1982 United States Senate election in Florida

1982 United States Senate election in Florida

← 1976 November 2, 1982 1988 →
 
Nominee Lawton Chiles Van B. Poole
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 1,637,667 1,015,330
Percentage 61.72% 38.26%

County results

Chiles:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

Poole:      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. senator before election

Lawton Chiles
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Lawton Chiles
Democratic

The 1982 United States Senate election in Florida was held on November 2, 1982. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Lawton Chiles won re-election to a third term.

Democratic primary

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Candidates

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Results

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Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lawton Chiles (incumbent) 1,044,246 100.00%

Republican primary

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Candidates

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Results

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Republican primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Van B. Poole 154,163 41.57%
Republican David H. Bludworth 116,040 31.29%
Republican George Snyder 100,609 27.13%
Total votes 370,812 100.00%
Republican primary runoff results[2]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Van B. Poole 131,655 58.08%
Republican David H. Bludworth 95,035 41.92%
Total votes 226,690 100.00%

General election

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Candidates

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Results

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General election results[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Lawton Chiles (incumbent) 1,637,667 61.72% −1.26%
Republican Van B. Poole 1,015,330 38.26% +1.24%
Write-in 422 0.02% N/A
Majority 622,337 23.45% −2.50%
Total votes 2,653,419 100.00%
Democratic hold Swing

County results

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Source:[4]

County Lawton Chiles

Democratic

Van B. Poole

Republican

Jim Fair

Write-in

Jim Fair

Write-in

Total
Alachua 21,263 6,927 1 8 28,199
Baker 2,028 520 0 0 2,548
Bay 10,783 8,362 0 0 19,145
Bradford 3,308 1,037 0 0 4,345
Brevard 46,892 37,974 0 16 84,882
Broward 204,272 105,482 0 30 309,784
Calhoun 2,190 584 0 0 2,774
Charlotte 12,483 13,612 0 1 26,096
Citrus 11,943 7,993 0 1 19,937
Clay 7,477 5,057 0 0 12,534
Collier 10,353 16,718 0 0 27,071
Columbia 5,309 2,261 0 0 7,570
Dade 246,797 99,806 0 8 346,611
Desoto 2,707 1,519 0 0 4,226
Dixie 1,791 321 2 1 2,115
Duval 78,383 35,660 0 8 114,051
Escambia 32,518 14,938 2 1 47,459
Flagler 2,854 1,776 0 0 4,630
Franklin 1,344 547 0 0 1,891
Gadsden 6,482 1,720 0 0 8,202
Gilchrist 1,460 393 0 2 1,855
Glades 1,105 393 0 0 1,498
Gulf 1,918 801 0 0 2,719
Hamilton 1,373 446 0 0 1,819
Hardee 2,542 1,141 0 1 3,684
Hendry 2,670 1,399 1 0 4,070
Hernando 12,378 8,166 0 0 20,544
Highlands 9,185 6,791 0 0 15,976
Hillsborough 98,939 47,994 6 16 146,955
Holmes 2,408 1,215 0 0 3,623
Indian River 9,977 10,323 0 0 20,300
Jackson 6,629 2,525 0 0 9,154
Jefferson 2,289 737 0 0 3,026
Lafayette 1,346 344 0 0 1,690
Lake 16,014 15,379 1 1 31,395
Lee 39,476 43,936 2 11 83,425
Leon 29,400 11,092 10 22 40,524
Levy 3,704 1,283 0 0 4,987
Liberty 978 351 0 0 1,329
Madison 3,165 949 0 0 4,114
Manatee 26,540 23,849 4 4 50,397
Marion 19,119 13,695 2 2 32,818
Martin 12,065 13,235 1 2 25,303
Monroe 10,034 5,081 0 0 15,115
Nassau 4,204 1,846 0 1 6,051
Okaloosa 12,174 11,517 1 9 23,701
Okeechobee 3,212 1,435 0 0 4,647
Orange 57,521 47,516 0 20 105,057
Osceola 7,951 6,311 1 0 14,263
Palm Beach 125,701 81,484 0 40 207,225
Pasco 45,725 31,006 2 6 76,739
Pinellas 148,669 110,856 73 36 259,634
Polk 49,183 24,993 1 6 74,183
Putnam 7,597 3,485 0 1 11,083
Santa Rosa 9,398 4,635 7 8 14,048
Sarasota 38,013 41,457 5 10 79,485
Seminole 21,157 22,065 0 8 43,230
St. Johns 7,350 5,165 0 0 12,515
St. Lucie 14,479 11,703 0 2 26,184
Sumter 3,425 1,551 0 1 4,977
Suwannee 3,817 1,481 1 0 5,299
Taylor 2,989 1,026 0 0 4,015
Union 1,191 301 1 2 1,495
Volusia 38,291 25,995 3 5 64,294
Wakulla 2,414 956 3 0 3,373
Walton 3,754 956 0 0 4,710
Washington 2,751 1,468 0 0 4,219
Federal Absentee 810 779 0 2 1,589
Total 1,637,667 1,015,330 130 292 2,653,419

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Florida Department of State - Election Results".
  2. ^ "Florida Department of State - Election Results".
  3. ^ "Statistics of the Congressional Election of November 2, 1982" (PDF). Clerk of the House of Representatives. p. 8.
  4. ^ "November 2, 1982 General Election: United States Senator". Florida Department of State: Division of Elections. Retrieved June 20, 2024.