Ballot access ★Although the Libertarian Party had ballot access in all fifty United States plus D.C., Browne's name only appeared on the ballot in forty-nine United States plus D.C. The
Libertarian Party of Arizona opted to place
L. Neil Smith on the ballot in Browne's place. When adding Smith's 5,775 Arizona votes to Browne's 384,431 votes nationwide, that brings the total presidential votes cast for the Libertarian Party in 2000 to 390,206.
Florida recount Votomatic voting machine used in the November 7, 2000 U.S. Presidential Election, on display at the
Florida Historic Capitol Museum,
Tallahassee, Florida On election night, it was unclear who had won, with
Florida's
electoral votes still undecided. The returns showed that Bush won Florida by such a close margin that state law required a
recount. A month-long series of legal battles led to the highly controversial 5–4
U.S. Supreme Court decision
Bush v. Gore, which ended the recount with Bush winning Florida by 537 votes, a margin of 0.009%. The Florida recount and subsequent litigation resulted in major post-election controversy, with some analysis suggesting that limited county-based recounts would have confirmed a Bush victory whereas a statewide recount would have given the state to Gore. With the exceptions of
Florida and Gore's home state of
Tennessee, Bush carried the Southern states by comfortable margins, including
Clinton's home state of
Arkansas, and also won
Ohio,
Indiana, most of the rural
Midwestern farming states, most of the Rocky Mountain states, and
Alaska. Gore balanced Bush by sweeping the
Northeastern United States (with the exception of
New Hampshire, which Bush won narrowly), the Pacific Coast states,
Hawaii,
New Mexico, and most of the
Upper Midwest. This was the only presidential election since 1988 where the Republican candidate carried any of the six New England states. As the night wore on, the returns in a handful of small-to-medium-sized states, including
Hawaii,
Iowa,
Oregon and New Mexico (Gore by 355 votes) were extremely close, but the election came down to Florida. As the final national results were tallied the following morning, Bush had clearly won 246 electoral votes and Gore 249, with 270 needed to win. Two smaller states—Wisconsin (11 electoral votes) and Oregon (7)—were still too close to call, but Florida's 25 electoral votes would be decisive regardless of their results. The election's outcome was not known for more than a month after voting ended because of the time required to count and recount Florida's ballots. Between 7:50 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. EST on November 7, just before the polls closed in the largely Republican Florida panhandle, which is in the Central time zone, all major television news networks (
CNN,
NBC,
FOX,
CBS, and
ABC) declared that Gore had won Florida. They based this prediction substantially on
exit polls. But in the vote, Bush began to take a wide lead early in Florida, and by 10 p.m. EST, the networks had retracted their predictions and placed Florida back in the "undecided" column. At approximately 2:30 a.m. on November 8, with 85% of the vote counted in Florida and Bush leading Gore by more than 100,000 votes, the networks declared that Bush had carried Florida and therefore been elected president. But most of the remaining votes to be counted in Florida were in three heavily Democratic counties—
Broward,
Miami-Dade, and
Palm Beach—and as their votes were reported Gore began to gain on Bush. By 4:30 a.m., after all votes were counted, Gore had narrowed Bush's margin to under 2,000 votes, and the networks retracted their declarations that Bush had won Florida and the presidency. Gore, who had privately conceded the election to Bush, withdrew his
concession. The final result in Florida was slim enough to require a mandatory recount (by machine) under state law; Bush's lead dwindled to just over 300 votes when it was completed the day after the election. On November 8, Florida Division of Elections staff prepared a press release for
Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris that said overseas ballots must be "postmarked or signed and dated" by Election Day. It was never released.) Most of the post-electoral controversy revolved around Gore's request for hand recounts in four counties (Broward, Miami-Dade, Palm Beach, and
Volusia), as provided under Florida state law. Harris, who also co-chaired Bush's Florida campaign, announced she would reject any revised totals from those counties if they were not turned in by 5 p.m. on November 14, the statutory deadline for amended returns. The
Florida Supreme Court extended the deadline to November 26, a decision later
vacated by the
U.S. Supreme Court. Miami-Dade eventually halted its recount and resubmitted its original total to the state canvassing board, while Palm Beach County failed to meet the extended deadline, turning in its completed recount results at 7 p.m., which Harris rejected. On November 26, the state canvassing board certified Bush as the winner of Florida's electors by 537 votes. Gore formally contested the certified results. A state court decision overruling Gore was reversed by the Florida Supreme Court, which ordered a recount of over 70,000 ballots previously rejected as undervotes by machine counters. The U.S. Supreme Court halted that order the next day, with
Justice Scalia issuing a concurring opinion that "the counting of votes that are of questionable legality does in my view threaten irreparable harm to petitioner" (Bush). On December 12, the Supreme Court in
Bush v. Gore issued a 5–4
per curiam decision that the Florida Supreme Court's ruling requiring a statewide recount of ballots was unconstitutional on equal protection grounds, and in a 5–4 vote reversed and remanded the case to the Florida Supreme Court for modification before the optional "safe harbor" deadline, which the Supreme Court decided the Florida court had said the state intended to meet. With only two hours remaining until the December 12 deadline, the Supreme Court's order effectively ended the recount, and the previously certified total held.
Legislative action Even if the Supreme Court had decided differently in
Bush v. Gore, the Florida Legislature had been meeting in Special Session since December 8 with the purpose of selecting of a slate of electors on December 12 should the dispute still be ongoing. Had the recount gone forward, it would have awarded those electors to Bush, based on the state-certified vote, and Gore's likely last recourse would have been to contest the electors in the United States Congress. The electors would then have been rejected only if both houses agreed to do so.
Media recounts From the beginning of the controversy, politicians, litigants, and the press focused exclusively on undervotes, in particular incompletely punched
hanging chads. Undervotes were the subject of much media coverage, most of the lawsuits, and the Florida Supreme Court ruling. Later, a larger consortium of news organizations, including
USA Today,
The Miami Herald, Knight Ridder,
The Tampa Tribune, and five other newspapers conducted a full recount of all machine-rejected ballots, including both undervotes and overvotes. It found that Bush won under stricter standards and Gore won under looser standards. Finally, the
National Opinion Research Center at the
University of Chicago, sponsored by a consortium of major U.S. news organizations, conducted the
Florida Ballot Project, a comprehensive review of ballots collected from the entire state, not just the disputed counties that were recounted. Based on the NORC review, the media group concluded that if the disputes over the validity of all the ballots in question had been consistently resolved and any uniform standard applied, Gore would have won Florida by 60 to 171 votes. The standards chosen for the NORC study ranged from a "most restrictive" standard to a "most inclusive" standard. According to factcheck.org, "Nobody can say for sure who might have won. A full, official recount of all votes statewide could have gone either way, but one was never conducted." CNN and PBS reported that, had the recount continued with its existing standards, Bush would likely have still tallied more votes, but variations of those standards (or of which precincts were recounted) could have swung the election either way. They also concluded that had a full recount of all undervotes and overvotes taken place, Gore would have won, though his legal team never pursued such an option. The post-controversy recounts revealed that "if a manual recount had been limited to undervotes, it would have produced an inaccurate picture of the electorate's position." Gore failed to win the popular vote in his home state,
Tennessee, which both he and his father had represented in the Senate, making him the first major-party presidential candidate to have lost his home state since
George McGovern lost
South Dakota in
1972. Furthermore, Gore lost
West Virginia, a state that had voted Republican only once in the previous six presidential elections. This was the first time since 1948 that Democrats won the popular vote in three consecutive elections. This is one of only four U.S. presidential elections in which the winner did not carry any of the three Rust Belt states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin; the others were
2004,
1916 and
1884. The 2000 election was also a rare instance in which the party controlling the White House lost a presidential election when the U.S. economy was not in a recession, the
1968 election being the most recent one. It is also the only election since 1968 where the popular vote was decided by under 1%. Before the election, the possibility that different candidates would win the popular vote and the Electoral College had been noted, but usually with the expectation of Gore winning the Electoral College and Bush the popular vote. The idea that Bush could win the Electoral College and Gore the popular vote was not considered likely. This was the first time since 1928 when a non-incumbent Republican candidate won West Virginia. The
Electoral College results were the closest since
1876, making this election the second-closest Electoral College result in history and the third-closest popular vote victory. Gore's 266 electoral votes are the highest for a losing nominee. The 537-vote margin in Florida is the closest for a tipping point state in history. Bush was the first winning Republican since
William McKinley to win with under 300 electoral votes. He was also the first son of a former president to be elected president himself since
John Quincy Adams in 1824. Bush was the first Republican in American history to win the presidency without carrying Vermont, Illinois, or New Mexico, as well as the second Republican to win the presidency without carrying California after
James A. Garfield in
1880, and Pennsylvania, Maine, Michigan, and Connecticut after
Richard Nixon in
1968, as well as the first winning Republican not to receive any electoral votes from California as Garfield received one electoral vote in 1880. Bush was the first Republican to win without New Jersey or Delaware since 1888. As of 2024, Bush is the last Republican nominee to win New Hampshire. This marked the first time since Iowa entered the union in 1846 in which the state voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in four elections in a row and the last time until 2020 that Iowa did not vote for the overall winner. Bush is the second Republican to win the presidency without Iowa (his father was the first, in
1988). This election was the first time since 1976 that New Jersey, Connecticut, Vermont, Maine, Illinois, New Mexico, Michigan, and California voted for the losing candidate, as well as the first since 1980 that Maryland did so, the first since 1948 that Delaware did so, and the first since 1968 that Pennsylvania did so. There were only two counties in the nation that had voted Republican in
1996 and flipped to the Democratic column in 2000:
Charles County, Maryland, and
Orange County, Florida, both rapidly diversifying counties, neither of which has voted Republican since. This was the last time until
2024 in which an incumbent vice president ran for
president. This was also the last time a Republican received any electoral votes from the Northeast until
2016. This and the
following election were the only ones since
1980 in which the winner received fewer than 300 electoral votes (less than 55% of the total). Bush is the most recent candidate with gubernatorial experience to win the presidency. This is the most recent election in which both major-party nominees were under age 60. : Source: File:ElectoralCollege2000-Large.png|Results by state with
pie charts for the electoral college and popular vote. File:2000 United States presidential election results map by county.svg|Results by county, shaded according to winning candidate's percentage of the vote File:2000 United States presidential election by congressional district.svg|Results by congressional district, shaded according to winning candidate's percentage of the vote File:Nader2000percentagebycounty.svg|Vote share by county for Green Party candidate Ralph Nader. Darker shades indicate a stronger Green performance. File:2000prescountymap2.PNG|Election results by county File:2000 Presidential Election, Results by Congressional District.png|Election results by congressional district Image:1996-2000 United States Presidential swing by county margin.svg|Change in vote margins at the county level from the 1996 election to the 2000 election
Results by state †Maine and Nebraska each allow for their electoral votes to be split between candidates. In both states, two electoral votes are awarded to the winner of the statewide race and one electoral vote is awarded to the winner of each congressional district. The votes for each candidate are only singly counted in the column totals. • The
Libertarian Party of Arizona had ballot access but opted to supplant Browne with
L. Neil Smith. In Arizona, Smith received 5,775 votes, or 0.38% of the Arizona vote. Adding Smith's 5,775 votes to Browne's 384,431 votes nationwide, the total votes cast for president for the Libertarian Party in 2000 was 390,206, or 0.37% of the national vote.
States that flipped from Democratic to Republican •
Arizona •
Arkansas •
Florida •
Kentucky •
Louisiana •
Missouri •
Nevada •
New Hampshire •
Ohio •
Tennessee •
West Virginia Close states States where the margin of victory was less than 1% (55 electoral votes): •
Florida, 0.009% (537 votes) (tipping point state) •
New Mexico, 0.061% (366 votes) •
Wisconsin, 0.22% (5,708 votes) •
Iowa, 0.31% (4,144 votes) •
Oregon, 0.44% (6,765 votes) States where the margin of victory was more than 1% but less than 5% (85 electoral votes): •
New Hampshire, 1.27% (7,211 votes) • '''Maine's 2nd Congressional District, 1.87% (5,660 votes)''' •
Minnesota, 2.41% (58,607 votes) •
Missouri, 3.34% (78,786 votes) •
Ohio, 3.51% (165,019 votes) •
Nevada, 3.54% (21,597 votes) •
Tennessee, 3.87% (80,229 votes) •
Pennsylvania, 4.17% (204,840 votes) States where the margin of victory was more than 5% but less than 10% (84 electoral votes): •
Maine, 5.12% (33,335 votes) •
Michigan, 5.14% (217,279 votes) •
Arkansas, 5.45% (50,172 votes) •
Washington, 5.57% (138,788 votes) •
Arizona, 6.28% (96,311 votes) •
West Virginia, 6.33% (40,978 votes) •
Louisiana, 7.67% (135,527 votes) • '''Maine's 1st Congressional District, 7.93% (27,675 votes)''' •
Virginia, 8.03% (220,200 votes) •
Colorado, 8.36% (145,518 votes) •
Vermont, 9.93% (29,247 votes) Statistics Counties with highest percent of vote (Republican) •
Glasscock County, Texas 92.47% •
Ochiltree County, Texas 90.72% •
Hansford County, Texas 89.75% •
Harding County, South Dakota 88.92% •
Carter County, Montana 88.84% Counties with highest percent of vote (Democratic) •
Macon County, Alabama 86.80% •
Bronx County, New York 86.28% •
Shannon County, South Dakota 85.36% •
Washington, D.C. 85.16% •
City of Baltimore, Maryland 82.52% Counties with highest percent of vote (other) •
San Miguel County, Colorado 17.20% •
Missoula County, Montana 15.03% •
Grand County, Utah 14.94% •
Mendocino County, California 14.68% •
Hampshire County, Massachusetts 14.59% ==Voter demographics==