1976 United States presidential election in Colorado
1976 United States presidential election in Colorado
County Results
Ford
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
Carter
40–50%
50–60%
60–70%
70–80%
The 1976 United States presidential election in Colorado took place on November 2, 1976, as part of the 1976 United States presidential election . Voters chose seven representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College , who voted for president and vice president .
Colorado was won by incumbent President Gerald Ford (R –Michigan ) with 54.05% of the popular vote, against Jimmy Carter (D –Georgia ), with 42.58% of the popular vote. Like most of the Mountain West , Colorado was comfortably in Ford's column; Colorado was Ford's ninth-best state overall (and one of only nine which he won by double digits). Ford held Carter's margin in the city of Denver to 2.8%, and rolled up large margins in the reliably Republican suburban Denver-area counties of Jefferson and Arapahoe . He also ran well in Boulder County , at the time a traditionally Republican county; he would be the last Republican apart from Reagan in his 1984 landslide to win a majority in the county. Despite the large national swing in favor of the Democrats, Ford even took back Pitkin County , which had supported McGovern in 1972 .
Nevertheless, Carter showed some strength in some rural parts of Colorado that later Democrats would fail to replicate. As of the 2020 presidential election , this was the last occasion on which Dolores County , Prowers County , Phillips County , and Cheyenne County voted for a Democratic presidential candidate.[ 1] [ 2]
None of the third-party candidates amounted to a significant portion of the vote, but Eugene McCarthy (I –Minnesota ) won 2.41% of the popular vote, proportionally significantly ahead of his national 0.91%. This was the first presidential election in which Colorado recorded one million votes.
Despite losing in Colorado, Carter went on to win the national election and became the 39th president of the United States . Colorado had previously voted Republican fifteen times, Democratic nine times, and Populist once (for James B. Weaver in 1892 ).[ 3]
Lucretia Potts, Jeanne Meyer, Kay Johnson, Sheldon Sheperd, Fern Wolaver, Martyn Butler, and Clyde Kissinger served as Republican presidential electors.[ 4]
Results
Results by county
County[ 5]
Gerald Ford Republican
Jimmy Carter Democratic
Eugene McCarthy Independent
Roger MacBride Libertarian
Various candidates Other parties
Margin
Total votes cast
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
Adams
35,392
45.30%
40,551
51.90%
1,618
2.07%
416
0.53%
150
0.19%
-5,159
-6.60%
78,127
Alamosa
2,599
53.51%
2,052
42.25%
179
3.69%
15
0.31%
12
0.25%
547
11.26%
4,857
Arapahoe
63,154
63.45%
33,685
33.85%
1,748
1.76%
449
0.45%
490
0.49%
29,469
29.60%
99,526
Archuleta
768
53.63%
632
44.13%
29
2.03%
1
0.07%
2
0.14%
136
9.50%
1,432
Baca
1,303
51.97%
1,164
46.43%
28
1.12%
10
0.40%
2
0.08%
139
5.54%
2,507
Bent
1,156
46.61%
1,268
51.13%
39
1.57%
4
0.16%
13
0.52%
-112
-4.52%
2,480
Boulder
42,830
52.71%
33,284
40.96%
4,252
5.23%
558
0.69%
329
0.40%
9,546
11.75%
81,253
Chaffee
2,925
56.66%
2,064
39.98%
118
2.29%
18
0.35%
37
0.72%
861
16.68%
5,162
Cheyenne
610
48.15%
625
49.33%
22
1.74%
8
0.63%
2
0.16%
-15
-1.18%
1,267
Clear Creek
1,477
55.36%
1,069
40.07%
80
3.00%
9
0.34%
33
1.24%
408
15.29%
2,668
Conejos
1,426
44.65%
1,698
53.16%
45
1.41%
7
0.22%
18
0.56%
-272
-8.51%
3,194
Costilla
392
26.96%
1,033
71.05%
16
1.10%
2
0.14%
11
0.76%
-641
-44.09%
1,454
Crowley
834
54.90%
667
43.91%
14
0.92%
2
0.13%
2
0.13%
167
10.99%
1,519
Custer
491
62.39%
259
32.91%
27
3.43%
7
0.89%
3
0.38%
232
29.48%
787
Delta
4,980
58.82%
3,232
38.17%
194
2.29%
35
0.41%
26
0.31%
1,748
20.65%
8,467
Denver
105,960
46.73%
112,229
49.50%
5,386
2.38%
1,105
0.49%
2,058
0.91%
-6,269
-2.77%
226,738
Dolores
343
45.61%
374
49.73%
26
3.46%
6
0.80%
3
0.40%
-31
-4.12%
752
Douglas
5,078
65.54%
2,459
31.74%
162
2.09%
38
0.49%
11
0.14%
2,619
33.80%
7,748
Eagle
2,963
64.18%
1,502
32.53%
111
2.40%
34
0.74%
7
0.15%
1,461
31.65%
4,617
El Paso
50,929
59.13%
32,911
38.21%
1,574
1.83%
530
0.62%
186
0.22%
18,018
20.92%
86,130
Elbert
1,279
52.72%
1,068
44.02%
64
2.64%
13
0.54%
2
0.08%
211
8.70%
2,426
Fremont
5,647
52.44%
4,886
45.38%
174
1.62%
29
0.27%
32
0.30%
761
7.06%
10,768
Garfield
4,699
59.74%
2,852
36.26%
223
2.83%
41
0.52%
51
0.65%
1,847
23.48%
7,866
Gilpin
451
41.19%
563
51.42%
59
5.39%
14
1.28%
8
0.73%
-112
-10.23%
1,095
Grand
1,703
61.77%
910
33.01%
113
4.10%
22
0.80%
9
0.33%
793
28.76%
2,757
Gunnison
2,568
61.88%
1,250
30.12%
260
6.27%
30
0.72%
42
1.01%
1,318
31.76%
4,150
Hinsdale
189
66.55%
83
29.23%
11
3.87%
1
0.35%
0
0.00%
106
37.32%
284
Huerfano
1,182
37.35%
1,932
61.04%
38
1.20%
7
0.22%
6
0.19%
-750
-23.69%
3,165
Jackson
455
60.83%
279
37.30%
14
1.87%
0
0.00%
0
0.00%
176
23.53%
748
Jefferson
87,080
60.44%
52,782
36.64%
3,141
2.18%
770
0.53%
300
0.21%
34,298
23.80%
144,073
Kiowa
598
52.59%
529
46.53%
8
0.70%
1
0.09%
1
0.09%
69
6.06%
1,137
Kit Carson
1,888
52.28%
1,647
45.61%
59
1.63%
10
0.28%
7
0.19%
241
6.67%
3,611
La Plata
6,228
59.05%
3,843
36.44%
312
2.96%
65
0.62%
99
0.94%
2,385
22.61%
10,547
Lake
1,575
48.03%
1,549
47.24%
89
2.71%
26
0.79%
40
1.22%
26
0.79%
3,279
Larimer
32,169
60.72%
19,005
35.87%
1,356
2.56%
297
0.56%
156
0.29%
13,164
24.85%
52,983
Las Animas
2,615
36.45%
4,459
62.15%
82
1.14%
8
0.11%
11
0.15%
-1,844
-25.70%
7,175
Lincoln
1,276
53.46%
1,059
44.37%
47
1.97%
4
0.17%
1
0.04%
217
9.09%
2,387
Logan
4,256
53.32%
3,543
44.39%
140
1.75%
22
0.28%
21
0.26%
713
8.93%
7,982
Mesa
17,924
65.44%
8,807
32.15%
541
1.98%
74
0.27%
44
0.16%
9,117
33.29%
27,390
Mineral
235
55.56%
167
39.48%
20
4.73%
1
0.24%
0
0.00%
68
16.08%
423
Moffat
2,099
55.68%
1,451
38.49%
120
3.18%
30
0.80%
70
1.86%
648
17.19%
3,770
Montezuma
3,002
57.99%
1,993
38.50%
152
2.94%
20
0.39%
10
0.19%
1,009
19.49%
5,177
Montrose
4,838
58.42%
3,164
38.20%
220
2.66%
19
0.23%
41
0.50%
1,674
20.22%
8,282
Morgan
4,603
53.34%
3,798
44.01%
136
1.58%
20
0.23%
72
0.83%
805
9.33%
8,629
Otero
4,597
51.54%
4,118
46.17%
72
0.81%
19
0.21%
114
1.28%
479
5.37%
8,920
Ouray
645
62.50%
333
32.27%
49
4.75%
4
0.39%
1
0.10%
312
30.23%
1,032
Park
1,034
55.24%
741
39.58%
67
3.58%
13
0.69%
17
0.91%
293
15.66%
1,872
Phillips
1,142
48.12%
1,173
49.43%
48
2.02%
7
0.29%
3
0.13%
-31
-1.31%
2,373
Pitkin
2,955
53.61%
2,194
39.80%
304
5.52%
46
0.83%
13
0.24%
761
13.81%
5,512
Prowers
2,578
46.13%
2,861
51.20%
57
1.02%
9
0.16%
83
1.49%
-283
-5.07%
5,588
Pueblo
18,518
41.06%
25,841
57.29%
568
1.26%
120
0.27%
56
0.12%
-7,323
-16.23%
45,103
Rio Blanco
1,439
67.24%
627
29.30%
57
2.66%
13
0.61%
4
0.19%
812
37.94%
2,140
Rio Grande
2,627
62.37%
1,475
35.02%
88
2.09%
14
0.33%
8
0.19%
1,152
27.35%
4,212
Routt
2,822
54.13%
2,130
40.86%
213
4.09%
39
0.75%
9
0.17%
692
13.27%
5,213
Saguache
1,094
49.50%
1,059
47.92%
51
2.31%
1
0.05%
5
0.23%
35
1.58%
2,210
San Juan
221
53.77%
167
40.63%
21
5.11%
1
0.24%
1
0.24%
54
13.14%
411
San Miguel
622
43.83%
674
47.50%
106
7.47%
14
0.99%
3
0.21%
-52
-3.67%
1,419
Sedgwick
902
53.06%
773
45.47%
21
1.24%
3
0.18%
1
0.06%
129
7.59%
1,700
Summit
1,826
58.15%
1,087
34.62%
166
5.29%
36
1.15%
25
0.80%
739
23.53%
3,140
Teller
1,410
55.93%
986
39.11%
94
3.73%
24
0.95%
7
0.28%
424
16.82%
2,521
Washington
1,440
52.63%
1,211
44.26%
61
2.23%
16
0.58%
8
0.29%
229
8.37%
2,736
Weld
21,976
55.35%
16,501
41.56%
922
2.32%
153
0.39%
150
0.38%
5,475
13.79%
39,702
Yuma
2,350
52.20%
2,025
44.98%
95
2.11%
23
0.51%
9
0.20%
325
7.22%
4,502
Total
584,367
54.05%
460,353
42.58%
26,107
2.41%
5,330
0.49%
4,978
0.46%
124,014
11.47%
1,081,135
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
References
^ Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004 , pp. 159-161 ISBN 0786422173
^ Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’ ; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review ; June 29, 2016
^ Leip, David. "1976 Presidential General Election Results – Colorado" . Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas .
^ "Springs Woman Voting For Defeated President" . The Gazette . December 13, 1976. p. 1A. Archived from the original on February 6, 2024 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Our Campaigns; CO US President, November 02, 1976