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The 1992 United States presidential election in Florida took place on November 3 1992 as part of the 1992 United States

1992 United States presidential election in Florida

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  • 1992 United States presidential election in Florida

The 1992 United States presidential election in Florida took place on November 3, 1992, as part of the 1992 United States presidential election. The race was extremely close – so close in fact that some news networks mistakenly reported that Democratic challenger Bill Clinton had won in the state, although incumbent President George H. W. Bush was eventually declared the winner. Bush received 40.89% of the vote to Clinton's 39.00%. The final result in Florida reflected the reluctance of many Southern states to back fellow Southerner Clinton, although Clinton was polling well in other parts of the country. This was the last presidential election in which Florida backed the losing candidate until 2020.

1992 United States presidential election in Florida
image
← 1988 November 3, 1992 1996 →
Turnoutimage83%
  image image image
Nominee George H. W. Bush Bill Clinton Ross Perot
Party Republican Democratic Independent
Home state Texas Arkansas Texas
Running mate Dan Quayle Al Gore James Stockdale
Electoral vote 25 0 0
Popular vote 2,173,310 2,072,698 1,053,067
Percentage 40.89% 39.00% 19.82%

image County Results
image Precinct Results

Bush

  30–40%
  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Clinton

  30–40%
  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%
  90–100%

Perot

  30–40%
  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  90–100%

Tie/No Votes

  
  


President before election

George H. W. Bush
Republican

Elected President

Bill Clinton
Democratic

Background

Following World War II the Democratic presidential nominee had only won Florida in 1948, 1964, and 1976.

Florida gained four seats in the United States House of Representatives as a result of the 1990 United States census.

Primary

Democratic

Florida was the only southern state on Super Tuesday where Bill Clinton received less than 60% of the vote. Paul Tsongas spent $500,000 on television ads.

1992 Florida Democratic presidential primary results
Candidate Vote Received
# %
Bill Clinton 554,861 50.8%
Paul Tsongas 379,572 34.7%
Jerry Brown 133,156 12.2%
Tom Harkin 13,302 1.2%
Bob Kerrey 11,557 1.1%
Total 1,092,448 100%

Republican

1992 Florida Republican presidential primary results
Candidate Vote received
# %
George H.W. Bush (incumbent) 607,522 68.1%
Pat Buchanan 285,074 31.9%
Total 892,596 100%

General

Jack Gargan formed Throw the Hypocritical Rascals Out in May 1991, and he help formed the movement to draft Ross Perot. Over 230,000 signatures were collected and Perot was qualified to appear on the ballot on May 27, 1992.

Bush won by about 100,000 votes, marking the first time Florida had backed the losing candidate since 1960, when it voted for Richard Nixon over John F. Kennedy. This was also the last time until the 2020 election that Florida would back the loser of the presidential election as well only the second time since 1924. Despite Bush's narrow victory, this election marked the start of Florida's transition from a strong GOP state into a closely divided swing state for future presidential elections; just four years earlier Bush had carried Florida by 22 points, making it his second-best state in the South. This is also the only election since 1944 that Florida did not vote the same way as Ohio, a state with a similar voting history. Florida was one of 5 states that gave Perot more than 1 million votes, including California, Texas, New York, and Ohio.

Clinton flipped the heavily populated South Florida counties of Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami -Dade, which had all voted for Bush in 1988, into the Democratic column, and they have remained reliable Democratic bastions in the state ever since, buoying Democratic base support in the state. Clinton's victory in Palm Beach County was noteworthy in as much as that county had not previously backed a Democratic presidential nominee since Florida's "Solid South" days when Franklin D. Roosevelt swept all sixty-seven counties in 1944. This was the last time St. Lucie County voted for a Republican presidential candidate until 2016.

Democratic U.S. Senator Bob Graham won reelection in the concurrent U.S. Senate election. The Republicans gained three seats in the Florida House of Representatives and one seat in the Florida Senate.

Results

United States presidential election in Florida, 1992
Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votes
Republican George H. W. Bush (incumbent) 2,173,310 40.89% 25
Democratic Bill Clinton 2,072,698 39.00% 0
Independent Ross Perot 1,053,067 19.82% 0
Libertarian Andre Marrou 15,079 0.28% 0
Write-Ins 238 0.00% 0
Totals 5,314,392 100.0% 25
image
Perot performance by county
  5–10%
  10–15%
  15–20%
  20–25%

Results by county

County George H.W. Bush
Republican
Bill Clinton
Democratic
Ross Perot
Independent
Various candidates
Other parties
Margin Total votes cast
# % # % # % # % # %
Alachua 22,813 29.87% 37,888 49.61% 15,296 20.03% 375 0.49% -15,075 -19.74% 76,372
Baker 3,418 50.59% 1,976 29.25% 1,315 19.46% 47 0.70% 1,442 21.34% 6,756
Bay 22,842 49.99% 12,846 28.12% 9,712 21.26% 289 0.63% 9,996 21.87% 45,689
Bradford 3,672 44.02% 3,041 36.46% 1,574 18.87% 54 0.65% 631 7.56% 8,341
Brevard 84,585 43.19% 61,091 31.19% 49,509 25.28% 675 0.34% 23,494 12.00% 195,860
Broward 164,832 30.92% 276,361 51.85% 90,937 17.06% 920 0.17% -111,529 -20.93% 533,050
Calhoun 1,721 37.58% 1,665 36.36% 1,176 25.68% 17 0.37% 56 1.22% 4,579
Charlotte 24,311 39.17% 22,907 36.91% 14,720 23.72% 126 0.20% 1,404 2.26% 62,064
Citrus 16,412 36.68% 15,937 35.62% 12,314 27.52% 83 0.19% 475 1.06% 44,746
Clay 26,360 57.95% 10,610 23.33% 8,423 18.52% 92 0.20% 15,750 34.62% 45,485
Collier 38,448 53.44% 18,796 26.13% 14,518 20.18% 182 0.25% 19,652 27.31% 71,944
Columbia 6,492 43.41% 5,528 36.97% 2,906 19.43% 28 0.19% 964 6.44% 14,954
DeSoto 3,070 41.32% 2,646 35.62% 1,687 22.71% 26 0.35% 424 5.70% 7,429
Dixie 1,401 32.04% 1,855 42.42% 1,094 25.02% 23 0.53% -454 -10.38% 4,373
Duval 123,631 49.47% 92,098 36.85% 33,388 13.36% 809 0.32% 31,533 12.62% 249,926
Escambia 52,868 50.24% 32,045 30.45% 19,923 18.93% 385 0.37% 20,823 19.79% 105,221
Flagler 6,246 38.19% 6,693 40.92% 3,390 20.73% 26 0.16% -447 -2.73% 16,355
Franklin 1,664 37.99% 1,535 35.05% 1,144 26.12% 37 0.84% 129 2.94% 4,380
Gadsden 3,975 27.62% 8,486 58.96% 1,871 13.00% 62 0.43% -4,511 -31.34% 14,394
Gilchrist 1,395 34.73% 1,511 37.62% 1,090 27.13% 21 0.52% -116 -2.89% 4,017
Glades 1,185 35.12% 1,305 38.68% 878 26.02% 6 0.18% -120 -3.56% 3,374
Gulf 2,651 45.29% 1,938 33.11% 1,245 21.27% 20 0.34% 713 12.18% 5,854
Hamilton 1,402 37.64% 1,622 43.54% 695 18.66% 6 0.16% -220 -5.90% 3,725
Hardee 2,900 45.08% 2,018 31.37% 1,499 23.30% 16 0.25% 882 13.71% 6,433
Hendry 3,279 40.91% 2,691 33.57% 2,032 25.35% 14 0.17% 588 7.34% 8,016
Hernando 17,902 36.47% 19,174 39.06% 11,848 24.14% 162 0.33% -1,272 -2.59% 49,086
Highlands 14,499 44.76% 11,237 34.69% 6,593 20.35% 62 0.19% 3,262 10.07% 32,391
Hillsborough 130,643 42.07% 115,282 37.13% 63,054 20.31% 1,523 0.49% 15,361 4.94% 310,502
Holmes 3,196 48.96% 1,877 28.75% 1,427 21.86% 28 0.43% 1,319 20.21% 6,528
Indian River 19,140 43.54% 12,360 28.12% 12,375 28.15% 87 0.20% 6,765 15.39% 43,962
Jackson 6,725 45.82% 5,482 37.35% 2,450 16.69% 19 0.13% 1,243 8.47% 14,676
Jefferson 1,506 32.19% 2,271 48.55% 895 19.13% 6 0.13% -765 -16.36% 4,678
Lafayette 1,039 41.15% 867 34.34% 612 24.24% 7 0.28% 172 6.81% 2,525
Lake 30,825 44.17% 23,200 33.24% 15,614 22.37% 148 0.21% 7,625 10.93% 69,787
Lee 73,436 44.24% 53,660 32.32% 38,452 23.16% 454 0.27% 19,776 11.92% 166,002
Leon 31,983 32.87% 47,791 49.12% 17,212 17.69% 308 0.32% -15,808 -16.25% 97,294
Levy 3,796 34.71% 4,330 39.59% 2,784 25.46% 26 0.24% -534 -4.88% 10,936
Liberty 1,126 43.71% 820 31.83% 617 23.95% 13 0.50% 306 11.88% 2,576
Madison 2,007 34.38% 2,648 45.36% 1,174 20.11% 9 0.15% -641 -10.98% 5,838
Manatee 42,725 42.63% 33,841 33.77% 23,290 23.24% 364 0.36% 8,884 8.86% 100,220
Marion 35,442 40.74% 30,829 35.44% 20,529 23.60% 189 0.22% 4,613 5.30% 86,989
Martin 24,800 46.63% 14,802 27.83% 13,442 25.27% 140 0.26% 9,998 18.80% 53,184
Miami-Dade 235,313 43.19% 254,609 46.73% 54,003 9.91% 918 0.17% -19,296 -3.54% 544,843
Monroe 9,898 34.38% 10,450 36.30% 8,314 28.88% 127 0.44% -552 -1.92% 28,789
Nassau 9,367 51.54% 5,503 30.28% 3,255 17.91% 49 0.27% 3,864 21.26% 18,174
Okaloosa 32,818 53.13% 12,038 19.49% 16,671 26.99% 242 0.39% 16,147 26.14% 61,769
Okeechobee 3,298 35.20% 3,418 36.48% 2,647 28.25% 7 0.07% -120 -1.28% 9,370
Orange 108,788 45.90% 82,683 34.89% 44,844 18.92% 696 0.29% 26,105 11.01% 237,011
Osceola 19,143 42.29% 15,010 33.16% 11,021 24.35% 93 0.21% 4,133 9.13% 45,267
Palm Beach 140,350 34.63% 187,869 46.36% 76,243 18.81% 789 0.19% -47,519 -11.73% 405,251
Pasco 47,735 35.11% 53,130 39.08% 34,654 25.49% 443 0.33% -5,395 -3.97% 135,962
Pinellas 159,121 37.63% 160,528 37.96% 101,257 23.95% 1,945 0.46% -1,407 -0.33% 422,851
Polk 65,963 45.21% 51,450 35.26% 28,204 19.33% 283 0.19% 14,513 9.95% 145,900
Putnam 8,910 34.72% 10,709 41.73% 5,979 23.30% 63 0.25% -1,799 -7.01% 25,661
St. Johns 20,188 50.49% 12,291 30.74% 7,400 18.51% 107 0.27% 7,897 19.75% 39,986
St. Lucie 24,400 35.76% 23,876 34.99% 19,817 29.04% 140 0.21% 524 0.77% 68,233
Santa Rosa 17,339 52.90% 6,556 20.00% 8,788 26.81% 94 0.29% 8,551 26.09% 32,777
Sarasota 66,855 42.76% 54,552 34.89% 34,289 21.93% 656 0.42% 12,303 7.87% 156,352
Seminole 57,101 48.57% 35,660 30.33% 24,487 20.83% 312 0.27% 21,441 18.24% 117,560
Sumter 4,366 35.41% 5,027 40.77% 2,901 23.53% 35 0.28% -661 -5.36% 12,329
Suwannee 4,576 40.23% 3,988 35.06% 2,791 24.54% 19 0.17% 588 5.17% 11,374
Taylor 2,693 37.34% 2,568 35.60% 1,929 26.74% 23 0.32% 125 1.74% 7,213
Union 1,546 43.29% 1,248 34.95% 770 21.56% 7 0.20% 298 8.34% 3,571
Volusia 59,172 38.05% 65,223 41.94% 30,823 19.82% 281 0.18% -6,051 -3.89% 155,499
Wakulla 2,586 38.52% 2,320 34.55% 1,790 26.66% 18 0.27% 266 3.97% 6,714
Walton 5,726 42.25% 3,888 28.69% 3,890 28.70% 50 0.37% 1,836 13.55% 13,554
Washington 3,695 46.94% 2,544 32.32% 1,596 20.28% 36 0.46% 1,151 14.62% 7,871
Totals 2,173,310 40.89% 2,072,698 39.00% 1,053,067 19.82% 15,317 0.29% 100,612 1.89% 5,314,392

Results by congressional district

Bush carried 13 of the 23 congressional districts.

District Clinton Bush Perot
1st 25.7% 51.1% 23.1%
2nd 41.9% 38.6% 19.5%
3rd 57% 30% 13%
4th 30.2% 53.2% 16.6%
5th 41.6% 34.2% 24.2%
6th 31.3% 47.3% 21.4%
7th 34.4% 44.7% 21%
8th 32.3% 47.6% 20.1%
9th 34.2% 41.4% 24.6%
10th 40% 36.2% 23.8%
11th 41.1% 39.2% 19.7%
12th 34.4% 45.6% 20%
13th 34.7% 42.8% 22.5%
14th 31.3% 46.1% 22.5%
15th 30.9% 43.4% 25.7%
16th 35.7% 39.4% 24.9%
17th 73.5% 19.1% 7.3%
18th 32.8% 56.9% 10.3%
19th 53.8% 30.3% 15.9%
20th 46.9% 33.6% 19.6%
21st 31.2% 58.2% 10.6%
22nd 45% 37.6% 17.4%
23rd 62.3% 23.2% 14.5%
Total 100% 100% 100%

Note

  1. In this county where Perot ran ahead of Clinton, margin given is Bush vote minus Perot vote and percentage margin Bush percentage minus Perot percentage.

References

  1. Steed, Moreland & Baker 1994, p. 119.
  2. Steed, Moreland & Baker 1994, pp. 13, 15.
  3. Steed, Moreland & Baker 1994, pp. 121–122.
  4. "March 10, 1992 Presidential Preference Primary: Democratic Primary". Florida Department of State - Division of Elections: Elections Results Archive. Retrieved July 24, 2024.
  5. "March 10, 1992 Presidential Preference Primary: Republican Primary". Florida Department of State - Division of Elections: Elections Results Archive. Retrieved July 24, 2024.
  6. Steed, Moreland & Baker 1994, p. 125.
  7. Dave Leip's U.S. Election Atlas; 1992 Presidential General Election Results – Florida
  8. Paulson, Darryl (November 4, 2016). "A quick history of Florida's presidential politics, from Whigs to wigged out". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved July 7, 2019.[dead link]
  9. Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  10. Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004, p. 164-165 ISBN 0786422173
  11. "1992 United States Presidential Election, Results by Congressional District". Western Washington University. Retrieved July 25, 2024.

Works cited

  • Steed, Robert; Moreland, Laurence; Baker, Tod, eds. (1994). The 1992 Presidential Election in the South: Current Patterns of Southern Party and Electoral Politics. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 0275945340.

Author: www.NiNa.Az

Publication date: May 09, 2025 / 18:51

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The 1992 United States presidential election in Florida took place on November 3 1992 as part of the 1992 United States presidential election The race was extremely close so close in fact that some news networks mistakenly reported that Democratic challenger Bill Clinton had won in the state although incumbent President George H W Bush was eventually declared the winner Bush received 40 89 of the vote to Clinton s 39 00 The final result in Florida reflected the reluctance of many Southern states to back fellow Southerner Clinton although Clinton was polling well in other parts of the country This was the last presidential election in which Florida backed the losing candidate until 2020 1992 United States presidential election in Florida 1988 November 3 1992 1996 Turnout83 Nominee George H W Bush Bill Clinton Ross Perot Party Republican Democratic Independent Home state Texas Arkansas Texas Running mate Dan Quayle Al Gore James Stockdale Electoral vote 25 0 0 Popular vote 2 173 310 2 072 698 1 053 067 Percentage 40 89 39 00 19 82 County ResultsPrecinct ResultsBush 30 40 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Clinton 30 40 40 50 50 60 60 70 70 80 80 90 90 100 Perot 30 40 40 50 50 60 60 70 90 100 Tie No Votes President before election George H W Bush Republican Elected President Bill Clinton DemocraticBackgroundFollowing World War II the Democratic presidential nominee had only won Florida in 1948 1964 and 1976 Florida gained four seats in the United States House of Representatives as a result of the 1990 United States census PrimaryDemocratic Florida was the only southern state on Super Tuesday where Bill Clinton received less than 60 of the vote Paul Tsongas spent 500 000 on television ads 1992 Florida Democratic presidential primary results Candidate Vote Received Bill Clinton 554 861 50 8 Paul Tsongas 379 572 34 7 Jerry Brown 133 156 12 2 Tom Harkin 13 302 1 2 Bob Kerrey 11 557 1 1 Total 1 092 448 100 Republican 1992 Florida Republican presidential primary results Candidate Vote received George H W Bush incumbent 607 522 68 1 Pat Buchanan 285 074 31 9 Total 892 596 100 GeneralJack Gargan formed Throw the Hypocritical Rascals Out in May 1991 and he help formed the movement to draft Ross Perot Over 230 000 signatures were collected and Perot was qualified to appear on the ballot on May 27 1992 Bush won by about 100 000 votes marking the first time Florida had backed the losing candidate since 1960 when it voted for Richard Nixon over John F Kennedy This was also the last time until the 2020 election that Florida would back the loser of the presidential election as well only the second time since 1924 Despite Bush s narrow victory this election marked the start of Florida s transition from a strong GOP state into a closely divided swing state for future presidential elections just four years earlier Bush had carried Florida by 22 points making it his second best state in the South This is also the only election since 1944 that Florida did not vote the same way as Ohio a state with a similar voting history Florida was one of 5 states that gave Perot more than 1 million votes including California Texas New York and Ohio Clinton flipped the heavily populated South Florida counties of Palm Beach Broward and Miami Dade which had all voted for Bush in 1988 into the Democratic column and they have remained reliable Democratic bastions in the state ever since buoying Democratic base support in the state Clinton s victory in Palm Beach County was noteworthy in as much as that county had not previously backed a Democratic presidential nominee since Florida s Solid South days when Franklin D Roosevelt swept all sixty seven counties in 1944 This was the last time St Lucie County voted for a Republican presidential candidate until 2016 Democratic U S Senator Bob Graham won reelection in the concurrent U S Senate election The Republicans gained three seats in the Florida House of Representatives and one seat in the Florida Senate ResultsUnited States presidential election in Florida 1992 Party Candidate Votes Percentage Electoral votes Republican George H W Bush incumbent 2 173 310 40 89 25 Democratic Bill Clinton 2 072 698 39 00 0 Independent Ross Perot 1 053 067 19 82 0 Libertarian Andre Marrou 15 079 0 28 0 Write Ins 238 0 00 0 Totals 5 314 392 100 0 25 Perot performance by county 5 10 10 15 15 20 20 25 Results by county County George H W Bush Republican Bill Clinton Democratic Ross Perot Independent Various candidates Other parties Margin Total votes cast Alachua 22 813 29 87 37 888 49 61 15 296 20 03 375 0 49 15 075 19 74 76 372 Baker 3 418 50 59 1 976 29 25 1 315 19 46 47 0 70 1 442 21 34 6 756 Bay 22 842 49 99 12 846 28 12 9 712 21 26 289 0 63 9 996 21 87 45 689 Bradford 3 672 44 02 3 041 36 46 1 574 18 87 54 0 65 631 7 56 8 341 Brevard 84 585 43 19 61 091 31 19 49 509 25 28 675 0 34 23 494 12 00 195 860 Broward 164 832 30 92 276 361 51 85 90 937 17 06 920 0 17 111 529 20 93 533 050 Calhoun 1 721 37 58 1 665 36 36 1 176 25 68 17 0 37 56 1 22 4 579 Charlotte 24 311 39 17 22 907 36 91 14 720 23 72 126 0 20 1 404 2 26 62 064 Citrus 16 412 36 68 15 937 35 62 12 314 27 52 83 0 19 475 1 06 44 746 Clay 26 360 57 95 10 610 23 33 8 423 18 52 92 0 20 15 750 34 62 45 485 Collier 38 448 53 44 18 796 26 13 14 518 20 18 182 0 25 19 652 27 31 71 944 Columbia 6 492 43 41 5 528 36 97 2 906 19 43 28 0 19 964 6 44 14 954 DeSoto 3 070 41 32 2 646 35 62 1 687 22 71 26 0 35 424 5 70 7 429 Dixie 1 401 32 04 1 855 42 42 1 094 25 02 23 0 53 454 10 38 4 373 Duval 123 631 49 47 92 098 36 85 33 388 13 36 809 0 32 31 533 12 62 249 926 Escambia 52 868 50 24 32 045 30 45 19 923 18 93 385 0 37 20 823 19 79 105 221 Flagler 6 246 38 19 6 693 40 92 3 390 20 73 26 0 16 447 2 73 16 355 Franklin 1 664 37 99 1 535 35 05 1 144 26 12 37 0 84 129 2 94 4 380 Gadsden 3 975 27 62 8 486 58 96 1 871 13 00 62 0 43 4 511 31 34 14 394 Gilchrist 1 395 34 73 1 511 37 62 1 090 27 13 21 0 52 116 2 89 4 017 Glades 1 185 35 12 1 305 38 68 878 26 02 6 0 18 120 3 56 3 374 Gulf 2 651 45 29 1 938 33 11 1 245 21 27 20 0 34 713 12 18 5 854 Hamilton 1 402 37 64 1 622 43 54 695 18 66 6 0 16 220 5 90 3 725 Hardee 2 900 45 08 2 018 31 37 1 499 23 30 16 0 25 882 13 71 6 433 Hendry 3 279 40 91 2 691 33 57 2 032 25 35 14 0 17 588 7 34 8 016 Hernando 17 902 36 47 19 174 39 06 11 848 24 14 162 0 33 1 272 2 59 49 086 Highlands 14 499 44 76 11 237 34 69 6 593 20 35 62 0 19 3 262 10 07 32 391 Hillsborough 130 643 42 07 115 282 37 13 63 054 20 31 1 523 0 49 15 361 4 94 310 502 Holmes 3 196 48 96 1 877 28 75 1 427 21 86 28 0 43 1 319 20 21 6 528 Indian River 19 140 43 54 12 360 28 12 12 375 28 15 87 0 20 6 765 15 39 43 962 Jackson 6 725 45 82 5 482 37 35 2 450 16 69 19 0 13 1 243 8 47 14 676 Jefferson 1 506 32 19 2 271 48 55 895 19 13 6 0 13 765 16 36 4 678 Lafayette 1 039 41 15 867 34 34 612 24 24 7 0 28 172 6 81 2 525 Lake 30 825 44 17 23 200 33 24 15 614 22 37 148 0 21 7 625 10 93 69 787 Lee 73 436 44 24 53 660 32 32 38 452 23 16 454 0 27 19 776 11 92 166 002 Leon 31 983 32 87 47 791 49 12 17 212 17 69 308 0 32 15 808 16 25 97 294 Levy 3 796 34 71 4 330 39 59 2 784 25 46 26 0 24 534 4 88 10 936 Liberty 1 126 43 71 820 31 83 617 23 95 13 0 50 306 11 88 2 576 Madison 2 007 34 38 2 648 45 36 1 174 20 11 9 0 15 641 10 98 5 838 Manatee 42 725 42 63 33 841 33 77 23 290 23 24 364 0 36 8 884 8 86 100 220 Marion 35 442 40 74 30 829 35 44 20 529 23 60 189 0 22 4 613 5 30 86 989 Martin 24 800 46 63 14 802 27 83 13 442 25 27 140 0 26 9 998 18 80 53 184 Miami Dade 235 313 43 19 254 609 46 73 54 003 9 91 918 0 17 19 296 3 54 544 843 Monroe 9 898 34 38 10 450 36 30 8 314 28 88 127 0 44 552 1 92 28 789 Nassau 9 367 51 54 5 503 30 28 3 255 17 91 49 0 27 3 864 21 26 18 174 Okaloosa 32 818 53 13 12 038 19 49 16 671 26 99 242 0 39 16 147 26 14 61 769 Okeechobee 3 298 35 20 3 418 36 48 2 647 28 25 7 0 07 120 1 28 9 370 Orange 108 788 45 90 82 683 34 89 44 844 18 92 696 0 29 26 105 11 01 237 011 Osceola 19 143 42 29 15 010 33 16 11 021 24 35 93 0 21 4 133 9 13 45 267 Palm Beach 140 350 34 63 187 869 46 36 76 243 18 81 789 0 19 47 519 11 73 405 251 Pasco 47 735 35 11 53 130 39 08 34 654 25 49 443 0 33 5 395 3 97 135 962 Pinellas 159 121 37 63 160 528 37 96 101 257 23 95 1 945 0 46 1 407 0 33 422 851 Polk 65 963 45 21 51 450 35 26 28 204 19 33 283 0 19 14 513 9 95 145 900 Putnam 8 910 34 72 10 709 41 73 5 979 23 30 63 0 25 1 799 7 01 25 661 St Johns 20 188 50 49 12 291 30 74 7 400 18 51 107 0 27 7 897 19 75 39 986 St Lucie 24 400 35 76 23 876 34 99 19 817 29 04 140 0 21 524 0 77 68 233 Santa Rosa 17 339 52 90 6 556 20 00 8 788 26 81 94 0 29 8 551 26 09 32 777 Sarasota 66 855 42 76 54 552 34 89 34 289 21 93 656 0 42 12 303 7 87 156 352 Seminole 57 101 48 57 35 660 30 33 24 487 20 83 312 0 27 21 441 18 24 117 560 Sumter 4 366 35 41 5 027 40 77 2 901 23 53 35 0 28 661 5 36 12 329 Suwannee 4 576 40 23 3 988 35 06 2 791 24 54 19 0 17 588 5 17 11 374 Taylor 2 693 37 34 2 568 35 60 1 929 26 74 23 0 32 125 1 74 7 213 Union 1 546 43 29 1 248 34 95 770 21 56 7 0 20 298 8 34 3 571 Volusia 59 172 38 05 65 223 41 94 30 823 19 82 281 0 18 6 051 3 89 155 499 Wakulla 2 586 38 52 2 320 34 55 1 790 26 66 18 0 27 266 3 97 6 714 Walton 5 726 42 25 3 888 28 69 3 890 28 70 50 0 37 1 836 13 55 13 554 Washington 3 695 46 94 2 544 32 32 1 596 20 28 36 0 46 1 151 14 62 7 871 Totals 2 173 310 40 89 2 072 698 39 00 1 053 067 19 82 15 317 0 29 100 612 1 89 5 314 392 Results by congressional district Bush carried 13 of the 23 congressional districts District Clinton Bush Perot 1st 25 7 51 1 23 1 2nd 41 9 38 6 19 5 3rd 57 30 13 4th 30 2 53 2 16 6 5th 41 6 34 2 24 2 6th 31 3 47 3 21 4 7th 34 4 44 7 21 8th 32 3 47 6 20 1 9th 34 2 41 4 24 6 10th 40 36 2 23 8 11th 41 1 39 2 19 7 12th 34 4 45 6 20 13th 34 7 42 8 22 5 14th 31 3 46 1 22 5 15th 30 9 43 4 25 7 16th 35 7 39 4 24 9 17th 73 5 19 1 7 3 18th 32 8 56 9 10 3 19th 53 8 30 3 15 9 20th 46 9 33 6 19 6 21st 31 2 58 2 10 6 22nd 45 37 6 17 4 23rd 62 3 23 2 14 5 Total 100 100 100 NoteIn this county where Perot ran ahead of Clinton margin given is Bush vote minus Perot vote and percentage margin Bush percentage minus Perot percentage ReferencesSteed Moreland amp Baker 1994 p 119 Steed Moreland amp Baker 1994 pp 13 15 Steed Moreland amp Baker 1994 pp 121 122 March 10 1992 Presidential Preference Primary Democratic Primary Florida Department of State Division of Elections Elections Results Archive Retrieved July 24 2024 March 10 1992 Presidential Preference Primary Republican Primary Florida Department of State Division of Elections Elections Results Archive Retrieved July 24 2024 Steed Moreland amp Baker 1994 p 125 Dave Leip s U S Election Atlas 1992 Presidential General Election Results Florida Paulson Darryl November 4 2016 A quick history of Florida s presidential politics from Whigs to wigged out Tampa Bay Times Retrieved July 7 2019 dead link Sullivan Robert David How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century America Magazine in The National Catholic Review June 29 2016 Menendez Albert J The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States 1868 2004 p 164 165 ISBN 0786422173 1992 United States Presidential Election Results by Congressional District Western Washington University Retrieved July 25 2024 Works citedSteed Robert Moreland Laurence Baker Tod eds 1994 The 1992 Presidential Election in the South Current Patterns of Southern Party and Electoral Politics Praeger Publishers ISBN 0275945340

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