VIEWER’S SCORECARD
- Share via
ELECTORAL TALLY (270 TO WIN)
*--*
Dole Clinton Alabama 9 Alaska 3 Arizona 8 Arkansas 6 California 54 Colorado 8 Connecticut 8 Delaware 3 D.C. 3 Florida 25 Georgia 13 Hawaii 4 Idaho 4 Illinois 22 Indiana 12 Iowa 7 Kansas 6 Kentucky 8 Louisiana 9 Mississippi 4 Maine 10 Maryland 12 Mass. 18 Michigan 10 Minnesota 10 Missouri 11 Montana 3 Nebraska 5 Nevada 4 New Hampshire 4 New Jersey 15 New Mexico 5 New York 33 North Carolina 14 North Dakota 3 Ohio 21 Oklahoma 8 Oregon 7 Pennsylvania 23 Rhode Island 4 South Carolina 8 South Dakota 3 Tennessee 11 Texas 32 Utah 5 Vermont 3 Virginia 13 Washington 11 West Virginia 5 Wisconsin 11 Wyoming 3 TOTALS
*--*
1992 ELECTORAL VOTE
Numbers denote electoral vote per state
Clinton
Arkansas: 6
California: 54
Colorado: 8
Connecticut: 8
Delaware: 3
D.C.: 3
Georgia: 13
Hawaii: 4
Illinois: 22
Iowa: 7
Kentucky: 8
Louisiana: 9
Maine: 4
Maryland: 10
Massachusetts: 4
Michigan: 18
Minnesota: 10
Missouri: 11
Montana: 3
Nevada: 4
New Hampshire: 4
New Jersey: 15
New Mexico: 5
New York: 33
Ohio: 21
Oregon: 7
Pennsylvania: 23
Rhode Island: 4
Tennessee: 11
Vermont: 3
Washington: 11
West Virginia: 5
Wisconsin: 11
*
Bush
Alabama: 9
Alaska: 3
Arizona: 8
Florida: 25
Idaho: 4
Indiana: 12
Kansas: 6
Mississippi: 7
Nebraska: 5
North Carolina: 14
North Dakota: 3
Oklahoma: 8
South Carolina: 8
South Dakota: 3
Texas: 32
Utah: 5
Virginia: 13
Wyoming: 3
WHAT TO WATCH: PRESIDENTIAL RACE
3 p.m.: Polls close in Indiana and Kentucky. If Bill Clinton carries usually Republican Indiana, the night will probably be over early. On the other hand, if Kentucky goes Republican, Bob Dole may be making a late comeback.
4:30 p.m.: By this point, polls will have closed in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Ohio--all must-win states for Dole.
5 p.m.: For all practical purposes, the campaign may be finished at this point, when polls close in such large states as Illinois, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. If Clinton carries all of them, Dole will not be able to catch up.
8 p.m.: Polls close in California, Oregon and Washington.
HOUSE RACES
* If Reps. Dick Chrysler, a freshman in Michigan, and Martin Hoke, a second-term representative from Ohio both lose, that will be a strong indicator that Republicans are in trouble.
* On the other hand, the fates of Democratic Reps. Mike Ward of Kentucky and Bud Cramer of Alabama will be key tests of whether Democrats can stave off losses in the South.
* Later in the evening, look to see what happens with Republican J.D. Hayworth in Arizona, an ally of Newt Gingrich, and Elizabeth Furse in Oregon, one of the House’s most liberal Democrats. Both are facing tough opposition.
SENATE RACES
The first indications of whether Democrats can recapture the Senate will come after 4 p.m. poll closings in Georgia, where Max Cleland (D) and Guy Millner (R) are in a tight race, and New Hampshire, where former Rep. Dick Swett (D) is hoping to unseat Sen. Robert C. Smith (R). If the Democrats lose those seats, Republicans can breathe easy. If Democrats win those two, watch later in the evening for hotly fought races in Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts and New Jersey, where polls close at 5 p.m.; Arkansas, where they close at 5:30; and Colorado, Louisiana and Minnesota, which close at 6.
ELECTORAL VOTE TOTALS
1968
Richard Nixon: 301
Hubert Humphrey: 191
George Wallace: 46
*
1972
Richard Nixon: 520
George McGovern: 17
*
1976
Gerald R. Ford: 240
Jimmy Carter: 297
*
1980
Ronald Reagan: 489
Jimmy Carter: 49
*
1984
Ronald Reagan: 525
Walter F. Mondale: 13
*
1988
George Bush: 426
Michael S. Dukakis: 111
****
1992
George Bush: 168
Bill Clinton: 370
TELEVISION
Network coverage plans for election night (all times PST):
CBS: 4 p.m. to 11 p.m., anchored by Dan Rather, with Bob Schieffer, Ed Bradley, Mike Wallace and others.
NBC: 4 p.m. to 11 p.m., anchored by Tom Brokaw, with Tim Russert, Maria Shriver, Lisa Myers and others.
ABC: 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., 8:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m., anchored by Peter Jennings, with David Brinkley, Jeff Greenfield, Cokie Roberts and others.
CNN: 3 to 9:30 p.m., 10 to 10:30 p.m., 11 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. anchored by Bernard Shaw and Judy Woodruff, with Bill Schneider and Ken Bode.
MSNBC: Simulcast with NBC News.
C-SPAN: Coverage all day and night
WEB SITES
CNN
https://www.cnn.com
MSNBC
https://www.msnbc.com
Politics Now
https://www.politicsnow.com
CBS Campaign News
https://www.webnews.com/campaign96
MSNBC
https://www.msnbc.com
CNN
https://www.cnn.com
Politics Now
https://www.politicsnow.com
CBS Campaign News
https://www.webnews.com/campaign96
CALIFORNIA Sec. of State
https://Vote96.ss.ca.gov
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.