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North Dakota Auditor election, 2016

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North Dakota State Auditor Election

Primary Date:
June 14, 2016
General Election Date:
November 8, 2016

November Election Winner:
Josh Gallion (R)
Incumbent Prior to Election:
Robert Peterson (R)

State Executive Elections
Top Ballot
Governor and Lt. GovernorTreasurer
Down Ballot
AuditorInsurance Commissioner
Public Service Commission
Superintendent of Schools
Key election dates

Filing deadline (major parties):
April 11, 2016
Party conventions:
March 31-April 2, 2016Democratic Party
April 1-3, 2016Republican Party
Primary date:
June 14, 2016
Filing deadline (independents):
September 6, 2016
Filing deadline (write-ins):
October 18, 2016
General election date:
November 8, 2016
Recount request deadline:
TBD
Inauguration:
December 15, 2016

North Dakota held an election for state auditor on November 8, 2016. Longtime incumbent Robert Peterson (R) did not run for re-election. Josh Gallion (R) won the election, keeping the seat under Republican control.

HIGHLIGHTS
  • No Democrat has held the office of auditor since 1894.
  • No Democrats filed to run in this race.
  • Republican Josh Gallion, accounting manager for the North Dakota Public Service Commission, and Libertarian businessman Roland Riemers were both unopposed in their parties' primaries and competed in the November 8 general election.
  • Gallion won the general election on November 8, 2016.
  • Overview

    The North Dakota state auditor provides citizens, legislators, and government officials with professional and independent evaluations of North Dakota's financial records and performance reports. Longtime incumbent Robert Peterson (R) did not run for re-election, leaving the 2016 election an open race.

    North Dakota has been under Republican trifecta control since 1995. A Democrat has not held the position of state auditor in North Dakota since Arthur W. Porter in 1894; he served one two-year term before losing his re-election bid.

    Accounting manager for the North Dakota Public Service Commission Josh Gallion (R) was the sole major party candidate to file for the seat. He competed in the November 8 general election with independent property manager Roland Riemers (Lib.). Republicans were expected to retain control of the seat in 2016. Gallion won the general election on November 8, 2016.

    Candidates

    Josh Gallion.jpeg

    Josh Gallion (R)
    Accounting manager for the Public Service Commission


    Roland Riemers square.jpeg

    Roland Riemers (Lib.)
    Independent property manager, investor



    Results

    General election

    Josh Gallion defeated Roland Riemers in the North Dakota auditor election.

    North Dakota Auditor, 2016
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Republican Green check mark transparent.png Josh Gallion 76.62% 236,751
         Libertarian Roland Riemers 22.92% 70,818
    Write-in votes 0.46% 1,423
    Total Votes 308,992
    Source: North Dakota Secretary of State

    Primary elections

    Josh Gallion ran unopposed in the Republican primary for auditor.

    Republican primary for auditor, 2016
    Candidate Vote % Votes
    Green check mark transparent.png Josh Gallion  (unopposed) 99.73% 91,531
    Write-in votes 0.27% 249
    Total Votes (432 of 432 precincts reporting) 91,780
    Source: North Dakota Secretary of State


    Roland Riemers ran unopposed in the Libertarian primary for auditor.

    Libertarian primary for auditor, 2016
    Candidate Vote % Votes
    Green check mark transparent.png Roland Riemers  (unopposed) 99.81% 1,059
    Write-in votes 0.19% 2
    Total Votes (432 of 432 precincts reporting) 1,061
    Source: North Dakota Secretary of State

    Context of the 2016 election

    Primary elections

    A primary election is an election in which voters select the candidate they believe should represent a political party in a general election. Primaries usually take place several months before a general election. North Dakota utilizes an open primary system, in which voters do not have to be members of a party to vote in that party's primary.[1][2][3] In North Dakota, major party candidates are usually nominated or endorsed by the party at the state conventions, which take place prior to the primary elections. Often, candidates who do not receive the endorsements do not file to run in the primary, however that is not mandatory and major party candidates can and do run in the primary regardless of receiving the official party nod.

    Primary contests for nonpartisan elections take the form of a top-two primary, with the top-two vote getters advancing to the general election.

    North Dakota's primary elections took place on June 14, 2016.

    Incumbent Robert Peterson (R)

    Peterson was first elected auditor in 1996 and easily won re-election by margins of greater than 20 percent every four years since. He assumed office in January 1997, replacing his father, Robert W. Peterson (R), who had served as auditor since 1973. The two controlled the office for a cumulative 34 years. Prior to his tenure as auditor, he worked as an accounting and budget specialist in the North Dakota State Land Department.

    Party control in North Dakota

    North Dakota has been under Republican trifecta control since 1995, and Republicans have seen comfortable margins of victory in recent statewide elections. The 2012 Republican Dalrymple/Wrigley ticket for governor won by a nearly 30-point margin.[4] In 2014, Attorney General Stenehjem won a fifth term in office with over 74 percent of the vote.[5]

    However, recent elections have also shown that popular Democrats can and do win statewide elections in North Dakota. Most recently, Heidi Heitkamp (D) narrowly defeated her Republican opponent in the United States Senate race in 2012, even as Mitt Romney carried the state by a nearly 20-point margin and Dalrymple was elected governor by an even larger margin.[6] Before Heitkamp, North Dakotans were represented in the United States Senate by Democrat Kent Conrad, who won election five times. During his 1992 re-election bid, he defeated Jack Dalrymple by a 30-point margin.[7][8]

    A Democrat has not held the position of state auditor in North Dakota since Arthur W. Porter in 1894; he served one two-year term before losing his re-election bid.[9] Republicans were expected to retain control of the seat in 2016.

    North Dakota Party Control: 1992-2024
    No Democratic trifectas  •  Thirty-one years of Republican trifectas
    Scroll left and right on the table below to view more years.

    Year 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
    Governor D R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
    Senate D D D R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
    House R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R

    Campaigns

    Campaign finance

    Campaign media

    Note: If a candidate is not listed below, Ballotpedia staff were unable to locate any campaign media for that candidate. Do you know of any? Tell us!

    Democrats
    Josh Gallion (D) Campaign website Facebook 

    About the office

    See also: North Dakota State Auditor

    The North Dakota state auditor provides citizens, legislators, and government officials with professional and independent evaluations of North Dakota's financial records and performance reports.[10]

    Incumbent

    The incumbent was Robert Peterson (R). He was first elected in 1996, succeeding his father in the office. His term expired in 2016.[11]

    Qualifications Article V, Section 4 of the North Dakota Constitution establishes the qualifications to hold the office of auditor:

    To be eligible to hold an elective office established by this article, a person must be a qualified elector of this state, must be at least twenty-five years of age on the day of the election, and must have been a resident of this state for the five years preceding election to office. To be eligible to hold the office of governor or lieutenant governor, a person must be at least thirty years old on the day of the election. The attorney general must be licensed to practice law in this state.[12]
    • qualified North Dakota voter
    • at least 25 years old
    • a resident of North Dakota for at least the five preceding years

    Authority

    The state Constitution establishes the office of auditor in Article V, Section 2:

    The qualified electors of the state at the times and places of choosing members of the legislative assembly shall choose a governor, lieutenant governor, agriculture commissioner, attorney general, auditor, insurance commissioner, three public service commissioners, secretary of state, superintendent of public instruction, tax commissioner, and treasurer. ...[12]

    Term Length

    See also: North Dakota State and County Official Term Lengths, Initiative 5 (1964)

    The four-year term length was established after an initiated constitutional amendment on the 1964 ballot was approved. Prior to this, the term length was two years.[13]

    Vacancies

    Article V, Section 8 addresses vacancies in state executive offices. In the event of a vacancy, the governor nominates a successor who must be confirmed by the state senate. Once confirmed, the individual serves the remainder of the unexpired term.[12]

    Elections

    North Dakota state government organizational chart

    The auditor in North Dakota is popularly elected every four years, in presidential election years. For North Dakota, 2016 and 2020 are auditor election years. The term of office is four years.[12]

    Full history


    Recent news

    The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms North Dakota. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

    See also

    North Dakota government:

    Previous elections:

    Ballotpedia exclusives:

    External links

    Footnotes