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2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota

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2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota
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The 2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota was held on November 3, 2020, to elect a member of the United States Senate to represent the state of Minnesota, concurrently with the 2020 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the U.S. Senate, elections to the United States House of Representatives and other state and local elections. Some Republican pundits and strategists believed Minnesota to be a potential pickup opportunity due to its perceived increasingly favorable demographics[citation needed] and unexpectedly close result in the 2016 presidential election, along with potential backlash from the 2020 George Floyd protests, originating after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. However, every poll showed incumbent Democratic Senator Tina Smith in the lead by varying degrees.

Quick Facts Nominee, Party ...
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Smith was reelected to a full term in office by a margin of 5.2 points, making this the closest Senate election in Minnesota since 2008. The primary took place on August 11.[1]

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Democratic primary

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Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in primary

  • Steve Carlson, candidate for U.S. Senate in 2018 and write-in candidate for president in 2016[3][4][5]
  • Ahmad Hassan[5]
  • Paula Overby, Green Party nominee for U.S. Senate in 2018[6][5]
  • Christopher Seymore Sr.[5]

Withdrawn

Endorsements

Results

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Results by county:
Map legend
  •   Smith—>90%
  •   Smith—80–90%
  •   Smith—70–80%
More information Party, Candidate ...
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Republican primary

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Candidates

Nominee

Eliminated in primary

  • John L. Berman[5]
  • Bob Carney Jr.[5][33]
  • Cynthia Gail, art teacher[34]
  • James Reibestein[5]

Withdrawn

Declined

Endorsements

Jason Lewis

Results

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Results by county:
Map legend
  •   Lewis—80–90%
  •   Lewis—70–80%
  •   Lewis—60–70%
  •   Lewis—50–60%
More information Party, Candidate ...
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Other candidates

Grassroots–Legalize Cannabis

Nominee

  • Oliver Steinberg[5]

Results

More information Party, Candidate ...

Nominee

  • Kevin O'Connor[5]

Primary results

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County Results for Kevin O'Connor:
Map legend
  •   8%
  •   7%
  •   6%
  •   5%
  •   4%
  •   3%
More information Party, Candidate ...

Independent write-in candidate

Declared

  • George Dennis Jr.[47]
  • Josh D. Ondich, perennial candidate[48][49]

General election

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Debate

Two general election debates were held. The first, on October 2, 2020, was hosted by Minnesota Public Radio and was attended by Smith and Lewis.[50] The second debate was hosted by Twin Cities PBS on October 23, 2020, and attended only by Lewis.[51]

Predictions

More information Source, Ranking ...

Additional general election endorsements

Tina Smith (DFL)

U.S. senators

Organizations

Labor unions

Newspapers

Jason Lewis (R)

U.S. executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Other individuals

Organizations

Newspapers

Polling

More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
More information Poll source, Date(s) administered ...
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Results

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Thumb
More information Party, Candidate ...

By county

More information By county, County ...

By congressional district

Smith and Lewis each won 4 of 8 congressional districts. [113]

More information District, Smith ...
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See also

Notes

  1. "Someone else" with 2%
  2. "Other candidate or write-in" with 2%
  3. "Not sure/Someone else/Undecided" with 3%
  4. "Some other candidate" with 3%
  5. O'Connor (LMN) and Steinberg (GLC) with 1%; "Someone else" with 0%
  6. Additional data sourced from FiveThirtyEight
  7. O'Connor (LMN) with 3%; Steinberg (GLC) with 1%; would not vote with 0%
  8. "Some other candidate" with 4%
  9. O'Connor (LMN) and "Refused" with 2%; Steinberg (GLC) and "Other" with 1%
  10. "Another Third Party/Write-in" with 2%
  11. "Someone else" and would not vote with 0%
  12. Includes "Refused"
  13. "Someone else" with 3%

Partisan clients

  1. Poll sponsored by Lewis' campaign
  2. Giffords endorsed Tina Smith prior to the sampling period
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References

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