2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota

The 2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota was held on November 3, 2020, to elect a member of the United States Senate to represent the state of Minnesota, concurrently with the 2020 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the U.S. Senate, elections to the United States House of Representatives and other state and local elections. Some Republican pundits and strategists believed Minnesota to be a potential pickup opportunity due to its increasingly favorable demographics and unexpectedly close result in the 2016 presidential election, along with potential backlash from the 2020 George Floyd protests, originating after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. However, every poll showed incumbent Democratic Senator Tina Smith in the lead by varying degrees.

2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota

← 2018 (special) November 3, 2020 2026 →
 
Nominee Tina Smith Jason Lewis Kevin O'Connor
Party Democratic (DFL) Republican Legal Marijuana Now
Popular vote 1,566,522 1,398,145 190,154
Percentage 48.74% 43.50% 5.91%

Smith:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Lewis:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Tie:      40–50%      50%      No votes

U.S. senator before election

Tina Smith
Democratic (DFL)

Elected U.S. Senator

Tina Smith
Democratic (DFL)

Smith was reelected to a full term in office by a margin of 5.2 points, making this the closest Senate election in Minnesota since 2008. The primary took place on August 11.[1]

Democratic primary

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Candidates

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Nominee

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Eliminated in primary

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  • Steve Carlson, candidate for U.S. Senate in 2018 and write-in candidate for president in 2016[3][4][5]
  • Ahmad Hassan[5]
  • Paula Overby, Green Party nominee for U.S. Senate in 2018[6][5]
  • Christopher Seymore Sr.[5]

Withdrawn

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Endorsements

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Results

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Results by county:
Map legend
  •   Smith—>90%
  •   Smith—80–90%
  •   Smith—70–80%
Democratic primary results[31]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic (DFL) Tina Smith (incumbent) 497,498 87.14%
Democratic (DFL) Paula Overby 30,497 5.34%
Democratic (DFL) Ahmad Hassan 20,037 3.51%
Democratic (DFL) Steve Carlson 16,429 2.88%
Democratic (DFL) Christopher Seymore 6,480 1.13%
Total votes 570,941 100.00%

Republican primary

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Candidates

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Nominee

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Eliminated in primary

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  • John L. Berman[5]
  • Bob Carney Jr.[5][33]
  • Cynthia Gail, art teacher[34]
  • James Reibestein[5]

Withdrawn

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Declined

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Endorsements

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Jason Lewis

Results

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Results by county:
Map legend
  •   Lewis—80–90%
  •   Lewis—70–80%
  •   Lewis—60–70%
  •   Lewis—50–60%
Republican primary results[31]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jason Lewis 191,290 78.11%
Republican Cynthia Gail 17,675 7.22%
Republican John Berman 16,213 6.62%
Republican Bob Carney Jr. 10,503 4.29%
Republican James Reibestein 9,210 3.76%
Total votes 244,891 100.00%

Other candidates

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Grassroots–Legalize Cannabis

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Nominee

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  • Oliver Steinberg[5]

Results

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Grassroots–Legalize Cannabis primary results[31]
Party Candidate Votes %
Grassroots—LC Oliver Steinberg 3,275 100.00%
Total votes 3,275 100.00%
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Nominee

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  • Kevin O'Connor[5]

Primary results

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County Results for Kevin O'Connor:
Map legend
  •   8%
  •   7%
  •   6%
  •   5%
  •   4%
  •   3%
Legal Marijuana Now primary results[31]
Party Candidate Votes %
Legal Marijuana Now Kevin O'Connor 6,996 100.00%
Total votes 6,996 100.00%

Independent write-in candidate

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Declared

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  • George Dennis Jr.[47]
  • Josh D. Ondich, perennial candidate[48][49]

General election

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Debate

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Two general election debates were held. The first, on October 2, 2020, was hosted by Minnesota Public Radio and was attended by Smith and Lewis.[50] The second debate was hosted by Twin Cities PBS on October 23, 2020, and attended only by Lewis.[51]

Predictions

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Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[52] Safe D October 29, 2020
Inside Elections[53] Safe D October 28, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[54] Likely D November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[55] Likely D October 30, 2020
Politico[56] Likely D November 2, 2020
RCP[57] Tossup October 23, 2020
DDHQ[58] Likely D November 3, 2020
538[59] Safe D November 2, 2020
Economist[60] Likely D November 2, 2020

Endorsements

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Jason Lewis (R)

U.S. executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Other individuals

Organizations

Newspapers

Polling

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Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Tina
Smith (DFL)
Jason
Lewis (R)
Other Undecided
Research Co.[87] October 31 – November 1, 2020 450 (LV) 4.6% 50% 39% 2%[a] 9%
Data for Progress[88] October 27 – November 1, 2020 1,259 (LV) ± 2.8% 54% 44% 2%[b]
Swayable[89] October 23 – November 1, 2020 430 (LV) ± 6.1% 55% 46%
Public Policy Polling[90] October 29–30, 2020 770 (V) 51% 42% 6%
Targoz Market Research/PollSmart[91] October 25–30, 2020 1,138 (LV) 53% 44% 3%[c]
St. Cloud State University[92] October 10–29, 2020 372 (A) ± 6.7% 53% 36%
SurveyUSA[93] October 23–27, 2020 649 (LV) ± 4.3% 45% 42% 3%[d] 10%
Gravis Marketing[94] October 24–26, 2020 657 (LV) ± 3.8% 53% 39% 8%
Civiqs/Daily Kos[95] October 17–20, 2020 840 (LV) ± 3.6% 54% 43% 2%[e] 1%
SurveyUSA[96] October 16–20, 2020 625 (LV) ± 5% 43% 42% 3%[d] 12%
Change Research[97] October 12–15, 2020[f] 1,021 (LV) ± 3.1% 48% 44% 4%[g] 5%
SurveyUSA[98] October 1–6, 2020 929 (LV) ± 3.9% 44% 37% 4%[h] 16%
Suffolk University[99] September 20–24, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 45% 35% 6%[i] 14%
Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy[100] September 21–23, 2020 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 49% 41% 10%
Redfield & Wilton Strategies[101] September 12–17, 2020 718 (LV) ± 3.7% 51% 36% 2%[j] 11%
CBS News/YouGov[102] September 9–11, 2020 1,087 (LV) ± 3.9% 47% 40% 2%[a] 10%
Siena College/NYT Upshot[103] September 8–10, 2020 814 (LV) ± 3.9% 49% 40% 0%[k] 11%[l]
SurveyUSA[104] September 4–7, 2020 553 (LV) ± 5.2% 47% 36% 3%[d] 14%
Public Policy Polling[105] September 3–4, 2020 877 (V) ± 3.3% 49% 41% 3%[m] 7%
Harper Polling (R)[106][A] August 30 – September 1, 2020 501 (LV) ± 4.4% 43% 41% 10%
Emerson College[107] August 8–10, 2020 733 (LV) ± 3.6% 48% 45% 7%
Public Policy Polling (D)[108][B] July 22–23, 2020 1,218 (V) ± 3.2% 48% 39% 13%
Harper Polling (R)[106][A] May 26–28, 2020 510 (LV) 46% 35% 20%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Other Undecided
PPP[109] Sep 3–4, 2020 877 (V) ± 3.3% 51% 44% 4%
Harper Polling/Jason Lewis[110][A] Aug 30 – Sep 1, 2020 501 (LV) ± 4.38% 45% 43% 3%[m] 9%
Emerson College[107] Aug 8–10, 2020 733 (LV) ± 3.6% 48% 46% 7%
Harper Polling (R)[106][A] May 26–28, 2020 510 (LV) 44% 40%

Results

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2020 United States Senate election in Minnesota[111]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic (DFL) Tina Smith (incumbent) 1,566,522 48.74% −4.23%
Republican Jason Lewis 1,398,145 43.50% +1.15%
Legal Marijuana Now Kevin O'Connor 190,154 5.91% +2.21%
Grassroots—LC Oliver Steinberg 57,174 1.78% N/A
Write-in 2,261 0.07% +0.03%
Total votes 3,214,256 100.00% N/A
Democratic (DFL) hold

By county

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By county
County[112] Tina Smith
DFL
Jason Lewis
Republican
Kevin O'Connor
LMN
Oliver Steinberg
G–LC
Write-in Margin Total votes
# % # % # % # % # %
Aitkin 3,474 35.29 5,761 58.52 462 4.69 143 1.45 5 0.05 -2,287 -23.23 9,845
Anoka 89,416 43.24 98,043 47.41 15,385 7.44 3,842 1.86 118 0.06 -8,627 -4.17 206,804
Becker 6,370 33.49 11,274 59.28 1,069 5.62 297 1.56 9 0.05 -4,904 -25.78 19,019
Beltrami 9,987 41.88 11,468 48.09 1,804 7.57 564 2.37 22 0.09 -1,481 -6.21 23,845
Benton 6,835 31.39 12,915 59.32 1,539 7.07 465 2.14 17 0.08 -6,080 -27.93 21,771
Big Stone 1,106 37.52 1,637 55.53 163 5.53 39 1.32 3 0.10 -531 -18.01 2,948
Blue Earth 16,527 46.78 15,040 42.57 2,847 8.06 871 2.47 41 0.12 1,487 4.21 35,326
Brown 4,808 33.23 8,736 60.38 690 4.77 224 1.55 10 0.07 -3,928 -27.15 14,468
Carlton 9,577 48.01 8,906 44.65 1,092 5.47 361 1.81 11 0.06 671 3.36 19,947
Carver 27,616 42.16 33,623 51.33 3,292 5.03 928 1.42 38 0.06 -6,007 -9.17 65,497
Cass 5,913 32.66 10,877 60.08 966 5.33 333 1.84 16 0.09 -4,964 -27.42 18,105
Chippewa 2,270 34.77 3,807 58.32 358 5.48 90 1.38 3 0.05 -1,537 -23.54 6,528
Chisago 11,014 32.62 19,700 58.34 2,340 6.93 692 2.05 20 0.06 -8,686 -25.72 33,766
Clay 15,136 47.99 13,308 42.20 2,348 7.45 716 2.27 29 0.09 1,828 5.80 31,537
Clearwater 1,224 26.50 3,078 66.65 242 5.24 69 1.49 5 0.11 -1,854 -40.15 4,618
Cook 2,344 63.08 1,162 31.27 133 3.58 73 1.96 4 0.11 1,182 31.81 3,716
Cottonwood 1,794 29.94 3,796 63.35 321 5.36 80 1.33 1 0.02 -2,002 -33.41 5,992
Crow Wing 12,964 32.76 23,792 60.11 2,032 5.13 774 1.96 16 0.04 -10,828 -27.36 39,578
Dakota 131,394 50.89 107,117 41.49 15,318 5.93 4,162 1.61 196 0.08 24,277 9.40 258,187
Dodge 4,013 33.45 6,924 57.71 806 6.72 248 2.07 6 0.05 -2,911 -24.26 11,997
Douglas 7,617 32.03 14,775 62.13 1,055 4.44 321 1.35 14 0.06 -7,158 -30.10 23,782
Faribault 2,531 32.66 4,624 59.66 444 5.73 148 1.91 3 0.04 -2,093 -27.01 7,750
Fillmore 4,696 39.22 6,440 53.79 625 5.22 205 1.71 6 0.05 -1,744 -14.57 11,972
Freeborn 6,797 41.09 8,364 50.57 1,057 6.39 313 1.89 10 0.06 -1,567 -9.47 16,541
Goodhue 11,186 39.45 15,171 53.50 1,486 5.24 489 1.72 25 0.09 -3,985 -14.05 28,357
Grant 1,349 37.51 2,044 56.84 163 4.53 39 1.08 1 0.03 -695 -19.33 3,596
Hennepin 478,129 64.46 209,754 28.28 41,282 5.56 12,130 1.63 496 0.07 268,375 36.18 741,791
Houston 4,478 39.96 5,778 51.56 700 6.25 243 2.17 8 0.07 -1,300 -11.60 11,207
Hubbard 4,281 33.43 7,713 60.23 572 4.47 232 1.81 7 0.06 -3,432 -26.80 12,805
Isanti 6,751 28.34 14,774 62.01 1,671 7.01 608 2.55 20 0.08 -8,023 -33.68 23,824
Itasca 10,463 39.88 13,949 53.17 1,353 5.16 458 1.74 14 0.05 -3,486 -13.29 26,237
Jackson 1,744 30.55 3,524 61.74 323 5.66 115 2.01 2 0.04 -1,780 -31.18 5,708
Kanabec 2,612 28.91 5,657 62.62 577 6.39 185 2.05 3 0.03 -3,045 -33.71 9,034
Kandiyohi 8,117 35.32 13,388 58.25 1,151 5.01 312 1.36 16 0.07 -5,271 -22.93 22,984
Kittson 1,116 42.97 1,350 51.98 98 3.77 32 1.23 1 0.04 -234 -9.01 2,597
Koochiching 2,637 39.08 3,629 53.78 365 5.41 114 1.69 3 0.04 -992 -14.70 6,748
Lac qui Parle 1,477 37.08 2,314 58.10 139 3.49 52 1.31 1 0.02 -837 -21.01 3,983
Lake 3,485 48.95 3,155 44.31 332 4.66 144 2.02 4 0.06 330 4.64 7,120
Lake of the Woods 650 27.61 1,545 65.63 121 5.14 37 1.57 1 0.04 -895 -38.02 2,354
Le Sueur 5,401 32.74 9,825 59.56 969 5.87 297 1.80 5 0.03 -4,424 -26.82 16,497
Lincoln 911 29.55 1,936 62.80 183 5.94 49 1.59 4 0.13 -1,025 -33.25 3,083
Lyon 4,464 35.03 7,401 58.08 668 5.24 195 1.53 14 0.11 -2,937 -23.05 12,742
Mahnomen 1,039 45.85 1,007 44.44 169 7.46 48 2.12 3 0.13 32 1.41 2,266
Marshall 1,490 29.73 3,255 64.96 198 3.95 62 1.24 6 0.12 -1,765 -35.22 5,011
Martin 3,348 30.79 6,707 61.68 613 5.64 200 1.84 6 0.05 -3,359 -30.89 10,874
McLeod 6,114 29.64 12,875 62.43 1,223 5.93 393 1.91 19 0.09 -6,761 -32.78 20,624
Meeker 3,889 29.12 8,575 64.20 664 4.97 221 1.65 7 0.05 -4,686 -35.08 13,356
Mille Lacs 4,123 28.74 8,851 61.69 1,025 7.14 334 2.33 15 0.10 -4,728 -32.95 14,348
Morrison 4,452 23.25 13,368 69.82 1,012 5.29 307 1.60 7 0.04 -8,916 -46.57 19,146
Mower 8,472 44.92 8,615 45.68 1,380 7.32 385 2.04 7 0.04 -143 -0.76 18,859
Murray 1,448 30.15 3,081 64.15 221 4.60 52 1.08 1 0.02 -1,633 -34.00 4,803
Nicollet 8,992 47.64 8,397 44.48 1,062 5.63 412 2.18 13 0.07 595 3.15 18,876
Nobles 2,776 32.87 4,959 58.72 543 6.43 162 1.92 5 0.06 -2,183 -25.85 8,445
Norman 1,497 44.59 1,617 48.17 193 5.75 48 1.43 2 0.06 -120 -3.57 3,357
Olmsted 45,543 51.22 36,972 41.58 4,730 5.32 1,604 1.80 60 0.07 8,571 9.64 88,909
Otter Tail 11,728 32.75 21,738 60.70 1,817 5.07 510 1.42 19 0.05 -10,010 -27.95 35,812
Pennington 2,574 35.76 3,919 54.45 566 7.86 133 1.85 5 0.07 -1,345 -18.69 7,197
Pine 5,055 32.16 9,341 59.44 1,005 6.39 310 1.97 5 0.03 -4,286 -27.27 15,716
Pipestone 1,200 24.68 3,324 68.37 264 5.43 71 1.46 3 0.06 -2,124 -43.69 4,862
Polk 5,577 36.45 8,559 55.94 917 5.99 236 1.54 10 0.06 -2,982 -19.49 15,299
Pope 2,390 34.66 4,135 59.96 290 4.20 77 1.12 4 0.06 -1,745 -25.30 6,896
Ramsey 188,784 65.55 73,638 25.57 19,087 6.63 6,158 2.14 324 0.11 115,146 39.98 287,991
Red Lake 769 35.92 1,222 57.08 114 5.32 33 1.54 3 1.40 -453 -21.16 2,141
Redwood 2,297 28.06 5,415 66.15 355 4.34 114 1.39 5 0.06 -3,118 -38.09 8,186
Renville 2,500 31.47 4,927 62.01 390 4.91 122 1.54 6 0.07 -2,427 -30.55 7,945
Rice 16,201 46.20 15,999 45.63 2,138 6.10 701 2.00 24 0.07 202 0.58 35,063
Rock 1,461 28.42 3,286 63.93 294 5.72 98 1.91 1 0.02 -1,825 -35.51 5,140
Roseau 2,321 27.93 5,494 66.11 396 4.76 95 1.14 4 0.05 -3,173 -38.18 8,310
Scott 35,758 41.34 44,215 51.11 5,218 6.03 1,269 1.47 46 0.05 -8,457 -9.78 86,506
Sherburne 16,584 30.46 33,145 60.88 3,702 6.80 974 1.79 42 0.08 -16,561 -30.42 54,447
Sibley 2,368 28.52 5,391 64.94 426 5.13 112 1.35 5 0.06 -3,023 -36.41 8,302
St. Louis 63,036 53.81 45,016 38.43 6,545 5.59 2,451 2.09 87 0.07 18,020 15.38 117,135
Stearns 29,931 35.89 47,080 56.45 4,843 5.81 1,484 1.78 64 0.08 -17,149 -20.56 83,402
Steele 7,412 36.00 11,358 55.16 1,381 6.71 435 2.11 5 0.02 -3,946 -19.16 20,591
Stevens 1,906 38.02 2,848 56.81 192 3.83 67 1.34 0 0.00 -942 -18.79 5,013
Swift 1,838 35.70 3,020 58.66 226 4.39 63 1.22 1 0.02 -1,182 -22.96 5,148
Todd 3,354 25.68 8,842 67.70 650 4.98 205 1.57 10 0.08 -5,488 -42.02 13,061
Traverse 656 35.87 1,045 57.13 98 5.36 27 1.48 3 0.16 -389 -21.27 1,829
Wabasha 4,513 35.02 7,535 58.47 643 4.99 190 1.47 5 0.04 -3,022 -23.45 12,886
Wadena 1,977 26.09 5,041 66.52 419 5.53 137 1.81 4 0.05 -3,064 -40.43 7,578
Waseca 3,365 32.95 6,043 59.17 629 6.16 172 1.68 4 0.04 -2,678 -26.22 10,213
Washington 80,479 49.21 71,906 43.97 8,382 5.12 2,679 1.64 106 0.06 8,573 5.24 163,552
Watonwan 1,960 38.48 2,752 54.02 298 5.85 81 1.59 3 0.06 -792 -15.55 5,094
Wilkin 1,095 32.61 1,988 59.20 203 6.05 71 2.11 1 0.03 -893 -26.59 3,358
Winona 12,002 45.48 11,961 45.32 1,813 6.87 594 2.25 20 0.08 41 0.16 26,390
Wright 25,896 34.96 48,173 65.04 5,009 6.76 1,523 2.06 60 0.08 -22,277 -30.08 74,069
Yellow Medicine 1,678 30.78 3,436 63.02 270 4.95 65 1.19 3 0.06 -1,758 -32.24 5,452
Totals 1,566,522 48.74 1,398,145 43.50 190,154 5.92 57,174 1.78 2,261 0.07 168,377 5.24 3,214,256

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

By congressional district

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Smith and Lewis each won 4 congressional districts.

District Smith Lewis Representative
1st 41.9% 49.8% Jim Hagedorn
2nd 47.9% 44.5% Angie Craig
3rd 53.1% 40.1% Dean Phillips
4th 61.7% 30.1% Betty McCollum
5th 73.4% 18.3% Ilhan Omar
6th 36% 55.7% Tom Emmer
7th 34% 58.9% Collin Peterson
Michelle Fischbach
8th 40% 52.3% Pete Stauber

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b "Someone else" with 2%
  2. ^ "Other candidate or write-in" with 2%
  3. ^ "Not sure/Someone else/Undecided" with 3%
  4. ^ a b c "Some other candidate" with 3%
  5. ^ O'Connor (LMN) and Steinberg (GLC) with 1%; "Someone else" with 0%
  6. ^ Additional data sourced from FiveThirtyEight
  7. ^ O'Connor (LMN) with 3%; Steinberg (GLC) with 1%; would not vote with 0%
  8. ^ "Some other candidate" with 4%
  9. ^ O'Connor (LMN) and "Refused" with 2%; Steinberg (GLC) and "Other" with 1%
  10. ^ "Another Third Party/Write-in" with 2%
  11. ^ "Someone else" and would not vote with 0%
  12. ^ Includes "Refused"
  13. ^ a b "Someone else" with 3%

Partisan clients

  1. ^ a b c d Poll sponsored by Lewis' campaign
  2. ^ Giffords endorsed Tina Smith prior to the sampling period

References

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  1. ^ Montgomery, David H. (June 5, 2020). "Primary primer: What you need to know about Minnesota's August election". MPR News. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  2. ^ Keen, Judy (July 9, 2018). "Tina Smith faces tough challengers in fight to keep U.S. Senate seat". Star Tribune. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c "Minnesota Senate 2020 race". Open Secrets. Retrieved May 15, 2020.
  4. ^ "Minnesota". The Washington Times. Archived from the original on May 14, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Minnesota 2020 Senate Candidate List". June 2, 2020. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  6. ^ "Former Green Party candidate Overby to seek DFL endorsement". www.wtip.org. Archived from the original on February 21, 2020. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  7. ^ "Bill Hamm announces candidacy for US Senate". Kanabec County Times. December 6, 2019. Retrieved May 17, 2020.
  8. ^ "The Green Papers: Minnesota 2020 General Election". The Green Papers. May 15, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2020.
  9. ^ a b "The Win Big Project". The Win Big Project.
  10. ^ a b Brown, Kris (September 12, 2019). "Brady Endorses Sen. Tina Smith, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, and Rep. Ben Ray Luján for U.S. Senate". Brady.
  11. ^ a b "Senate Candidates - Council for a Livable World". Council for a Livable World.
  12. ^ a b "EMILY's List Endorses Senator Tina Smith for Re-Election". Emily's List. January 31, 2019.
  13. ^ a b Muller, Tiffany (August 27, 2019). "End Citizens United Endorses Four U.S. Senators for Reelection". End Citizens United.
  14. ^ a b "Everytown For Gun Safety Action Fund Endorses Tina Smith For U.S. Senate in Minnesota". Everytown. June 9, 2020.
  15. ^ a b "2020 – Feminist Majority PAC". feministmajoritypac.org.
  16. ^ a b "Giffords Endorses Slate of Senators Running to Bring a Gun Safety Majority to the US Senate". Giffords. May 8, 2020.
  17. ^ a b Acosta, Lucas (August 26, 2019). "HRC Endorses Senator Tina Smith for Reelection| Human Rights Campaign". Human Rights Campaign.
  18. ^ a b "JStreetPAC Candidates". JStreetPAC. Archived from the original on May 2, 2018. Retrieved December 26, 2019.
  19. ^ a b "Meet the 2020 Candidates". Joint Action Committee for Political Affairs.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ a b Burke, Holly (June 18, 2019). "LCV Action Fund Endorses Senator Tina Smith for Re-Election". League of Conservation Voters. Retrieved June 20, 2019.
  21. ^ a b "NARAL Pro-Choice America Endorses Senator Tina Smith for Re-election- NARAL Pro-Choice America". NARAL Pro-Choice America. September 23, 2019.
  22. ^ a b "Candidates We Endorse and Support". NCPSSM.
  23. ^ a b "2020 Federal Endorsements - NOW PAC". nowpac.org.
  24. ^ a b Axelrod, Tal (October 10, 2019). "Planned Parenthood issues first wave of 2020 House, Senate endorsements". TheHill.
  25. ^ a b "2020 Endorsements". Population Connection. Archived from the original on September 18, 2020. Retrieved November 26, 2019.
  26. ^ a b "2020 Endorsed Candidates - Stonewall DFL". Stonewall DFL.
  27. ^ a b "2020 Endorsed Candidates - Women Winning". Women Winning. Archived from the original on June 2, 2020.
  28. ^ a b "Federal Endorsed Candidates 2019-2020". Women's Political Committee.
  29. ^ a b "Education Minnesota endorses Tina Smith for U.S. Senate". Education Minnesota. Archived from the original on September 13, 2020. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  30. ^ a b "Minnesota AFL-CIO makes first round of 2020 election endorsements". mnaflcio.org. March 11, 2020.
  31. ^ a b c d "Official Canvassing Report". Minnesota Secretary of State. Retrieved September 13, 2020.
  32. ^ "Jason Lewis to challenge Tina Smith for U.S. Senate seat". Star Tribune. Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  33. ^ "Calling all (reasonable) Republicans to take your party back". Star Tribune. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  34. ^ Gail, Cynthia (July 19, 2020). "Candidate's View: Pandemic has been particularly hard on students". Duluth News Tribune. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
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Official campaign websites

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Association 4
INTERN 2
Note 3
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twitter 3