Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The following table indicates the party of elected officials in the U.S. state of Nebraska:
The table also indicates the historical party composition in the:
For years in which a presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.
The parties are as follows: Democratic (D), Democratic/Populist fusion (D/P), Independent (I), Nonpartisan (NP), Populist (P), Republican (R), and a tie or coalition within a group of elected officials.
Year |
Executive offices |
State Legislature |
United States Congress |
Electoral College votes |
Governor |
Lieutenant Governor |
Secretary of State |
Attorney General |
Auditor |
Treasurer |
U.S. Senator (Class I) |
U.S. Senator (Class II) |
U.S. House |
1867 |
David Butler (R)[1] |
no such office |
Thomas P. Kennard (R) |
Champion S. Chase (R) |
John Gillespie (R) |
Augustus Kountze (R) |
R Majorities |
Thomas Tipton (R) |
John Milton Thayer (R) |
Turner M. Marquette (R) |
no electoral votes |
John Taffe (R) |
1868 |
Ulysses S. Grant and Schuyler Colfax (R) Y |
1869 |
Seth Robinson (R) |
James Sweet (R) |
1870 |
1871 |
William H. James (R) |
George H. Roberts (R) |
Henry A. Koenig (R) |
Phineas Hitchcock (R) |
William H. James (R)[2] |
1872 |
Ulysses S. Grant and Henry Wilson (R) Y |
1873 |
Robert W. Furnas (R) |
John J. Gosper (R) |
Joseph R. Webster (R) |
Jefferson B. Weston (R) |
Lorenzo Crounse (R) |
1874 |
1875 |
Silas Garber (R) |
Bruno Tzschuck (R) |
George H. Roberts (R) |
J. C. McBride (R) |
Algernon Paddock (R) |
1876 |
Rutherford B. Hayes and William A. Wheeler (R) Y |
1877 |
Othman A. Abbott (R) |
Alvin Saunders (R) |
Frank Welch (R)[3] |
1878 |
Thomas J. Majors (R) |
1879 |
Albinus Nance (R) |
Edmund C. Carns (R) |
S. J. Alexander (R) |
C. J. Dilworth (R) |
F. W. Liedtke (R) |
George M. Bartlett (R) |
Edward K. Valentine (R) |
1880 |
James A. Garfield and Chester A. Arthur (R) N |
1881 |
John Wallichs (R) |
Charles Van Wyck (R) |
1882 |
1883 |
James W. Dawes (R) |
Alfred W. Agee (R) |
Edward P. Roggen (R) |
Isaac Powers, Jr. (R) |
Phelps D. Sturdevant (D/Anti-M) |
R Majority in House, D/Anti-Monopoly Majority in Senate[4] |
Charles F. Manderson (R) |
3R |
1884 |
James G. Blaine and John A. Logan (R) N |
1885 |
Hibbard H. Shedd (R) |
William Leese (R) |
H. A. Babcock (R) |
Charles H. Willard (R) |
R Majorities |
1886 |
1887 |
John Milton Thayer (R)[5] |
Gilbert L. Laws (R)[6] |
Algernon Paddock (R) |
2R, 1D |
1888 |
Benjamin Harrison and Levi P. Morton (R) Y |
1889 |
George D. Meiklejohn (R) |
Thomas H. Benton (R) |
John E. Hill (R) |
3R |
1890 |
Benjamin R. Cowdery (R)[7] |
1891 |
Thomas Jefferson Majors (R) |
John Clayton Allen (R) |
George H. Hastings (R) |
P Majorities |
2P, 1D |
1892 |
James E. Boyd (D)[5] |
Benjamin Harrison and Whitelaw Reid (R) N |
1893 |
Lorenzo Crounse (R) |
Eugene Moore (R) |
Joseph S. Bartley (R) |
D/P Majorities[8] |
William V. Allen (P) |
3R, 2P, 1D |
1894 |
1895 |
Silas A. Holcomb (D/P) |
Robert E. Moore (D/P) |
Joel A. Piper (R) |
Arthur S. Churchill (R) |
R Majorities |
John Mellen Thurston (R) |
5R, 1P |
1896 |
William Jennings Bryan and Arthur Sewall (D) N |
1897 |
James E. Harris (D/P) |
William F. Porter (D/P) |
Constantine J. Smyth (D/P) |
John F. Cornell (D/P) |
John B. Meserve (D/P) |
D/P Majorities[9] |
4P, 2R |
1898 |
1899 |
William A. Poynter (D/P) |
Edward A. Gilbert (R) |
R Majorities |
Monroe Hayward (R)[10] |
3P, 2R, 1D |
1900 |
William V. Allen (P)[11] |
William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt (R) Y |
1901 |
Charles H. Dietrich (R)[12] |
Ezra P. Savage (R) |
George W. Marsh (R) |
Frank N. Prout (R) |
Charles Weston (R) |
William Stuefer (R) |
Joseph Millard (R) |
2D, 2P, 2R |
Ezra P. Savage (R)[13] |
vacant |
Charles H. Dietrich (R) |
1902 |
1903 |
John H. Mickey (R) |
Edmund G. McGilton (R) |
Peter Mortensen (R) |
5R, 1D |
1904 |
Theodore Roosevelt and Charles W. Fairbanks (R) Y |
1905 |
A. Galusha (R) |
Norris Brown (R) |
Edward N. Searle, Jr. (R) |
Elmer Burkett (R) |
6R |
1906 |
1907 |
George L. Sheldon (R) |
Melville R. Hopewell (R)[14] |
George C. Junkin (R) |
William T. Thompson (R)[15] |
L. G. Brian (R) |
Norris Brown (R) |
5R, 1D |
1908 |
William Jennings Bryan and John W. Kern (D) N |
1909 |
Ashton C. Shallenberger (D) |
Silas R. Barton (R) |
D Majorities |
3D, 3R |
1910 |
Arthur F. Mullen (D)[7] |
1911 |
Chester H. Aldrich (R) |
Addison Wait (R) |
Grant G. Martin (R) |
Walter A. George (R) |
Gilbert Hitchcock (D) |
1912 |
vacant |
Woodrow Wilson and Thomas R. Marshall (D) Y |
1913 |
John H. Morehead (D) |
Samuel R. McKelvie (R) |
W. B. Howard (R) |
D Majority in House, R Majority in Senate |
George W. Norris (R) |
1914 |
1915 |
James Pearson (D) |
Charles W. Pool (D) |
Willis E. Reed (D) |
William H. Smith (D) |
George E. Hall (D) |
D Majorities |
1916 |
1917 |
Keith Neville (D) |
Edgar Howard (D) |
1918 |
1919 |
Samuel R. McKelvie (R) |
Pelham A. Barrows (R) |
Darius M. Amsberry (R) |
Clarence A. Davis (R) |
George W. Marsh (R) |
Daniel B. Cropsey (R) |
R Majorities |
6R |
1920 |
Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge (R) Y |
1921 |
1922 |
1923 |
Charles W. Bryan (D) |
Fred G. Johnson (R) |
Charles W. Pool (D) |
Ora S. Spillman (R) |
Charles D. Robinson (R) |
Robert B. Howell (R)[16] |
3D, 3R |
1924 |
Calvin Coolidge and Charles G. Dawes (R) Y |
1925 |
Adam McMullen (R) |
George A. Williams (R) |
1926 |
1927 |
Frank Marsh, Sr. (R) |
L. B. Johnson (R) |
W. M. Stebbins (R) |
4D, 2R |
1928 |
Herbert Hoover and Charles Curtis (R) Y |
1929 |
Arthur J. Weaver (R) |
Christian A. Sorensen (R) |
4R, 2D |
1930 |
1931 |
Charles W. Bryan (D) |
Theodore Metcalfe (R) |
George W. Marsh (R) |
Truman W. Bass (R) |
4D, 2R |
1932 |
Franklin D. Roosevelt and John Nance Garner (D) Y |
1933 |
Walter H. Jurgensen (D) |
Harry R. Swanson (D) |
Paul F. Good (D) |
William B. Price (D)[17] |
George E. Hall (D)[18] |
D Majorities |
5D |
William H. Thompson (D)[11] |
1934 |
Richard C. Hunter (D) |
1935 |
Robert Leroy Cochran (D) |
William H. Wright (D) |
Edward R. Burke (D) |
4D, 1R |
Fred C. Ayres (D)[7] |
1936 |
George W. Norris (I)[19] |
H. J. Murray (D)[7] |
1937 |
Richard C. Hunter (D) |
William H. Price (D) |
Walter H. Jensen (D) |
43NP[20] |
1938 |
Nate M. Parsons (D) |
1939 |
William E. Johnson (R) |
Walter R. Johnson (R) |
Ray C. Johnson (R) |
Truman W. Bass (R)[21] |
3R, 2D |
John Havekost (D)[7] |
1940 |
Wendell Willkie and Charles L. McNary (R) N |
1941 |
Dwight Griswold (R) |
Frank Marsh, Sr. (R)[22] |
L. B. Johnson (R) |
Hugh A. Butler (R)[23] |
1942 |
1943 |
Roy W. Johnson (R) |
Carl G. Swanson (R)[24] |
Kenneth S. Wherry (R)[25] |
4R |
1944 |
Thomas E. Dewey and John W. Bricker (R) N |
1945 |
1946 |
Edward Gillette (R)[26] |
1947 |
Val Peterson (R) |
Robert B. Crosby (R) |
1948 |
Thomas E. Dewey and Earl Warren (R) N |
1949 |
Charles J. Warner (R)[27] |
James H. Anderson (R)[28] |
3R, 1D |
1950 |
Clarence S. Beck (R)[26] |
1951 |
James S. Pittenger (R)[7] |
Frank B. Heintze (R) |
4R |
1952 |
Fred A. Seaton (R)[11] |
Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon (R) Y |
Dwight Griswold (R)[29] |
1953 |
Robert B. Crosby (R) |
Frank Marsh (R) |
1954 |
Samuel W. Reynolds (R)[11] |
Eva Bowring (R)[11] |
Roman Hruska (R) |
Hazel Abel (R) |
1955 |
Victor E. Anderson (R) |
Ralph W. Hill (R)[30] |
Carl Curtis (R) |
1956 |
vacant |
1957 |
Dwight W. Burney (R) |
1958 |
Bertha I. Hill (R)[7] |
1959 |
Ralph G. Brooks (D)[31] |
Richard R. Larsen (D) |
2D, 2R |
1960 |
Richard Nixon and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (R) N |
Dwight W. Burney (R)[13] |
1961 |
Frank B. Morrison (D) |
Clarence A. H. Meyer (R) |
Clarence L. E. Swanson (R)[32] |
4R |
1962 |
1963 |
3R |
1964 |
P. Merle Humphries (R)[7] |
Lyndon B. Johnson and Hubert Humphrey (D) Y |
1965 |
Philip C. Sorensen (D) |
Fred Sorensen (D) |
49NP[33] |
2R, 1D |
1966 |
1967 |
Norbert Tiemann (R) |
John E. Everroad (R) |
Wayne R. Swanson (R) |
3R |
1968 |
Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew (R) Y |
1969 |
1970 |
1971 |
J. James Exon (D) |
Frank Marsh (R) |
Allen J. Beermann (R) |
Ray A. C. Johnson (R) |
1972 |
1973 |
1974 |
1975 |
Gerald T. Whelan (D) |
Paul L. Douglas (R)[34] |
Frank Marsh (R)[35] |
1976 |
Gerald Ford and Bob Dole (R) N |
1977 |
Edward Zorinsky (D)[36] |
2R, 1D |
1978 |
1979 |
Charles Thone (R) |
Roland A. Luedtke (R) |
J. James Exon (D) |
1980 |
Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush (R) Y |
1981 |
Kay A. Orr (R)[26] |
3R |
1982 |
1983 |
Bob Kerrey (D) |
Donald F. McGinley (D) |
1984 |
1985 |
Robert M. Spire (R)[26] |
1986 |
1987 |
Kay A. Orr (R) |
William E. Nichol (R) |
Frank Marsh (R) |
David Karnes (R)[37] |
1988 |
George H. W. Bush and Dan Quayle (R) Y |
1989 |
Bob Kerrey (D) |
2R, 1D |
1990 |
1991 |
Ben Nelson (D) |
Maxine Moul (D)[38] |
Don Stenberg (R) |
John Breslow (D) |
Dawn Rockey (D) |
1992 |
George H. W. Bush and Dan Quayle (R) N |
1993 |
Kim M. Robak (D)[26] |
1994 |
1995 |
Scott Moore (R)[39] |
John Breslow (R)[40] |
Dave Heineman (R)[41] |
3R |
1996 |
Bob Dole and Jack Kemp (R) N |
1997 |
Chuck Hagel (R) |
1998 |
1999 |
Mike Johanns (R)[42] |
David I. Maurstad (R)[43] |
Kate Witek (R) |
2000 |
George W. Bush and Dick Cheney (R) Y |
2001 |
John A. Gale (R)[26] |
Ben Nelson (D) |
Dave Heineman (R)[26] |
Lorelee Hunt Byrd (R)[26][44] |
2002 |
2003 |
Jon Bruning (R) |
2004 |
Ron Ross (R)[37] |
2005 |
Dave Heineman (R)[45] |
Rick Sheehy (R)[26][46] |
2006 |
Kate Witek (D)[47] |
2007 |
Mike Foley (R) |
Shane Osborn (R) |
49NP (31R, 15D, 3I) |
2008 |
4 John McCain and Sarah Palin (R) N, 1 Barack Obama and Joe Biden (D) Y[48] |
2009 |
49NP (32R, 17D) |
Mike Johanns (R) |
2010 |
2011 |
Don Stenberg (R) |
49NP (34R, 15D) |
2012 |
Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan (R) N |
2013 |
Lavon Heidemann (R)[7][49] |
49NP (30R, 18D, 1I) |
Deb Fischer (R) |
2014 |
John E. Nelson (R)[11] |
2015 |
Pete Ricketts (R) |
Mike Foley (R) |
Doug Peterson (R) |
Charlie Janssen (R) |
49NP (35R, 13D, 1I) |
Ben Sasse (R) |
2R, 1D |
2016 |
Year |
Governor |
Lieutenant Governor |
Secretary of State |
Attorney General |
Auditor |
Treasurer |
State Legislature |
U.S. Senator (Class I) |
U.S. Senator (Class II) |
U.S. House |
Electoral College votes |
Executive offices |
United States Congress |
Notes
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See also
- ↑ Impeached and removed from office for misappropriation of state funds; the impeachment was expunged six years later.
- ↑ As state secretary of state, acted as governor for unexpired term.
- ↑ Died in office on September 4, 1878.
- ↑ The Coalition elected an Anti-Monopolist as Senate President Pro Tempore. p. 14
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 James E. Boyd won the 1890 election and was sworn in on January 8, 1891. However, due to a question of his U.S. citizenship and eligibility for the office, he did not take office until February 8, 1892.
- ↑ Resigned on November 20, 1889 to take an elected seat in the United States House of Representatives.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 Appointed to fill vacancy.
- ↑ A Republican was elected as Senate President Pro Tempore, but the chamber was organized by the coalition of Democrats and Populists. p. ii, viii-x
- ↑ A Silver Republican was elected as Senate President Pro Tempore, and the Silver Republicans were in coalition with the Democrats and Populists in organizing both chambers. p. vi, viii
- ↑ Died in office on December 5, 1899.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 Appointed to fill vacancy; did not seek election.
- ↑ Resigned on May 1, 1901 to take an elected seat in the United States Senate.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term.
- ↑ Died in office on May 2, 1911.
- ↑ Resigned in 1910 to take office as Solicitor of the United States Treasury.
- ↑ Died in office on March 11, 1933.
- ↑ Died in office on August 19, 1935.
- ↑ Died in office on December 21, 1936.
- ↑ Changed party affiliation from Republican to Independent in 1936.
- ↑ Due to a constitutional amendment passed in 1934, effective with the 1936 election, the Nebraska Legislature became a non-partisan unicameral body with 43 elected members.
- ↑ Died in office on August 21, 1939.
- ↑ Died in office on February 9, 1951.
- ↑ Died in office on July 1, 1954.
- ↑ Resigned on December 31, 1945.
- ↑ Died in office on November 29, 1951.
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 26.4 26.5 26.6 26.7 26.8 Appointed to fill vacancy; subsequently elected.
- ↑ Died in office on September 24, 1955.
- ↑ Resigned in 1950.
- ↑ Died in office on April 12, 1954.
- ↑ Died in office on July 13, 1958.
- ↑ Died in office on September 9, 1960.
- ↑ Died in office on April 5, 1964.
- ↑ Due to the mandate of "one man, one vote" in Baker v. Carr and Reynolds v. Sims in redistricting, the Legislature expanded to 49 members.
- ↑ Resigned on December 26, 1984.
- ↑ Resigned in June 1981.
- ↑ Died in office on March 6, 1987.
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 Appointed to fill vacancy; lost election to a full term.
- ↑ Resigned on October 4, 1993 to take office as director of the Nebraska Department of Economic Development.
- ↑ Resigned on December 15, 2000 to take a position with Union Pacific Railroad.
- ↑ Changed party affiliation from Democratic to Republican in November 1994 after winning reelection as a Democrat.
- ↑ Resigned on October 1, 2001 to take office as Lieutenant Governor.
- ↑ Resigned on January 20, 2005 to take office as United States Secretary of Agriculture.
- ↑ Resigned on October 1, 2001 to take office as director of Federal Emergency Management Agency Region VIII.
- ↑ Resigned on January 6, 2004.
- ↑ As lieutenant governor, acted as governor for unexpired term and was later elected in his own right.
- ↑ Resigned on February 2, 2013.
- ↑ Changed party affiliation from Republican to Democratic in August 2006.
- ↑ McCain and Palin received state's two at-large votes and one vote each in the First and Third Congressional Districts while Obama and Biden received one vote in the Second District.
- ↑ Resigned on September 9, 2014.