2002 United States Senate election in Minnesota

2002 United States Senate election in Minnesota

← 1996 November 5, 2002 2008 →
 
Nominee Norm Coleman Walter Mondale
(Replaced Paul Wellstone on the ballot)
Party Republican Democratic (DFL)
Popular vote 1,116,697 1,067,246
Percentage 49.53% 47.34%

Coleman:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Mondale:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Moore:      40–50%
Wellstone:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Write-ins:      40–50%      >90%
Tie:      30–40%      40–50%      50%      No votes

U.S. senator before election

Dean Barkley[a]
Independence

Elected U.S. Senator

Norm Coleman
Republican

The 2002 United States Senate election in Minnesota took place on November 5, 2002. Incumbent Senator Paul Wellstone was running for a third term but died in a plane crash eleven days before the election. The Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) quickly chose former Vice President and 1984 presidential nominee Walter Mondale to replace Wellstone on the ballot. Mondale had previously held the seat from 1964 to 1976, resigning to assume the vice presidency. He narrowly lost to Republican Norm Coleman, the former mayor of Saint Paul. The day before the election, Governor Jesse Ventura appointed the 1996 Independence Party candidate, Dean Barkley, to serve the remainder of Wellstone's term.[1]

To date, this is the only time since 1994 that Republicans won a U.S. Senate election in Minnesota. This is also the last time in a midterm election that the party controlling the White House flipped a Senate seat in a state they did not win in the preceding presidential election. This marked the first election that Mondale had lost in Minnesota, as he had even narrowly carried it against Ronald Reagan in his landslide defeat in the 1984 United States presidential election, where he lost 49 states, winning only Minnesota and the District of Columbia. As a result of his defeat in this election, Mondale became the first, and so far only, major party candidate in American history to have lost a general election in every state.


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  1. ^ "Mondale Concedes to Coleman". FOX News Network, LLC. Associated Press. November 6, 2002. Archived from the original on May 15, 2008. Retrieved August 12, 2010.

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