Changes

United States presidential election, 1992

7 bytes removed, 22:57, May 3, 2015
/* Results */ remove spaces in numbers
| Bill Clinton
| Democratic
| 44, 909, 806
| 43.0%
| 370
| George H.W. Bush
| Republican
| 39, 104, 550
| 37.4%
| 168
| H. Ross Perot
| Independent
| 19, 743, 821
| 18.9%
| 0
| Andre Marrou
| Libertarian
| 290, 087
| .28%
| 0
| Other
| Other
| 375, 659
| .36%
| 0
|}
<ref> http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,260688,00.html </ref>
 
==Analysis==
The 1992 election was unique for a number of reasons: a perception that economic conditions were worse than they actually were, which harmed incumbent President Bush; a strong third-party candidate in Perot who won over alienated conservatives by arguing 12 years of Republican rule had only raised the deficit; and, perhaps most importantly, Bill Clinton's ability to unite not only the Democratic Party, but a number of heterogeneous coalitions, much as Franklin Roosevelt, also a consummate politician, did in the [[New Deal Coalition]] after 1932.<ref> Seymour Martin Lipset, "The Significance of the 1992 Election." ''PS: Political Science & Politics'' 1993 26(1): 7-16. 1049-0965 </ref>
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