United States Senate elections, 1972
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The 1972 United States Senate election was an election for the United States Senate coinciding with the landslide re-election of Richard Nixon. However, Nixon's victory did not help his allies in the Senate, and the Democrats increased their majority by two seats. The result was a Democratic Senate, with 56 seats, to the Republicans' 42, with one independent and one Conservative senator.
Democratic pickups included open seats in Kentucky and South Dakota, and defeats of Senators Gordon L. Allott of Colorado, J. Caleb Boggs of Delaware, Jack Miller of Iowa, and Margaret Chase Smith of Maine. Republican pickups included open seats in New Mexico, North Carolina, and Oklahoma, and the defeat of incumbent William B. Spong, Jr. of Virginia.
In 1974, William B. Saxbe of Ohio resigned to become Attorney General, and Democrat Howard Metzenbaum was appointed to replace him. This is not included in the party balances.
Notable Freshman include future two time presidential candidate Joe Biden and conservative icon Jessie Helms.
[edit] Senate Contests
State | Incumbent | Party | Status | Opposing Candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama | John Sparkman | Democratic | Re-elected, 62.3% | Winton M. Blount (Republican) 33.1% John LeFlore (Nat'l Democratic) 3.0% Jerome Couch (AL Prohibition) 1.0% Herbert Stone (AL Conservative) 0.6% |
Alaska | Ted Stevens | Republican | Re-elected, 77.3% | Gene Guess (Democratic) 22.7% |
Arkansas | John Little McClellan | Democratic | Re-elected, 60.8% | Wayne H. Babbitt (Republican) 39.1% |
Colorado | Gordon L. Allott | Republican | Defeated, 48.4% | Floyd K. Haskell (Democratic) 49.4% Secundion Salazar (Raza Unida) 1.4% Henry Olshaw (American) 0.8% |
Delaware | J. Caleb Boggs | Republican | Defeated, 49.1% | Joe Biden (Democratic) 50.5% |
Georgia | David H. Gambrell | Democratic | Defeated in primary, Democratic victory | Sam Nunn (Democratic) 54.0% Fletcher Thompson (Republican) 46.0% |
Idaho | Leonard B. Jordan | Republican | Retired, Republican victory | James A. McClure (Republican) 52.3% William E. Davis (Democratic) 45.5% |
Illinois | Charles H. Percy | Republican | Re-elected, 62.2% | Roman Pucinski (Democratic) 37.4% |
Iowa | Jack Miller | Republican | Defeated, 44.1% | Dick Clark (Democratic) 55.1% |
Kansas | James B. Pearson | Republican | Re-elected, 71.4% | Arch Tetzlaff (Democratic) 23.0% |
Kentucky | John Sherman Cooper | Republican | Retired, Democratic victory | Walter D. Huddleston (Democratic) 50.9% Louie B. Nunn (Republican) 47.6% |
Louisiana | Elaine S. Edwards | Democratic | Retired, Democratic victory | J. Bennett Johnston (Democratic) 55.2% John McKeithen (Independent) 23.1% Ben C. Toledano (Republican) 16.1% |
Maine | Margaret Chase Smith | Republican | Defeated, 46.8% | William Hathaway (Democratic) 56.6% |
Massachusetts | Edward Brooke | Republican | Re-elected, 63.5% | John J. Droney (Democratic) 34.7% Donald Gurewitz (Socialist Workers) 1.7% |
Michigan | Robert P. Griffin | Republican | Re-elected, 52.3% | Frank J. Kelley (Democratic) 42.9% |
Minnesota | Walter Mondale | Democratic | Re-elected, 56.7% | Phil Hansen (Republican) 42.9% |
Mississippi | James Eastland | Democratic | Re-elected, 58.1% | Gil Carmichael (Republican) 38.7% |
Montana | Lee Metcalf | Democratic | Re-elected, 52.0% | Henry S. Hibbard (Republican) 48.1% |
Nebraska | Carl Curtis | Republican | Re-elected, 53.1% | Terry Carpenter (Democratic) 46.8% |
New Hampshire | Thomas J. McIntyre | Democratic | Re-elected, 56.9% | Wesley Powell (Republican) 43.1% |
New Jersey | Clifford P. Case | Republican | Re-elected, 62.5% | Paul J. Krebs (Democratic) 34.5% |
New Mexico | Clinton Presba Anderson | Democratic | Retired, Republican victory | Pete Dominici (Republican) 54.0% Jack Daniels (Democratic) 46.0% |
North Carolina | B. Everett Jordan | Democratic | Defeated in primary, Republican victory | Jesse Helms (Republican) 54.0% Nick Galifianakis (Democratic) 46.0% |
Oklahoma | Fred R. Harris | Democratic | Retired, Republican victory | Dewey F. Bartlett (Republican) 51.4% Ed Edmondson (Democratic) 47.6% |
Oregon | Mark Hatfield | Republican | Re-elected, 53.7% | Wayne Morse (Democratic) 46.2% |
Rhode Island | Claiborne Pell | Democratic | Re-elected, 53.7% | John Chafee (Republican) 45.7% |
South Carolina | Strom Thurmond | Republican | Re-elected, 63.3% | Eugene N. Zeigler (Democratic) 36.7% |
South Dakota | Karl Earl Mundt | Republican | Retired, Democratic victory | James Abourezk (Democratic) 57.0% Robert W. Hirsch (Republican) 42.9% |
Tennessee | Howard Baker | Republican | Re-elected, 61.6% | Ray Blanton (Democratic) 37.9% |
Texas | John Tower | Republican | Re-elected, 53.4% | Barefoot Sanders (Democratic) 44.3% |
Vermont1 | Robert Stafford | Republican | Re-elected, 64.3% | Randolph T. Major (Democratic) 33.4% |
Virginia | William B. Spong, Jr. | Democratic | Defeated, 46.1% | William L. Scott (Republican) 51.5% |
West Virginia | Jennings Randolph | Democratic | Re-elected, 66.5% | Louise Leonard (Republican) 33.6% |
Wyoming | Clifford Hansen | Republican | Re-elected, 71.3% | Mike Vinich (Democratic) 28.7% |
1 special election held due to death of Winston L. Prouty (R-VT)
[edit] See also
[edit] Senate composition before and after elections
92nd Congress Senate Composition | 93rd Congress Senate Composition | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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