1996 United States presidential election in Indiana


The 1996 United States presidential election in Indiana took place on November 5, 1996 as part of the 1996 United States presidential election. Voters chose 12 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Indiana was won by Senator Bob Dole. The presidential contest in Indiana was not a surprise, with Dole winning 47.13% to 41.55% over President Bill Clinton by a margin of 5.58%. Billionaire businessman Ross Perot finished in third, with a significant 10.50% of the popular vote. Indiana would stay a Republican state until 2008, in which Barack Obama won by a close margin, the first Democratic victory in Indiana since 1964.
Clinton did manage the feat of winning a plurality in exurban Chicago’s Porter County, which had previously voted Republican at every presidential election since that party was founded in 1854. In doing so he broke the second-last still-standing streak of voting Republican from that party’s first election in 1856, leaving Illinois’ Carroll County as the solitary county to have voted Republican at every presidential election since that party’s formation.
, this is the last election in which Blackford County, Sullivan County, Crawford County, Jefferson County, Knox County, Clark County, Posey County, Switzerland County, Pike County, Floyd County, Gibson County, and Warrick County voted for a Democratic Presidential candidate.

Results

Results by county