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1970s

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Vermont Attorney General Democratic primary, 1970[1]

Vermont Attorney General election, 1970[2]

Vermont Attorney General Republican primary, 1972[3]

  • Kimberly B. Cheney (R) – 20,307 (33.62%)
  • Natt L. Divoll (R) – 18,300 (30.30%)
  • Robert E. West (R) – 13,095 (21.68%)
  • Sten E. Lium (R) – 5,009 (8.29%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (R) – 3,669 (6.07%)

Vermont Attorney General election, 1972[4]

  • Kimberly B. Cheney (R) – 101,480 (57.89%)
  • Richard Gadbois (D) – 67,884 (38.72%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 5,989 (3.36%)

Vermont's at-large congressional district Democratic primary, 1974[5]

  • Francis J. Cain (D) – 9,415 (41.37%)
  • Margaret A. Lucenti (D) – 3,384 (14.87%)
  • John J. Welch (D) – 3,004 (13.20%)
  • Francis J. Esposito (D) – 2,804 (12.32%)
  • Dennis J. Morrisseau (D) – 2,623 (11.52%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (D) – 1,426 (6.27%)

Vermont Attorney General election, 1976[6]

  • M. Jerome Diamond (D) – 89,839 (53.17%)
  • John P. Meaker (R) – 71,960 (42.59%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 7,153 (4.23%)

United States House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1978[7]

  • Jim Jeffords (R) – 90,668 (75.26%)
  • Sarah Marie Dietz (D) – 23,228 (19.28%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 6,505 (5.40%)

1980s

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U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1980[8]

  • Jim Jeffords (R) – 154,274 (79.24%)
  • Robin Lloyd (Citizens) – 24,758 (12.72%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 15,218 (7.82%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1982[9]

  • Jim Jeffords (R) – 114,191 (69.23%)
  • Mark A. Kaplan (D) – 38,296 (23.22%)
  • Robin Lloyd (C) – 6,409 (3.89%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 2,794 (1.69%)
  • Morris Earle (Small Is Beautiful) – 1,733 (1.05%)
  • George E. Trask (Libertarian) – 1,407 (0.85%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1984[10][11]

  • Jim Jeffords (R) – 148,025 (65.41%)
  • Anthony Pollina (D) – 60,360 (26.67%)
  • Jim Hedbor (L) – 9,359 (4.14%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 4,858 (2.15%)
  • Morris Earle (SIB) – 3,313 (1.46%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1986[12]

  • Jim Jeffords (R) – 168,403 (89.12%)
  • John T. McNulty (Pro-life) – 7,404 (3.92%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 7,060 (3.74%)
  • Morris Earle (SIB) – 5,850 (3.10%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1988[13]

  • Peter Plympton Smith (R) – 98,937 (41.21%)
  • Bernie Sanders (Independent) – 90,026 (37.50%)
  • Paul N. Poirier (D) – 45,330 (18.88%)
  • Jim Hedbor (L) – 3,109 (1.30%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 1,455 (0.61%)
  • Morris Earle (SIB) – 1,070 (0.45%)

1990s

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Vermont's at-large congressional district Democratic primary, 1990[14]

  • Dolores Sandoval (D) – 5,979 (41.27%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (D) – 5,711 (39.42%)
  • Bernie Sanders (write–in, D) – 2,005 (13.84%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1990[15]

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1992[16]

  • Bernie Sanders (I) – 162,724 (57.78%)
  • Tim Philbin (R) – 86,901 (30.86%)
  • Lewis E. Young (D) – 22,279 (7.91%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 3,660 (1.30%)
  • John Dewey (Natural Law) – 3,549 (1.26%)
  • Douglas M. Miller (Freedom for LaRouche) – 2,049 (0.73%)

Vermont Attorney General election, 1994[17]

  • Jeffrey Amestoy (R) – 176,857 (87.14%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 11,210 (5.52%)
  • Joseph P. Mulcahy (NL) – 7,753 (3.73%)
  • Ted Talcott (Vermont Grassroots) – 7,062 (3.48%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1996[18]

  • Bernie Sanders (I) – 140,678 (55.23%)
  • Susan W. Sweetser (R) – 83,021 (32.60%)
  • Jack Long (D) – 23,830 (9.36%)
  • Thomas J. Morse (L) – 2,693 (1.06%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 1,965 (0.77%)
  • Robert Melamede (VG) – 1,350 (0.53%)
  • Norio Kushi (NL) – 812 (0.32%)

Vermont's at-large congressional district Democratic primary, 1998[19]

  • Bernie Sanders (write-in, D) – 1,661 (47.88%)
  • Mark Candon (write–in, D) – 524 (15.11%)
  • Jack Long (write–in, D) – 465 (13.40%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (write–in, D) – 352 (10.15%)

Vermont's at-large congressional district Republican primary, 1998[20]

  • Mark Candon (R) – 23,101 (48.43%)
  • Jack Long (R) – 15,716 (32.95%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (R) – 8,327 (17.46%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 1998[21]

  • Bernie Sanders (I) – 136,403 (63.40%)
  • Mark Candon (R) – 70,740 (32.88%)
  • Matthew S. Mulligan (VG) – 3,464 (1.61%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 2,153 (1.00%)
  • Robert Maynard (L) – 2,097 (0.98%)

2000s

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Vermont's at-large congressional district Democratic primary, 2000[22]

  • Peter Diamondstone (D) – 20,539 (90.94%)
  • Bernie Sanders (write–in, D) – 1,337 (5.92%)

U.S. House of Representatives election in Vermont, 2000[23]

  • Bernie Sanders (I) – 196,118 (69.21%)
  • Karen Ann Kerin (R) – 51,977 (18.34%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU, D, Organic Life) – 14,918 (5.27%)
  • Stewart Skrill (I) – 11,816 (4.17%)
  • Jack Rogers (VG) – 4,799 (1.69%)
  • Daniel H. Krymkowski (L) – 2,978 (1.05%)

Governor of Vermont Progressive primary, 2002[24]

  • Michael J. Badamo (Progressive) – 931 (54.16%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (P) – 412 (23.97%)

Vermont gubernatorial election, 2002[25]

  • Jim Douglas (R) – 103,436 (44.94%)
  • Doug Racine (D) – 97,565 (42.39%)
  • Cornelius Hogan (I) – 22,353 (9.71%)
  • Cris Ericson (Marijuana) – 1,737 (0.76)
  • Michael Badamo (P) – 1,380 (0.60%)
  • Joel W. Williams (L) – 938 (0.41%)
  • Patricia Hejny (VG) – 771 (0.34%)
  • Marilynn Christian (Restore Justice-Freedom) – 638 (0.28%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 625 (0.27%)
  • Brian Pearl (I) – 569 (0.25%)

Governor of Vermont Progressive primary, 2004[26]

  • Martha Abbott (write–in, P) – 375 (55.07%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (P) – 190 (27.90%)

Vermont gubernatorial election, 2004[27]

  • Jim Douglas (R) – 181,540 (58.74%)
  • Peter Clavelle (D) – 117,327 (37.96%)
  • Cris Ericson (M) – 4,221 (1.37%)
  • Patricia Hejny (I) – 2,431 (0.79%)
  • Harland Arthur Macia III (L) – 2,263 (0.73%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 1,298 (0.42%)

United States Senate election in Vermont, 2006[28]

Vermont gubernatorial election, 2008[29]

  • Jim Douglas (R) – 170,492 (53.43%)
  • Anthony Pollina (I) – 69,791 (21.87%)
  • Gaye Symington (D) – 69,534 (21.79%)
  • Tony O'Connor (Cheap Renewable Energy) – 3,106 (0.97%)
  • Sam Young (I) – 2,490 (0.78%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 1,710 (0.54%)
  • Cris Ericson (I) – 1,704 (0.53%)

2010s

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United States Senate election in Vermont, 2010[30]

  • Patrick Leahy (D) – 151,281 (64.33%)
  • Len Britton (R) – 72,699 (30.91%)
  • Daniel Freilich (I) – 3,544 (1.51%)
  • Cris Ericson (M) – 2,731 (1.16%)
  • Stephen J. Cain (I) – 2,356 (1.00%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU, Socialist) – 1,433 (0.61%)
  • Johenry Nunes (I) – 1,021 (0.43%)

United States Senate election in Vermont, 2012[31]

  • Bernie Sanders (I) – 207,848 (71.00%)
  • John MacGovern (R) – 72,898 (24.90%)
  • Cris Ericson (M) – 5,924 (2.02%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 2,511 (0.86%)
  • Peter Moss (Peace & Prosperity) – 2,452 (0.84%)
  • Laurel LaFramboise (VoteKISS) – 877 (0.30%)

Vermont gubernatorial election, 2014[32]

  • Peter Shumlin (D) – 89,509 (46.36%)
  • Scott Milne (R) – 87,075 (45.10%)
  • Dan Feliciano (L) – 8,428 (4.37%)
  • Em Peyton (I) – 3,157 (1.64%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 1,673 (0.87%)
  • Bernard Peters (I) – 1,434 (0.74%)
  • Cris Ericson (I) – 1,089 (0.56%)

United States Senate election in Vermont, 2016[33][34][35]

  • Patrick Leahy (D) – 192,243 (59.99%)
  • Scott Milne (R) – 103,637 (32.34%)
  • Cris Ericson (M) – 9,156 (2.86%)
  • Jerry Trudell (I) – 5,223 (1.63%)
  • Peter Diamondstone (LU) – 3,241 (1.01%)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "VT Attorney General - D Primary 1970". Our Campaigns.
  2. ^ "VT Attorney General 1970". Our Campaigns.
  3. ^ "VT Attorney General - R Primary 1972". Our Campaigns.
  4. ^ "VT Attorney General 1972". Our Campaigns.
  5. ^ "VT - At-Large - D Primary 1974". Our Campaigns.
  6. ^ "VT Attorney General 1976". Our Campaigns.
  7. ^ "VT At-Large 1978". Our Campaigns.
  8. ^ "VT At-Large 1980". Our Campaigns.
  9. ^ "VT At Large 1982". Our Campaigns.
  10. ^ "VT At-Large 1984". Our Campaigns.
  11. ^ "Vermont General Election Results - U.S. Representatives" Vermont State Archives[usurped]
  12. ^ "VT At-Large 1986". Our Campaigns.
  13. ^ "VT At-Large 1988". Our Campaigns.
  14. ^ "VT At-Large - D Primary 1990". Our Campaigns.
  15. ^ "VT At-Large 1990". Our Campaigns.
  16. ^ "VT At-Large 1992". Our Campaigns.
  17. ^ "VT Attorney General 1994". Our Campaigns.
  18. ^ "VT At-Large 1996". Our Campaigns.
  19. ^ "VT At-Large - D Primary 1998". Our Campaigns.
  20. ^ "VT At-Large - R Primary 1998". Our Campaigns.
  21. ^ "VT At-Large 1998". Our Campaigns.
  22. ^ "VT At-Large - D Primary 2000". Our Campaigns.
  23. ^ "VT At-Large 2000". Our Campaigns.
  24. ^ "VT Governor - PRG Primary 2002". Our Campaigns.
  25. ^ "VT - Governor 2002". Our Campaigns.
  26. ^ "VT Governor - PRG Primary 2004". Our Campaigns.
  27. ^ "VT Governor 2004". Our Campaigns.
  28. ^ "VT US Senate 2006". Our Campaigns.
  29. ^ "VT Governor 2008". Our Campaigns.
  30. ^ "VT US Senate 2010". Our Campaigns.
  31. ^ "VT US Senate 2012". Our Campaigns.
  32. ^ "VT Governor 2014". Our Campaigns.
  33. ^ "VT US Senate 2016". Our Campaigns.
  34. ^ "Vermont Election Results". Burlington Free Press. Archived from the original on November 10, 2016. Retrieved January 29, 2017.
  35. ^ "Official Results - General Election - November 8, 2016". Vermont Secretary of State. November 8, 2016. Archived from the original on May 28, 2019. Retrieved December 28, 2016.