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2012 United States Senate election in Montana


2012 United States Senate election in Montana


The 2012 United States Senate election in Montana was held on November 6, 2012, alongside a presidential election, other elections to the United States Senate in other states, as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.

Incumbent Democratic senator Jon Tester successfully ran for reelection to a second term, gaining 48.6% of the vote against Republican U.S. Representative Denny Rehberg who received 44.9% of the vote.

Democratic primary

Candidate

  • Jon Tester, incumbent U.S. Senator

Republican primary

Candidates

  • Denny Rehberg, U.S. Representative, former lieutenant governor, former state representative and nominee in 1996
  • Dennis Teske, farmer

Withdrew

  • Steve Daines, businessman and 2008 Republican nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Montana (ran for the U.S. House of Representatives)

Endorsements

Results

The Republican primary was held on June 5, 2012.

General election

Candidates

  • Dan Cox (Libertarian), retired businessman
  • Denny Rehberg (Republican), U.S. Representative, former lieutenant governor and former state representative
  • Jon Tester (Democratic), incumbent U.S. Senator and former state senator

Debates

Three debates were scheduled, including one with the Libertarian candidate whose ultimate influence on the race remains uncertain. The first, between Rehberg and Tester, was held on October 8, 2012, at 7 p.m. at Petro Theatre at the MSU Billings University campus. The debate was televised live by Montana PBS andbroadcast on KEMC/Yellowstone Public Radio and streamed on the Gazette's website. It was moderated by Steve Prosinski, editor of The Gazette, with questions from a panel of political reporters. Representatives from the Associated Students of Montana State University Billings, the student government, served as timekeepers.

  • Complete video of debate, October 8, 2012.
  • Complete video of debate, October 20, 2012

Campaign

Former president of the Montana Senate and farmer Jon Tester was elected with 49.2% of the vote in 2006, defeating incumbent Conrad Burns.

As of June 30, 2011, Jon Tester had saved $2.34 million in campaign funds. Tester has been accused by Republican Denny Rehberg's senate campaign of depending on financial contributions from Wall Street banking executives and movie stars.

On February 5, 2011, U.S. Representative Denny Rehberg announced his intention to run for the U.S. Senate. Steve Daines had announced he would seek the Republican nomination on November 13, 2010, but just before Rehberg's announcement he dropped out of the primary and announced he would instead seek the Republican nomination for Montana's at-large congressional district in 2012. Daines would later be elected in the other U.S. Senate seat two years later.

As of early July 2010, Denny Rehberg had saved $1.5 million of an original $2 million in campaign funds. Rehberg accused Democrat Jon Tester's senate campaign of depending on financial contributions from Wall Street banking executives and Hollywood while Rehberg's campaign relies primarily on in state donations. Tester's campaign countered that Rehberg has been funded by petroleum special interests and Wall Street.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee aired an attack ad against Jon Tester that mistakenly included a digitally manipulated photo of Tester (who has only two fingers on his left hand) with full sets of fingers. Another ad against Tester, from the Karl Rove group Crossroads GPS, falsely asserted that Tester had voted in favor of Environmental Protection Agency regulation of farm dust. In fact, Tester had praised the EPA for not attempting such a regulation. The vote cited in the anti-Tester ad concerned currency exchange rates.

In early October 2012, Crossroads GPS announced it would launch a $16 million advertising buy in national races, of which four were this and three other Senate elections.

Top contributors

  • Although organizations are listed here, it is illegal for corporations to contribute to federal campaigns. Only political action committees (PACs) and individuals may contribute to federal candidates and in limited amounts. These lists actually indicate aggregate contributions from the organizations' PACs, their individual members or employees or owners, and those individuals' immediate families.

Top industries

Predictions

Polling

Results

Tester won re-election to a second term, albeit by a narrow margin. He received about 4% more of the vote than Republican Rehberg, but the difference in Tester and Rehberg's vote totals was less than the vote total of Libertarian Dan Cox, who received 6.6% of the vote.

By county

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

  • Chouteau (largest municipality: Fort Benton)
  • Gallatin (largest city: Bozeman)
  • Yellowstone (largest municipality: Billings)

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Mineral (Largest city: Superior)
  • Sheridan (Largest city: Plentywood)

Source:

See also

  • 2012 United States Senate elections
  • 2012 United States House of Representatives election in Montana
  • 2012 Montana gubernatorial election
Collection James Bond 007

References

External links

  • Elections and Government at the Montana Secretary of State
  • Candidate issue positions at On the Issues
  • Outside spending at Sunlight Foundation
  • Campaign contributions at OpenSecrets
Official campaign websites
  • Denny Rehberg for U.S. Senate
  • Jon Tester for U.S. Senate
  • Dan Cox for U.S. Senate

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: 2012 United States Senate election in Montana by Wikipedia (Historical)

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