Candidates • Matthew R. Abel (Green) •
Spencer Abraham, incumbent U.S. Senator (Republican) • Michael Corliss (Libertarian) • Mark Forton (Reform) • John Mangopoulos (Constitution) • William Quarton (Natural Law) •
Debbie Stabenow, U.S. Representative from
East Lansing (Democratic)
Campaign Abraham, who was first elected in the 1994
Republican Revolution despite never running for public office before, was considered vulnerable by the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Major issues in the campaign included prescription drugs for the elderly. By September 4, Abraham still had failed to reach 50% in polls despite having spent over $6 million on television ads. In mid-October, he came back and reached 50% and 49% in two polls respectively. Abraham's campaign established a negative web site with the URL LiberalDebbie.com which parodied the logo for
Little Debbie snack cakes.
McKee Foods, the maker of Little Debbie cakes objected to the trademark infringement and the Abraham campaign included a disclaimer stating that McKee Foods does not endorse Abraham.
Debates • Complete video of debate, October 22, 2000
Results The election was very close with Stabenow prevailing by just over 67,000 votes. Stabenow was also likely helped by the fact that
Vice President Al Gore won Michigan in the
concurrent presidential election. Ultimately, Stabenow pulled out huge numbers out of the
Democratic stronghold of
Wayne County, which covers the
Detroit Metropolitan Area. Stabenow also performed well in other heavily populated areas such as
Ingham County, home to the state's capital of
Lansing, and the college town of
Ann Arbor. Abraham did not concede right after major news networks declared Stabenow the winner; he held out hope that the few outstanding precincts could push him over the edge. At 4:00 AM, Abraham conceded defeat. Senator Abraham called Stabenow and congratulated her on her victory. As a result of the historic election, Stabenow became the first woman to represent
Michigan in the
United States Senate.
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican •
Delta (largest city:
Escanaba)
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic •
Lake (largest village:
Baldwin) •
Monroe (largest city:
Monroe) •
Macomb (largest city:
Warren) •
Muskegon (largest city:
Muskegon) == See also ==