2012 Indiana gubernatorial election


The 2012 Indiana gubernatorial election took place on November 6, 2012. Incumbent governor Mitch Daniels was term-limited and unable to seek a third term. The Republican candidate, Congressman Mike Pence; the Democratic candidate, former Speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives John R. Gregg; and the Libertarian candidate, youth mentor, small business owner and reality TV personality, Rupert Boneham, were all unopposed in their respective primaries or conventions and contested the general election. This is the first open Indiana gubernatorial election since 1996 and the first gubernatorial election since 1972 without the incumbent governor or lieutenant governor as a nominee.
When the polls closed, the election was very close, and continued to stay close throughout the night. Gregg performed well in Marion County and Lake County, which were Democratic strongholds. Pence performed well in the Indianapolis suburbs and the Fort Wayne area. At 12:34 am EST, the Associated Press called the race for Pence. At 1:06 am, Gregg called Pence to concede, realizing there were not enough votes left to overtake him. Pence ultimately won the election and took office on January 14, 2013. This was the closest race for governor since 1960.

Primaries

Democratic

Libertarian

General election

Candidates

Debates

The organized three televised debates between Indiana Gubernatorial candidates Republican Mike Pence, Democrat John R. Gregg and Libertarian Rupert Boneham.
Debate schedule

The first debate was held on Wednesday, October 10, 2012, at the Zionsville Performing Arts Center in Zionsville, Indiana and was moderated by former Indianapolis Star editor Dennis Ryerson.
The second debate was held on Wednesday, October 17, 2012, at the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center in South Bend, Indiana and was
moderated by Indiana Fiscal Policy Institute president John Ketzenberger.
The third debate was held on Thursday, October 25, 2012, at the WFWA PBS 39 studio in Fort Wayne, Indiana and was moderated by DePauw University Executive Director of Media Relations Ken Owen.

Results

By county

Source
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

By congressional district

Pence won six of nine congressional districts; while Gregg won three including one, the 8th district, that elected a Republican.
DistrictPenceGreggRepresentative
1st33.61%63.98%Pete Visclosky
2nd50.63%46.15%Joe Donnelly
2nd50.63%46.15%Jackie Walorski
3rd58.24%38.77%Marlin Stutzman
4th53.82%40.87%Todd Rokita
5th55.34%40.44%Dan Burton
5th55.34%40.44%Susan Brooks
6th56.56%38.49%Mike Pence
6th56.56%38.49%Luke Messer
7th33.07%61.73%André Carson
8th congressional district|8th]48.28%48.69%Larry Bucshon
9th53.08%42.70%Todd Young
9th53.08%42.70%-