1984 United States presidential election

E106029

The 1984 United States presidential election was a landslide contest in which incumbent Republican President Ronald Reagan overwhelmingly defeated Democratic challenger Walter Mondale.

All labels observed (3)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (51)

Predicate Object
instanceOf United States presidential election
campaignSloganOfRonaldReagan It's morning again in America
Prouder, stronger, better
campaignSloganOfWalterMondale America needs a change
coldWarContext occurred during heightened tensions with the Soviet Union in the early 1980s
country United States of America
surface form: United States
date November 6, 1984
debatesHeld three presidential debates and one vice-presidential debate
democraticElectoralVotes 13
democraticNomineeForPresident Walter Mondale
democraticNomineeForVicePresident Geraldine Ferraro
democraticPopularVote 37497852
democraticPopularVoteShare 40.6%
districtOfColumbiaCarriedBy Walter Mondale
economicContext took place during a period of economic recovery and declining inflation in the United States
electionForOffice President of the United States
Vice President of the United States
electoralVoteRunnerUp Walter Mondale
electoralVotesNeededToWin 270
electoralVoteWinner Ronald Reagan
historicalSignificance Geraldine Ferraro
surface form: Geraldine Ferraro became the first female vice-presidential nominee of a major U.S. party

Reagan
surface form: Reagan won the highest electoral vote total ever received by a presidential candidate

1984 United States presidential election self-linksurface differs
surface form: Reagan won the largest number of states ever carried by a presidential candidate, tied with 1972
incumbentParty Republican Party
surface form: Republican Party (United States)
incumbentPresident Ronald Reagan
incumbentVicePresident George H. W. Bush
largestElectoralCollegeLandslideSince 1936 United States presidential election
mainOpponentParty Democratic Party
surface form: Democratic Party (United States)
majorDemocraticPrimaryCandidates Gary Hart
Jesse Jackson
Walter Mondale
nextElection 1988 United States presidential election
notableDebateMoment Reagan addressed concerns about his age with the line 'I will not make age an issue of this campaign' in the second debate
numberOfStatesCarriedByDemocraticNominee 1
numberOfStatesCarriedByRepublicanNominee 49
onlyStateCarriedByDemocraticNominee Minnesota
popularVoteRunnerUp Walter Mondale
popularVoteWinner Ronald Reagan
presidentAfterElection Ronald Reagan
presidentAfterElectionParty Republican Party
surface form: Republican Party (United States)
presidentBeforeElection Ronald Reagan
previousElection 1980 United States presidential election
primaryOpponentsToReagan no major Republican primary challengers
republicanElectoralVotes 525
republicanNomineeForPresident Ronald Reagan
republicanNomineeForVicePresident George H. W. Bush
republicanPopularVote 54455072
republicanPopularVoteShare 58.8%
totalElectoralVotes 538
voterTurnout 53.3%
voterTurnoutChangeFromPrevious -0.7 percentage points

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (10)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Walter Mondale election 1984 United States presidential election
1988 United States presidential election follows 1984 United States presidential election
Roger Ailes workedOn 1984 United States presidential election
this entity surface form: Ronald Reagan presidential campaign 1984
1984 United States presidential election historicalSignificance 1984 United States presidential election self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Reagan won the largest number of states ever carried by a presidential candidate, tied with 1972
Geraldine Ferraro part of 1984 United States presidential election
Alan Cranston candidateIn 1984 United States presidential election
1980 United States presidential election nextElection 1984 United States presidential election
1986 United States House of Representatives elections isMidtermRelativeTo 1984 United States presidential election
“Tale of Two Cities” speech associatedWith 1984 United States presidential election
subject surface form: Tale of Two Cities speech
Lyndon LaRouche candidateInElection 1984 United States presidential election