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2018 Iowa gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2018 Iowa gubernatorial election
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The 2018 Iowa gubernatorial election took place on November 6, 2018. Incumbent Republican governor Kim Reynolds ran for election to a full term, facing Democratic businessman Fred Hubbell, Libertarian Jake Porter, and independent candidate Gary Siegwarth.

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On election day, Reynolds won 50.3% of the vote, a 2.8% margin of victory, and carried 88 of Iowa's 99 counties. She became the first female governor of Iowa elected in her own right. This was the first Iowa gubernatorial election since 1998 in which the winner was of the same party as the incumbent president.

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Background

After the 2016 presidential election, President Donald Trump nominated then-Governor Terry Branstad to be the United States Ambassador to China. When Branstad was confirmed by the United States Senate, he resigned as Iowa governor to assume the ambassadorship on May 24, 2017. Lieutenant Governor Kim Reynolds then became governor of Iowa.[1]

Republican primary

Candidates

Nominated

Withdrew

Declined

Endorsements

Kim Reynolds

Results

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Democratic primary

Candidates

Nominated

Eliminated in primary

Withdrew

Declined

Endorsements

Nate Boulton (withdrew)
Statewide officials
State legislators
Organizations
Cathy Glasson
Elected officials
Iowa Democratic Party officials
  • Alex Anderson, Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee affirmative action chairperson[61]
  • Evan Burger, 4th District Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member[61]
  • Lindsey Ellickson, Linn County Democratic Party central committee member[61]
  • Jessica Fears, 4th District Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member[61]
  • Mason Fraker, Henry County Democratic Party vice-chairman[61]
  • Jason Frerichs, Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member, chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party Progressive Caucus[61]
  • Dylan P. Funk, Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member, vice-chairman of the Iowa Democratic Party Progressive Caucus[61]
  • Jon Green, 2nd District Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member[61]
  • Holly Herbert, 3rd District Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member[61]
  • Sarah J. Hinds, Linn County Democratic Party credentials committee chairperson[61]
  • Kate Revaux, 2nd District Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member[61]
  • Nora Taft, 2nd District Iowa Democratic Party State Central Committee member[61]
Labor union leaders
  • Chris Laursen, UAW Local 74 president[61]
Labor unions
Organizations
Fred Hubbell
Statewide officials
State legislators
Newspapers
Andy McGuire
Individuals
John Norris
Individuals
  • Brad Anderson, 2014 Democratic Secretary of State nominee
  • Marti Anderson, state representative
  • Daryll Beal, former state senator
  • Tom Hockensmith, Polk County Supervisor
  • Marcia Nichols, former political director for AFSCME 61
  • Jo Oldson, state representative
  • Brian Quirk, former state representative
  • Don Ruby, Iowa Democratic Party Secretary
  • Dave Schroeder, former state representative
  • Norm Sterzenbach, former executive director, Iowa Democratic Party
  • Rod Sullivan, Johnson County Supervisor
  • Roger Thomas, former state representative
  • Travis Weipert, Johnson County Auditor
  • Andrew Wenthe, mayor of Fayette, former state representative
Todd Prichard (withdrew)
Individuals

Polling

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Hypothetical polling

Results

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Results by county:
  Hubbell—70–80%
  Hubbell—60–70%
  Hubbell—50–60%
  Hubbell—40–50%
  Hubbell—<40%
  Glasson—<40%
  Norris—60–70%
  Boulton—<40%
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Libertarian primary

Libertarian Party presidential nominee Gary Johnson received 3.8 percent of the votes in Iowa in 2016, surpassing the 2 percent threshold to attain full political party status.[80] As a result, the Libertarian Party was allowed to hold a primary to select a nominee.[80]

Candidates

Nominated

  • Jake Porter, business consultant

Declared

  • Marco Battaglia, musician[81]
  • Jake Porter, nominee for Secretary of State in 2010 and 2014[82][83][84]

Endorsements

Jake Porter

Results

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Independents

Candidates

Withdrew

Endorsements

Brent Roske (withdrew)

General election

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Debates

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Predictions

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Notes
  1. The Fox News Midterm Power Rankings uniquely does not contain a category for Safe/Solid races

Polling

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Hypothetical polling

with Nate Boulton

with Cathy Glasson

with generic Democrat

with John Norris

with Andy McGuire

Results

While pre-election polls showed Reynolds trailing Hubbell,[114] Reynolds won 50.3% of the vote on election day, primarily by sweeping every county west of Des Moines and dominating the 4th Congressional District (she lost the other three).[115] Ultimately, she carried 88 of Iowa's 99 counties.[116] She became the first female governor of Iowa elected in her own right.[117]

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Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

Despite losing the state, Hubbell won three of four congressional districts.[119]

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See also

References

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