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Minnesota elections, 2012

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Contents
1 2012 Elections
2 Eligibility to Vote
2.1 Primary election
2.2 General election
3 Voting absentee
3.1 Eligibility
3.2 Deadlines
3.3 Military and overseas voting
4 Voting early
5 See also
6 References

The state of Minnesota held elections in 2012. Below are the dates of note:

On the 2012 ballot Click here for all
November 6, 2012
Election Results
U.S. Senate (1 seat) Approveda Preview Article
U.S. House (8 seats) Approveda
State Executives Defeatedd N/A
State Senate (67 seats) Approveda Preview Article
State House (134 seats) Approveda
Ballot measures (2 measure) Approveda Preview Article

2012 Elections

Note: Election information listed on this page does not pertain to 2012 presidential elections. For more about Ballotpedia's areas of coverage, click here.
For election results in the 50 states, see our November 6, 2012 election results page

Elections by type

U.S. Senate

See also: United States Senate elections in Minnesota, 2012
U.S. Senate, Minnesota General Election, 2012
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.pngAmy Klobuchar Incumbent 65.2% 1,854,595
     Republican Kurt Bills 30.5% 867,974
     Independence Stephen Williams 2.6% 73,539
     Grassroots Tim Davis 1.1% 30,531
     Progressive Michael Cavlan 0.5% 13,986
Total Votes 2,843,207
Source: Minnesota Secretary of State, "Official Election Results, 2012 General Election" (dead link)

U.S. House

See also: United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, 2012
Members of the U.S. House from Minnesota -- Partisan Breakdown
Party As of November 2012 After the 2012 Election
     Democratic Party 4 5
     Republican Party 4 3
Total 8 8
District General Election Candidates Incumbent 2012 Winner Partisan Switch?
1st Democratic Party Tim Walz
Republican Party Allen Quist
Tim Walz Democratic Party Tim Walz No
2nd Democratic Party Mike Obermueller
Republican Party John Kline
John Kline Republican Party John Kline No
3rd Democratic Party Brian Barnes
Republican Party Erik Paulsen
Erik Paulsen Republican Party Erik Paulsen No
4th Democratic Party Betty McCollum
Republican Party Tony Hernandez
Independence Party of America Steve Carlson
Betty McCollum Democratic Party Betty McCollum No
5th Democratic Party Keith Ellison
Republican Party Chris Fields
Keith Ellison Democratic Party Keith Ellison No
6th Democratic Party Jim Graves
Republican Party Michele Bachmann
Michele Bachmann Republican Party Michele Bachmann No
7th Democratic Party Collin Peterson
Republican Party Lee Byberg
Independence Party of America Adam Steele
Collin Peterson Democratic Party Collin Peterson No
8th Democratic Party Rick Nolan
Republican Party Chip Cravaack
Chip Cravaack Democratic Party Rick Nolan Yes

State Senate

See also: Minnesota State Senate elections, 2012

Heading into the election, Republicans maintained partisan control in the state senate.

Minnesota State Senate
Party As of November 5, 2012 After the 2012 Election
     Democratic Party 30 39
     Republican Party 37 28
Total 67 67


State House

See also: Minnesota House of Representatives elections, 2012

Heading into the election, Republicans maintained partisan control in the state house.

Minnesota House of Representatives
Party As of November 5, 2012 After the 2012 Election
     Democratic Party 61 73
     Republican Party 72 61
     Vacancy 1 0
Total 134 134

Ballot measures

See also: Minnesota 2012 ballot measures
Type Title Subject Description Result
LRCA Amendment 1 Marriage Would ban same-sex marriage.
Defeatedd
LRCA Amendment 2 Elections Would require people to present photo identification to vote.
Defeatedd

Eligibility to Vote

Minnesota

Primary election

See also: Voting in the 2012 primary elections

Minnesota was one of 16 states to use an open primary system. Voters who wanted to register in advance were required to pre-register at least 21 days before Election Day. However, voters could also register on Election Day at their polling place. (Information about registering to vote)

General election

See also: Voting in the 2012 general elections

The deadline to register to vote was 21 days prior to the election day, which in 2012 was October 16.[1][2]

  • Voter ID info
  • Residency requirements: Resided in Minnesota for 20 days immediately preceding Election Day[3]
  • Same-day registration: Yes[4]

Voting absentee

AbsenteeMap.png
See also: Absentee Voting

There are no eligibility requirements to vote absentee in Minnesota.[5]

There is no specific deadline for applying for an absentee ballot. A completed ballot must be returned on or before Election Day for it to be counted.[6]

Prospective voters may select an option on the Minnesota voter registration application to join a permanent absentee voter list, which means they will automatically be sent an absentee/mail-in ballot for every election.[7]

Voting early

See also: Early voting

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, "although [Minnesota does] not have early voting in the traditional sense .... [the state does] allow a voter to apply in person for an absentee ballot (without an excuse) and cast that ballot in one trip to an election official's office. This is often known as 'in-person absentee' voting."[8]

See also

Footnotes