1994 United States Senate special election in Tennessee
November 8, 1994
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| Turnout | 56.62%[1] | ||||||||||||||||
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County results Thompson: 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Cooper: 50–60% 60–70% | |||||||||||||||||
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| Elections in Tennessee |
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| Government |
The 1994 United States Senate special election in Tennessee was held November 8, 1994. Incumbent Democratic Senator Al Gore resigned from the Senate following his election as Vice President of the United States in 1992, and this led to the 1993 appointment of Harlan Mathews and the subsequent special election.[2] Mathews did not seek election to finish the unexpired term, and Representative Jim Cooper subsequently became the Democratic nominee. However, the Republican nominee Fred Thompson won the seat in a decisive victory.
The election was held concurrently with the regular Class 1 Tennessee Senate election, in which Republican Bill Frist defeated incumbent Democrat Jim Sasser. As a result of Thompson and Frist's simultaneous victories in Tennessee, the two elections marked the first time since 1978 that both Senate seats in a state have flipped from one party to the other in a single election cycle. The next time this was repeated was in Georgia in 2021 where both the regular election and the special election went from incumbent Republicans to Democrats.
Democratic primary
U.S. Representative Jim Cooper, a moderate Democrat from Tennessee's 4th congressional district, won the Democratic nomination for the special election unopposed on August 4, 1994.[3]
Nominee
Republican primary
Fred Thompson, a Nashville attorney and actor who gained national recognition as minority counsel to the Senate Watergate Committee in 1973, announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination in April 1994 to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Al Gore.[4]
Thompson faced only minimal opposition in the August 4, 1994, Republican primary from John Warnp, a Memphis salesman. He won the nomination easily, with little need for extensive campaigning.[5]
Nominee
- Fred Thompson, attorney and actor
Election results
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Fred Thompson | 885,998 | 60.44% | +30.63% | ||
| Democratic | Jim Cooper | 565,930 | 38.61% | −29.12% | ||
| Independent | Charles N. Hancock | 4,169 | 0.28% | |||
| Independent | Charles Moore | 2,219 | 0.15% | |||
| Independent | Terry Lytle | 1,934 | 0.13% | |||
| Independent | Kerry Martin | 1,719 | 0.12% | |||
| Independent | Jon Walls | 1,532 | 0.10% | |||
| Independent | Hobart Lumpkin | 1,184 | 0.08% | |||
| Independent | Don Schneller | 1,150 | 0.08% | |||
| Write-ins | 27 | 0.00% | ||||
| Majority | 320,068 | 21.83% | −16.08% | |||
| Turnout | 1,465,862 | |||||
| Republican gain from Democratic | ||||||
See also
- 1994 United States Senate election in Tennessee
- 1994 United States Senate elections
- 1994 Tennessee gubernatorial election
References
- ^ "Tennessee Voter Turnout in 1994". Tennessee Secretary of State. November 8, 1994. Retrieved April 17, 2023.
- ^ "Our Campaigns - TN US Senate Special Race - Nov 08, 1994". www.ourcampaigns.com.
- ^ "LAWYER-ACTOR WINS TENNESSEE SENATE PRIMARY". The Washington Post. August 5, 1994. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 10, 2026.
- ^ "Bioguide Search". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved February 10, 2026.
- ^ "An Actor and an Intellectual Vie For Gore's Senate Seat in Tennessee". Christian Science Monitor. ISSN 0882-7729. Retrieved February 10, 2026.
- ^ "94 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION STATISTICS". clerk.house.gov.