R) 70% Arthur Small (D) 28% |
| Kansas | Sam Brownback | Republican | Re-elected to 2nd term | Sam Brownback (R) 69% Lee Jones (D) 28% Stephen A. Rosile (L) 2% |
| Kentucky | Jim Bunning | Republican | Re-elected to 2nd term | Jim Bunning (R) 51% Daniel Mongiardo (D) 49% |
| Louisiana | John Breaux | Democrat | Retired | David Vitter (R) 51% Chris John (D) 29% John Kennedy (D) 15% Arthur Morrell (D) 2% |
| Maryland | Barbara Mikulski | Democrat | Re-elected to 4th term | Barbara Mikulski (D) 65% Edward Pipkin (R) 34% |
| Missouri | Christopher S. Bond | Republican | Re-elected to 4th term | Chris Bond (R) 56% Nancy Farmer (D) 43% |
| Nevada | Harry Reid | Democrat | Re-elected to 4th term | Harry Reid (D) 61% Richard Ziser (R) 35% |
| New Hampshire | Judd Gregg | Republican | Re-elected to 3rd term | Judd Gregg (R) 66% Doris Haddock (D) 34% |
| New York | Charles Schumer | Democrat | Re-elected to 2nd term | Charles Schumer (D) 71% Howard Mills (R) 25% Marilyn O'Grady (C) 3% |
| North Carolina | John Edwards | Democrat | Retired | Richard Burr (R) 52% Erskine Bowles (D) 47% |
| North Dakota | Byron Dorgan | Democratic-NPL | Re-elected to 3rd term | Byron Dorgan (D) 68% Mike Liffrig (R) 32% |
| Ohio | George Voinovich | Republican | Re-elected to 2nd term | George Voinovich (R) 64% Eric Fingerhut (D) 36% |
| Oklahoma | Don Nickles | Republican | Retired | Tom Coburn (R) 53% Brad Carson (D) 41% Sheila Bilyeu 6% |
| Oregon | Ron Wyden | Democrat | Re-elected to 2nd term | Ron Wyden (D) 64% Al King (R) 31% Teresa Keane (G) 2% Dan Fitzgerald (L) 2% |
| Pennsylvania | Arlen Specter | Republican | Re-elected to 5th term | Arlen Specter (R) 53% Joe Hoeffel (D) 42% Jim Clymer 4% |
| South Carolina | Ernest Hollings | Democrat | Retired | Jim DeMint (R) 54% Inez Tenenbaum (D) 44% |
| South Dakota | Tom Daschle | Democrat | Defeated after 3rd term | John Thune (R) 51% Tom Daschle (D) 49% |
| Utah | Robert Foster Bennett | Republican | Re-elected to 3rd term | Robert Bennett (R) 68% Paul Van Dam (D) 29% Gary R. Van Horn 2% |
| Vermont | Patrick Leahy | Democrat | Re-elected to 6th term | Patrick Leahy (D) 71% Jack McMullen (R) 25% Cris Ericson (I) 2% |
| Washington | Patty Murray | Democrat | Re-elected to 3rd term | Patty Murray (D) 55% George Nethercutt (R) 43% |
| Wisconsin | Russ Feingold | Democrat | Re-elected to 3rd term | Russ Feingold (D) 56% Tim Michels (R) 44% |
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