1992 Washington gubernatorial election

Summary

The 1992 Washington gubernatorial election was held on November 3, 1992. Incumbent Democratic Governor Booth Gardner chose not to run for a third term. This resulted in an open race for Governor of Washington in which Democrat Mike Lowry narrowly defeated Republican Ken Eikenberry. This is the last time that a gubernatorial nominee and a lieutenant gubernatorial nominee of different political parties were elected governor and lieutenant governor of Washington.

1992 Washington gubernatorial election

← 1988 November 3, 1992 1996 →
 
Nominee Mike Lowry Ken Eikenberry
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 1,184,315 1,086,216
Percentage 52.2% 47.8%

County results
Lowry:      50–60%      60–70%
Eikenberry:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%

Governor before election

Booth Gardner
Democratic

Elected Governor

Mike Lowry
Democratic

Blanket primary edit

Candidates edit

Democratic edit

Republican edit

Results edit

Blanket primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mike Lowry 337,783 29.23%
Republican Ken Eikenberry 258,553 22.37%
Republican Sid Morrison 250,418 21.67%
Republican Dan McDonald 144,050 12.47%
Democratic Joseph E. King 96,480 8.35%
Democratic Sally McQuown 31,175 2.70%
Democratic Richard "Onery Dick" Short 8,470 0.73%
Total votes 1,126,929 100.00%

General election edit

Candidates edit

Debates edit

  • Complete video of debate, October 27, 1992 - C-SPAN

Polling edit

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Mike
Lowry (D)
Ken
Eikenberry (R)
Undecided
Tacoma News Tribune October 1992 47% 43% 10%

Endorsements edit

Mike Lowry (D)

Results edit

1992 Washington gubernatorial election results[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mike Lowry 1,184,315 52.16
Republican Ken Eikenberry 1,086,216 47.84
Total votes 2,270,531 100.00
Democratic hold

References edit

  1. ^ "'92'S Odd Governor's Race -- While Eikenberry Sounds Populist, Lowry's Wooing Rotary Clubbers". October 26, 1992.
  2. ^ "Election Search Results - Elections & Voting - WA Secretary of State". Sos.wa.gov. Retrieved July 13, 2018.