2016 United States Senate election in Washington

The 2016 United States Senate election in Washington was held November 8, 2016, to elect a member of the United States Senate to represent the State of Washington. Incumbent Democratic Senator Patty Murray ran for re-election to a fifth term,[1] and won by a significant margin, winning 59% of the vote, to Republican Chris Vance's 41%.

2016 United States Senate election in Washington

← 2010November 8, 20162022 →
 
NomineePatty MurrayChris Vance
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Popular vote1,913,9791,329,338
Percentage58.83%40.86%

Murray:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Vance:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Tie:      50%      No data

U.S. senator before election

Patty Murray
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Patty Murray
Democratic

The election took place concurrently with the 2016 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the United States Senate in other states and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.

Under Washington's nonpartisan blanket primary law, all candidates appear on the same ballot, regardless of party. In the August 2 primary, voters had the choice to vote for any candidate, regardless of their party affiliation. The top two finishers—regardless of party—advance to the general election in November, even if a candidate manages to receive a majority of the votes cast in the primary election. California is the only other state with this system, a so-called "top two primary" (Louisiana has a similar "jungle primary", but there is no general election if one candidate receives 50% plus one vote of all votes cast in the primary).

As of 2024, this is the last time a Democrat running statewide for federal office has won Grays Harbor and Mason Counties.

Primary election

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Democratic Party

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Declared

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  • Thor Amundson[2]
  • Phil Cornell, retired communications technician[3]
  • Patty Murray, incumbent U.S. Senator
  • Mohammed Said[2]

Republican Party

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Declared

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Declined

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Third party and independent candidates

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Declared

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  • Pano Churchill (Lincoln Caucus)[2]
  • Ted Cummings (independent)[2]
  • Zach Haller (independent)[2]
  • Chuck Jackson (independent)[2]
  • Donna Rae Lands (Conservative)[2]
  • Mike Luke (Libertarian)[2]
  • Jeremy Teuton (System Reboot)[2]
  • Alex Tsimerman (StandUpAmerica)[2]
  • Sam Wright (Human Rights)[2]

Results

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Results by county:
  Murray—30–40%
  Murray—40–50%
  Murray—50–60%
  Murray—60–70%
  Vance—30–40%
  Vance—40–50%
Blanket primary election results[11]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticPatty Murray (incumbent) 745,421 53.82%
RepublicanChris Vance 381,004 27.51%
RepublicanEric John Makus57,8254.18%
DemocraticPhil Cornell46,4603.35%
RepublicanScott Nazarino41,5423.00%
LibertarianMike Luke20,9881.52%
DemocraticMohammad Said13,3620.96%
IndependentDonna Rae Lands11,4720.83%
IndependentTed Cummings11,0280.80%
IndependentSam Wright10,7510.78%
RepublicanUncle Mover8,5690.62%
IndependentJeremy Teuton7,9910.58%
DemocraticThor Amundson7,9060.57%
IndependentChuck Jackson6,3180.46%
IndependentPano Churchill5,1500.37%
IndependentZach Haller5,0920.37%
IndependentAlex Tsimerman4,1170.30%
Total votes1,384,996 100.00%

General election

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Debates

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DatesLocationMurrayVanceLink
October 16, 2016Seattle, WashingtonParticipantParticipantFull debate - C-SPAN
October 23, 2016Redmond, WashingtonParticipantParticipantFull debate - C-SPAN

Predictions

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SourceRankingAs of
The Cook Political Report[12]Safe DNovember 2, 2016
Sabato's Crystal Ball[13]Safe DNovember 7, 2016
Rothenberg Political Report[14]Safe DNovember 3, 2016
Daily Kos[15]Safe DNovember 8, 2016
Real Clear Politics[16]Safe DNovember 7, 2016

Polling

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Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Patty
Murray (D)
Chris
Vance (R)
OtherUndecided
SurveyMonkeyNovember 1–7, 20161,451± 4.6%59%37%4%
Insights West Archived November 8, 2016, at the Wayback MachineNovember 4–6, 2016402± 4.9%53%37%11%
SurveyMonkeyOctober 31–November 6, 20161,292± 4.6%59%37%4%
SurveyMonkeyOctober 28–November 3, 2016944± 4.6%61%36%3%
SurveyUSAOctober 31–November 2, 2016667± 3.9%53%41%6%
SurveyMonkeyOctober 27–November 2, 2016807± 4.6%61%36%3%
SurveyMonkeyOctober 26–November 1, 2016698± 4.6%61%36%3%
SurveyMonkeyOctober 25–31, 2016745± 4.6%61%36%3%
Elway PollOctober 20–22, 2016502± 4.5%58%34%8%
KCTS 9/YouGov Archived October 27, 2016, at the Wayback MachineOctober 6–13, 2016750± 4.4%55%39%16%
Strategies 360/KOMO NewsSeptember 29–October 3, 2016500± 4.4%57%36%6%
Emerson CollegeSeptember 25–26, 2016700± 3.6%48%41%3%8%
Insights WestSeptember 12–14, 2016505± 4.4%46%25%2%27%
Elway PollAugust 9–13, 2016500± 4.5%52%34%14%
Elway PollApril 14–17, 2016503± 3.5%50%32%18%
Elway PollOctober 13–15, 2015500± 4.5%44%23%33%
Hypothetical polling
with Rob McKenna
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Patty
Murray (D)
Rob
McKenna (R)
Undecided
Public Policy PollingMay 14–17, 2015879± 3.3%46%41%12%
with Dave Reichert
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Patty
Murray (D)
Dave
Reichert (R)
Undecided
Public Policy PollingMay 14–17, 2015879± 3.3%48%37%15%
with Jaime Herrera Beutler
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Patty
Murray (D)
Jaime
Herrera
Beutler (R)
Undecided
Public Policy PollingMay 14–17, 2015879± 3.3%47%37%17%
with Cathy McMorris Rodgers
Poll sourceDate(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Patty
Murray (D)
Cathy
McMorris
Rodgers (R)
Undecided
Public Policy PollingMay 14–17, 2015879± 3.3%48%35%17%

Results

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At 1,913,979 votes, Murray made history by receiving the most votes in a United States Senate election in Washington state.

United States Senate election in Washington, 2016 [17]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticPatty Murray (incumbent) 1,913,979 58.83% +6.75%
RepublicanChris Vance1,329,33840.86%-6.51%
Write-in10,0710.31%-0.24%
Total votes3,253,388 100.00% N/A
Democratic hold

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

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By congressional district

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Murray won 7 of 10 congressional districts, including one that elected a Republican.[18]

DistrictVanceMurrayRepresentative
1st43.75%56.25%Suzan DelBene
2nd38.69%61.31%Rick Larsen
3rd50.54%49.46%Jaime Herrera Beutler
4th55.87%44.13%Dan Newhouse
5th52.16%47.84%Cathy McMorris Rodgers
6th41.85%58.15%Derek Kilmer
7th17.38%82.62%Jim McDermott
Pramila Jayapal
8th48.33%51.67%Dave Reichert
9th27.92%72.08%Adam Smith
10th42.29%57.71%Denny Heck

See also

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References

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Official campaign websites (Archived)