1980 United States presidential election in New Mexico
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| | | | Nominee | Ronald Reagan | Jimmy Carter | John B. Anderson | Party | Republican | Democratic | Independent | Home state | California | Georgia | Illinois | Running mate | George H. W. Bush | Walter Mondale | Patrick Lucey | Electoral vote | 4 | 0 | 0 | Popular vote | 250,779 | 167,826 | 29,459 | Percentage | 54.97% | 36.78% | 6.46% | |
County Results Reagan 40-50% 50–60% 60–70% | Carter 40-50% 50–60% | |
President before election Jimmy Carter Democratic | Elected President Ronald Reagan Republican | |
The 1980 United States presidential election in New Mexico took place on November 4, 1980. All 50 states and The District of Columbia, were part of the 1980 United States presidential election. State voters chose four electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
New Mexico was won by former California Governor Ronald Reagan by an 18-point landslide.[1] President of the United States Jimmy Carter failed to gain reelection against Reagan. New Mexico election results reflect the Republican Party's re-consolidation under what is popularly called the "Reagan Revolution,"[2] which sounded overwhelming conservative electoral victories across the United States. As of the 2020 presidential election[update], this is the last time when McKinley County and Grant County voted for a Republican presidential candidate.[3] To date, Jimmy Carter remains the only Democrat to have been elected president without ever winning the state of New Mexico in an election since the state’s founding. He is also the first of only two presidents to have held office to have never won the state with Donald Trump having lost the state consecutively in 2016 and 2020.
Results
1980 United States presidential election in New Mexico Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% |
| Republican | | 250,779 | 54.97% | +4.22 |
| Democratic | | 167,826 | 36.78% | −11.50 |
| Independent | | 29,459 | 6.46% | N/A |
| Libertarian | | 4,365 | 0.96% | +0.69 |
| Citizens | | 2,202 | 0.48% | N/A |
| Statesman | | 1,281 | 0.28% | +0.23 |
| Socialist Workers | | 325 | 0.07% | −0.52 |
Total votes | 456,237 | 100.00% | |
| Republican win |
Results by county
County | Ronald Reagan Republican | Jimmy Carter Democratic | John B. Anderson Independent | Various candidates Other parties | Margin | Total votes cast |
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % |
Bernalillo | 83,956 | 53.45% | 54,841 | 34.92% | 15,118 | 9.63% | 3,148 | 2.00% | 29,115 | 18.53% | 157,063 |
Catron | 906 | 62.74% | 466 | 32.27% | 40 | 2.77% | 32 | 2.22% | 440 | 30.47% | 1,444 |
Chaves | 12,502 | 67.24% | 5,350 | 28.77% | 543 | 2.92% | 199 | 1.07% | 7,152 | 38.47% | 18,594 |
Colfax | 2,537 | 49.88% | 2,266 | 44.55% | 199 | 3.91% | 84 | 1.65% | 271 | 5.33% | 5,086 |
Curry | 8,132 | 67.37% | 3,622 | 30.01% | 183 | 1.52% | 133 | 1.10% | 4,510 | 37.36% | 12,070 |
De Baca | 655 | 56.17% | 484 | 41.51% | 14 | 1.20% | 13 | 1.11% | 171 | 14.66% | 1,166 |
Dona Ana | 15,539 | 53.92% | 10,839 | 37.61% | 1,863 | 6.46% | 579 | 2.01% | 4,700 | 16.31% | 28,820 |
Eddy | 9,817 | 56.55% | 7,028 | 40.49% | 326 | 1.88% | 188 | 1.08% | 2,789 | 16.06% | 17,359 |
Grant | 4,628 | 47.41% | 4,600 | 47.13% | 349 | 3.58% | 184 | 1.89% | 28 | 0.28% | 9,761 |
Guadalupe | 1,065 | 49.65% | 980 | 45.69% | 58 | 2.70% | 42 | 1.96% | 85 | 3.96% | 2,145 |
Harding | 356 | 59.23% | 225 | 37.44% | 14 | 2.33% | 6 | 1.00% | 131 | 21.79% | 601 |
Hidalgo | 1,059 | 53.19% | 840 | 42.19% | 59 | 2.96% | 33 | 1.66% | 219 | 11.00% | 1,991 |
Lea | 10,727 | 66.28% | 5,006 | 30.93% | 298 | 1.84% | 154 | 0.95% | 5,721 | 35.35% | 16,185 |
Lincoln | 3,009 | 68.79% | 1,127 | 25.77% | 172 | 3.93% | 66 | 1.51% | 1,882 | 43.02% | 4,374 |
Los Alamos | 5,460 | 58.19% | 2,368 | 25.24% | 1,388 | 14.79% | 167 | 1.78% | 3,092 | 32.95% | 9,383 |
Luna | 3,636 | 57.30% | 2,443 | 38.50% | 157 | 2.47% | 110 | 1.73% | 1,193 | 18.80% | 6,346 |
McKinley | 7,329 | 56.66% | 4,869 | 37.64% | 498 | 3.85% | 238 | 1.84% | 2,460 | 19.02% | 12,934 |
Mora | 1,037 | 43.48% | 1,274 | 53.42% | 44 | 1.84% | 30 | 1.26% | -237 | -9.94% | 2,385 |
Otero | 7,210 | 60.26% | 4,111 | 34.36% | 478 | 3.99% | 166 | 1.39% | 3,099 | 25.90% | 11,965 |
Quay | 2,499 | 62.09% | 1,422 | 35.33% | 58 | 1.44% | 46 | 1.14% | 1,077 | 26.76% | 4,025 |
Rio Arriba | 3,794 | 35.82% | 6,245 | 58.97% | 379 | 3.58% | 173 | 1.63% | -2,451 | -23.15% | 10,591 |
Roosevelt | 3,950 | 60.92% | 2,240 | 34.55% | 208 | 3.21% | 86 | 1.33% | 1,710 | 26.37% | 6,484 |
San Juan | 15,579 | 66.30% | 6,705 | 28.53% | 741 | 3.15% | 474 | 2.02% | 8,874 | 37.77% | 23,499 |
San Miguel | 3,292 | 39.34% | 4,514 | 53.94% | 416 | 4.97% | 147 | 1.76% | -1,222 | -14.60% | 8,369 |
Sandoval | 6,762 | 53.74% | 4,740 | 37.67% | 789 | 6.27% | 291 | 2.31% | 2,022 | 16.07% | 12,582 |
Santa Fe | 12,361 | 42.86% | 12,658 | 43.89% | 3,123 | 10.83% | 696 | 2.41% | -297 | -1.03% | 28,838 |
Sierra | 2,222 | 62.50% | 1,169 | 32.88% | 117 | 3.29% | 47 | 1.32% | 1,053 | 29.62% | 3,555 |
Socorro | 2,685 | 49.52% | 2,226 | 41.05% | 387 | 7.14% | 124 | 2.29% | 459 | 8.47% | 5,422 |
Taos | 3,584 | 41.67% | 4,346 | 50.53% | 482 | 5.60% | 189 | 2.20% | -762 | -8.86% | 8,601 |
Torrance | 1,907 | 57.42% | 1,261 | 37.97% | 101 | 3.04% | 52 | 1.57% | 646 | 19.45% | 3,321 |
Union | 1,407 | 65.87% | 675 | 31.60% | 32 | 1.50% | 22 | 1.03% | 732 | 34.27% | 2,136 |
Valencia | 11,177 | 58.39% | 6,886 | 35.97% | 825 | 4.31% | 254 | 1.33% | 4,291 | 22.42% | 19,142 |
Totals | 250,779 | 54.97% | 167,826 | 36.78% | 29,459 | 6.46% | 8,173 | 1.79% | 82,953 | 18.19% | 456,237 |
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
References
- ^ "1980 Presidential General Election Results – New Mexico". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
- ^ Jerry Lanson (November 6, 2008). "A historic victory. A changed nation. Now, can Obama deliver?". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved April 27, 2013.
- ^ Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
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