A state-by-state look at Tuesday's elections around the country:
ALABAMA
GOVERNOR - Favored Democrat Don Sie-gel-man walloped Republican incumbent Fob James. With 92 percent of precincts reporting, Siegelman had 58 percent, to James' 42 percent.
SENATE - Richard Shelby, in first race since switching to GOP in 1994, re-elected over retiree Clayton Suddith, who mortgaged his pickup to run. With 92 percent of precincts reporting, Shelby led 63 percent to 37 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 5R, 2D; New: 5R, 2D. All seven were re-elected.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 21D, 14R; New Senate: 18D, 10R, with others undecided. Old House: 69D, 36R; New House, 59D, 30R, with others undecided.
ALASKA
SENATE - Republican Frank Murkowski rolled to a fourth term, beating perennial candidate Joe Sonneman 75 percent to 19 percent.
GOVERNOR - Four years after taking office by 536 votes in three-way race, incumbent Democrat Tony Knowles won with 51 percent, easily defeating Republican John Lindauer, who finished third with 17 percent after the GOP disowned him for lying about his finances. Twenty-two percent went to last-minute write-in Robin Taylor, GOP state senator.
HOUSE - Republican Don Young won 14th term in mudslinging contest with longtime state Sen. Jim Duncan for state's only seat.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 15R, 5D; New Senate: same. Old House: 25R, 15D. New House 23R, 17D.
PROPOSITIONS - Allowed medical use of marijuana; amended constitution to ban gay marriage.
ARIZONA
GOVERNOR - Republican Jane Hull, who took over after Fife Symington's conviction last year, brushed aside Democrat Paul Johnson, former Phoenix mayor, 61 percent to 35 percent.
SENATE - Republican John McCain easily retained seat against Democrat Ed Ranger, 69 percent to 27 percent.
HOUSE - All six incumbents re-elected, five Republicans, one Democrat.
PROPOSITIONS - Cockfighting banned in Arizona, one of five states that allowed it; lottery will stay; medical use of marijuana approved for second time in two years; state funding for campaigns held a narrow lead.
LEGISLATURE - Democrats failed in bid to wrest control of state Senate from Republicans, who have held it since 1993. GOP still firmly in control of House.
ARKANSAS
SENATE - Ex-congresswoman Blanche Lincoln, a Democrat, took 55 percent to defeat Fay Boozman, GOP state senator who sponsored Arkansas' ban on certain late-term abortions.
GOVERNOR - Mike Huckabee won full term after taking office in 1996 following White-water conviction of Jim Guy Tucker; carried 60 percent in beating lawyer Bill Bristow.
HOUSE - Four-seat delegation from Clinton's home state remained evenly split.
LEGISLATURE - GOP cuts Democratic edge from 86-14 to 77-23 in House, benefiting from term limits law; GOP loses one seat in Senate, moving to 29-6 disadvantage. Term limits take effect in Senate in 2000.
CALIFORNIA
GOVERNOR - Lt. Gov. Gray Davis elected California's first Democratic governor in two decades. With 97 percent of precincts reporting, Davis got 58 percent to Attorney General Lungren's 38 percent.
SENATE - Democrat Barbara Boxer re-elected over Republican Matt Fong. With 95 percent of precincts reporting, she got 54 percent to 43 percent.
HOUSE - Democrats held 29-23 edge going into the election but lost one seat for 28-24 lead. Flamboyant former Rep. Robert K. Dornan, defeated by 912 votes two years ago, doesn't even come close in rematch against Democratic Rep. Loretta Sanchez.
LEGISLATURE - Democrats increase their 47-37 majority by at least four seats in the Assembly and their 23-16-1 majority in Senate by at least one seat.
PROPOSITIONS - Video slot machines at Indian casinos were legalized in the most expensive ballot-measure campaign in nation's his-tory. A $9.2 billion bond issue for schools an easy winner.
COLORADO
GOVERNOR - State Treasurer Bill Owens broke two-decade Democratic hold on governor's office, slipping past Lt. Gov. Gail Schoettler, 49 percent to 48 percent.
SENATE - Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, running for GOP for first time since switching parties in 1995, beat Dottie Lamm, wife of former governor, 63 percent to 35 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 2D, 4R; New: same, with Democrat Mark Udall, son of former Arizona Rep. Morris Udall, beating former Boulder Mayor Bob Greenlee.
CONNECTICUT
GOVERNOR - Republican incumbent John G. Rowland, at 41 the nation's youngest governor, beat Democratic Rep. Barbara Kennelly, 63 percent to 35 percent.
SENATE - Democrat Christopher Dodd easily won fourth term, swamping black ex-Rep. Gary Franks, 65 percent to 32 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 4D, 2R. New: same.
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 19D, 17R. New Senate: 20D, 15R, one race undecided. Old House: 96D, 55R. New House: 86D, 55R, 10 races undecided.
DELAWARE
HOUSE: Republican Michael Castle, former governor, beat Democrat Dennis Williams.
LEGISLATURE: Democrats in the Senate retained a 13-8 edge over the Republicans. In the House, the majority Republicans lost at least two seats with a third too close to call. The Republican margin is 25-15 over Democrats with only 10 votes separating the candidates for the final seat.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
MAYOR: Bow-tied Ivy Leaguer and Washington's former chief financial officer Anthony Williams took 66 percent in race notable for absence of longtime Mayor Marion Barry. Republican Councilwoman Carol Schwartz, making her third run, got 30 percent.
HOUSE: Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton won fifth term as nonvoting delegate.
CITY COUNCIL: First-ever white majority elected. Party breakdown: 11 Democrats, two Republicans.
PROPOSITIONS: The city's board of elections, bowing to congressional pressure, did not release results of referendum to legalize marijuana for medical purposes.
FLORIDA
GOVERNOR - Republican Jeb Bush, son of former president and brother of Texas governor, rolled past 30-year political veteran Lt. Gov. Buddy MacKay, 55 percent to 45 percent.
SENATE - Two-term Democrat Bob Graham beat GOP's "Chain Gang Charlie" Crist, who sponsored legislation that brought back chain gangs, 63 percent to 37 percent.
HOUSE - Remains 15R, 8D. Six of 23 incumbents faced challenges but easily returned to Congress.
LEGISLATURE - Senate remains 25R, 15D: Same. Old House: 64R, 56D; New House: 71R, 46D with three races undecided.
PROPOSITIONS - Voters overwhelmingly let counties impose waiting period on firearms sold at gun shows.
GEORGIA
SENATE - Republican Sen. Paul Coverdell re-elected over cookie company founder Michael Coles, 53 percent to 44 percent.
GOVERNOR - Roy Barnes, folksy Democratic state legislator, defeated temp agency founder Guy Millner 52 percent to 45 percent. Millner lost third attempt at statewide office.
HOUSE - Remains 3D; 8R. Rep. Sanford Bishop, a black Democrat in a majority-white district, defeated Albany businessman Joe McCormick 56 percent to 44 percent.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 33D; 23R. New Senate: 31D; 22R, with three undecided. Old House: 101D; 79R. New House: 96D; 75R, with nine undecided.
HAWAII
GOVERNOR - Ben Cayetano maintained Democrats' 36-year grip on governor's office, defeating Maui County Mayor Linda Lingle 50 percent to 49 percent.
SENATE - Democrat Daniel Inouye breezed past Crystal Young to win seventh term. Inouye received 79 percent to 18 percent for Young, who said she has been disabled since having electromagnetic needles implanted by Shirley MacLaine - an allegation the actress denied.
HOUSE - Incumbents Neil Abercrombie and Patsy Mink cruised to easy victories, maintaining Hawaii's two-Democrat congressional delegation.
LEGISLATURE - Senate remains 23D, 2R. Old House: 39D, 12R. New House: 40D, 11R.
PROPOSITIONS - Authorized Legislature to ban gay marriages.
IDAHO
GOVERNOR - Republican U.S. Sen. Dirk Kempthorne became Idaho's next governor with 68 percent of vote, winning job he wanted after six years in Washington helping engineer return of power to the states.
SENATE - Popular and personable U.S. Rep. Michael Crapo financially swamped former Democratic State Chairman Bill Mauk to win Kempthorne's U.S. Senate seat with 70 percent of vote.
HOUSE - Idaho's two seats stay in Republican hands as outspoken Clinton critic Helen Chenoweth wins third (and self-limited final) term despite admitting adulterous affair with former business partner.
LEGISLATURE - Democrats continued slide in state Senate, losing yet another race to leave them with four of 35 seats. Party appeared to hold on to 11 seats in 70-member House, though absentee ballots still being counted.
ILLINOIS
SENATE: Millionaire state Sen. Peter Fitzgerald, Republican, defeated scandal-tarnished Democratic incumbent Carol Moseley-Braun - first black female senator - 51 percent to 47 percent.
GOVERNOR - GOP Secretary of State George Ryan surpassed conservative Democratic Rep. Glenn Poshard, 51 percent to 47 percent.
HOUSE - Still 10D, 10R. Two women join previously all-male delegation.
INDIANA
SENATE - Republican Fort Wayne Mayor Paul Helmke was no match for Evan Bayh's cash, recognition and immense popularity as a former two-term governor. Bayh won with 63 percent.
HOUSE - Three contested races out of 10 districts, but most eyes on the 9th in southern Indiana, where Republican Jean Leising was trailing Democrat Baron Hill slightly to replace retiring Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton.
PROPOSITION - Two low-interest ballot measures approved, one of them removing requirement that certain state office holders maintain residences in Indianapolis.
MAINE
GOVERNOR - Independent incumbent Angus King won second four-year term in a landslide, pulling 58 percent of the vote in a five-way race. Republican Jim Longley Jr. got 19 percent and Democrat Tom Connolly 12 percent.
HOUSE - Maine's two Democratic House members easily won re-election.
PROPOSITIONS - South Portland approved gay rights ordinance, but similar measure was rejected in Oqunquit. Portland backed law restricting smoking in restaurants.
LEGISLATURE - Old House: 81D, 69R, 1I. Close races put outcome in doubt. Old Senate: 19D, 15R, 1I. Democrats appear to regain control.
MINNESOTA
GOVERNOR - Former pro wrestler Jesse "The Body" Ventura ambushed two major-party rivals, Democrat Hubert Humphrey III and Republican Norm Coleman. With 96 percent of precincts reporting, Ventura had 37 percent of the vote to 34 percent for Coleman and 28 percent for Humphrey.
HOUSE - Six Democrats, two Republicans all re-elected.
LEGISLATURE - The Democratic-Farmer Labor Party loses control to the House to Republicans.
PROPOSITIONS - Approved constitutional amendments to protect hunting and fishing privileges; to continue spending lottery proceeds on environmental causes; and to abolish state treasurer office.
MISSISSIPPI
HOUSE - Democrat Ronnie Shows upsets Republican Delbert Hosemann to succeed retiring GOP Rep. Mike Parker. The victory gives Democrats a 3-2 advantage in congressional delegation for first time since 1995.
PROPOSITIONS - Puts victims' rights in state Constitution; bars out-of-staters from circulating petitions to get initiatives on ballot.
MISSOURI
SENATE - Two-term Republican Christopher Bond defeated Democrat Attorney General Jay Nixon.
HOUSE - All nine incumbents, five Democrats and four Republicans, re-elected.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 19D, 15R; new Senate: 17D, 16R and one vacancy. House - 86D, 75R, one Independent and one vacancy - unchanged.
PROPOSITIONS - Approved games of chance on riverboats in artificial basins, approved proposition banning cockfighting.
MONTANA
HOUSE - First-term Rep. Rick Hill defeats Democrat Dusty Deschamps, 53 percent to 45 percent, for Montana's only seat
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 34R, 16D; New Senate: 32R, 18D. Old House: 65R, 35D; New House: 59R, 41D.
PROPOSITIONS - Constitutional amendment requiring voter approval of all new or increased taxes narrowly approved.
NEBRASKA
GOVERNOR - Lincoln Mayor Mike Johanns, a Republican, defeats Democratic business consultant Bill Hoppner, 54 percent to 46 percent.
HOUSE - All three Republicans re-elected.
PROPOSITIONS - Proposal to cap tax collections by state and local governments rejected.
NEVADA
GOVERNOR - Republican Kenny Guinn defeats Las Vegas Mayor Jan Jones, a Democrat, 52 percent to 42 percent.
SENATE - Two-term incumbent Democrat Harry Reid in close race with Rep. John Ensign.
HOUSE - Democrat Shelley Berkley defeats Republican Don Chairez in race for Ensign's seat.
LEGISLATURE: Senate unchanged at 12R, 9D. Old House: 25D, 17R; New House: 28D, 14R.
PROPOSITIONS - Voted to allow medical use of marijuana.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
GOVERNOR - First-term Democrat Jeanne Shaheen easily defeats Republican Jay Lucas, 66 percent to 31 percent.
SENATE - Democrat George Condodemetraky pounded by Republican incumbent Judd Gregg, 68 percent to 28 percent.
HOUSE - Both Republicans re-elected.
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 15R, 9D; New Senate: 13D, 11R. Old House: 253R, 147D; New House: 244R, 150D.
NEW JERSEY
HOUSE - Old: 7R, 6D; New: 6R, 7D. Democrat Rush Holt, a scientist who counted 16 Nobel Prize winners among his contributors, ousted freshman Republican Mike Pappas.
PROPOSITIONS - Approved setting aside $98 million from sales-tax revenues each year for the next 10 years to preserve open space, farmland and historic sites.
NEW MEXICO
GOVERNOR - Republican Gov. Gary Johnson defeated Democrat Martin Chavez, a former Albuquerque mayor, 54 percent to 46 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 3R. New: 2R, 1D. Democrat Tom Udall recaptured traditionally Democratic congressional seat in 3rd District, defeating incumbent Republican Bill Redmond.
LEGISLATURE: Old House: 42D, 28R; New House lineup unclear, a third of contested races remained undecided Wednesday. No Senate races.
NEW YORK
GOVERNOR - Republican George Pataki, touted as White House material in 2000, easily won re-election against New York City Council Speaker Peter Vallone, 54 percent to 33 percent.
SENATE - Rep. Charles Schumer ousted Republican incumbent Alfonse D'Amato in race about as polite as a New York cabbie. Schumer, 54 percent; D'Amato, 44 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 19D, 12R. New: 18D, 13R. On Long Island, first-term incumbent Carolyn McCarthy, a Republican elected on Democratic line, beat GOP challenger.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 26D, 35R. New Senate: 25D, 35R. Old House: 96D, 54R. New House: 97D, 52R.
NORTH CAROLINA
SENATE - In first bid for public office, Democratic lawyer John Edwards defeated GOP incumbent Lauch Faircloth, 51 percent to 47 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 6R, 6D; New: 7R, 5D. Former GOP gubernatorial candidate Robin Hayes won to replace replace retiring Democratic Rep. Bill Hefner.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 30D, 20R; New Senate: 35D, 15R; Old House: 61R, 59D; New House: 60D, 49R, 11 undecided.
NORTH DAKOTA
SENATE - Democratic incumbent Byron Dorgan trounced GOP challenger Donna Nalewaja, 63 percent to 35 percent.
HOUSE - Democratic incumbent Earl Pomeroy defeated Republican flat-tax promoter Kevin Cramer second time, 56 percent to 41 percent.
LEGISLATURE - Republicans saw advantage in state House decrease from 72-26 to 66-32. Republican advantage in state Senate increased from 30-19 to 31-18.
OHIO
GOVERNOR - Secretary of State Bob Taft will be first Republican to succeed another in the Ohio governor's mansion since 1903 after beating Democrat Lee Fisher 50 percent to 45 percent.
SENATE - Republican Gov. George Voino-vich won 56 percent to 44 percent. Ohio will have two Republican senators for the first time since 1974, when John Glenn won the seat. Defeated Democrat Mary Boyle wants election certification delayed because of campaign finance controversy.
HOUSE - Unchanged at 8D, 11R. Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland, who lost seat once, wins re-election in southern district.
LEGISLATURE - Senate unchanged at 12D, 21R; Old House 39D, 60R; New House 40D, 59R. Former Democratic Congressman Eric Fingerhut retains seat for the party while heading to the state Senate.
PROPOSITIONS - Cincinnati voters side with baseball's Reds to put new stadium next to Cinergy Field, along the Ohio River. Ohioans say mourning-dove hunting shouldn't be banned again.
OKLAHOMA
GOVERNOR - Incumbent Republican Frank Keating became just the second governor to win consecutive terms, defeating state Rep. Laura Boyd, first female nominee for the job. Keating won 58 percent, Boyd 41 percent.
SENATE - GOP Sen. Don Nickles overwhelmed Don Carroll, who had to defeat a dead woman to win Democratic nomination. Nickles had 66 percent of the vote to Carroll's 31 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 0D, 6R; New: OD, 6R.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 33D, 15R; New Senate 33D, 15R; Old House: 65D, 36R; New House: 61D, 40R.
OREGON
GOVERNOR - Democratic Governor John Kitzhaber scored resounding victory over his anti-tax crusading GOP opponent Bill Sizemore, 63-to-31 percent.
SENATE - Democrat incumbent Ron Wyden inn a landslide over little-known Republican State Sen. John Lim, 59-to 35 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 4D, 1R; New, 3D, 1R, 1 uncertain.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 20R, 9D, 1IND. Old House, 31R, 28D, 1IND. Because of heavy absentee ballot voting, a new party breakdown may not become clear until Friday.
PROPOSITIONS - Defeated ban on clear-cutting, restoration of criminal penalties for pot. Leading: measure to legalize pot as a medicine for serious illnesses, and measure to make Oregon the first state to conduct its elections exclusively by mail.
PENNSYLVANIA
GOVERNOR - Republican Tom Ridge easily won a second term over Democratic state legislator and former nuclear scientist Ivan Itkin, 57 percent to 31 percent.
SENATE - Republican Arlen Specter cruised to re-election with 61 percent of the vote; he faced poorly funded Democratic state lawmaker Bill Lloyd, who got 35 percent.
HOUSE - Delegation remains 11 Democrats and 10 Republicans. Republican Rep. Jon Fox lost his rematch with Democrat Joseph Hoeffel III. In 1996, Fox beat Hoeffel by the smallest margin in the country - 84 votes.
LEGISLATURE - Democrats picked up one seat in the 203-member House, reducing the GOP's majority to 103-100. In the Senate, the Republicans held their 30-20 margin of control.
RHODE ISLAND
GOVERNOR - Republican Gov. Lincoln Almond slipped past moderate Democrat Myrth York, 51 percent to 42 percent. York, a tax attorney, also lost to Almond four years ago.
HOUSE - Old: 2D, 0R. New: 2D, 0R. Patrick Kennedy, son of Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and an important fund-raiser for the Democrats, and fellow incumbent Democrat Robert Weygand both scored landslide victories over little-known Republican opponents.
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 42D, 8R. New Senate: 42D, 8R. Old House: 84D, 16R. New House: 86D, 13R, 1I.
SOUTH CAROLINA
GOVERNOR - Voters bet on Democrat Jim Hodges, who wants a state lottery to finance school improvements. With 53 percent of the vote, he ousted Gov. David Beasley, who angered supporters of video gambling and the Confederate flag during his first term.
SENATE - Once considered vulnerable after 32 years in office, Ernest "Fritz" Hollings won six more years with 52 percent over three-term Republican Rep. Bob Inglis' 48 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 2D, 4R; New: 2D, 4R.
LEGISLATURE - Old House: 51D, 72R, 1I. New House: 55D, 65R, four seats too close to call. Democrats took three of six seats where video poker interests targeted Republicans for defeat.
SOUTH DAKOTA
GOVERNOR - Bill Janklow won fourth four-year term, defeating state Senate Democratic Leader Bernie Hunhoff 64 percent to 33 percent.
SENATE - Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle used his name recognition and big campaign war chest to defeat Republican Ron Schmidt, a lawyer, 62 percent to 36 percent.
HOUSE - For the state's only House seat, Republican Rep. John Thune easily defeated virtual unknown Democrat Jeff Moser, who conceded as the polls closed.
LEGISLATURE - Republicans held on to majorities in both houses, though final results were slow in coming.
TENNESSEE
GOVERNOR: Republican incumbent Don Sundquist defeated political gadfly John Jay Hooker, 69 percent to 29 percent.
HOUSE: All nine congressmen - five Republicans, four Democrats - won.
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 18D, 15R; New Senate: 18D, 15R. Old House: 61D, 38R. New House: 59D, 40R.
TEXAS
GOVERNOR - Gov. George W. Bush demolished Democrat Garry Mauro, 69 percent to 31 percent. Next up: White House run in 2000?
HOUSE - Old: 17D, 13R; New: 17D, 13R. Every incumbent running re-elected. Democrat Charlie Gonzalez elected to replace 82-year-old father Henry B. Gonzalez.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 14D, 17R; New Senate: 15D, 16R. Old State House: 82D, 68R; New State House: 79D, 71R.
UTAH
SENATE - In winning second term 64-33 percent, Republican Bob Bennett extends to 28 years Utah Democrats' failure to win a Senate seat.
HOUSE - Old: 3R, 0D; New: same. Freshman Republican Rep. Merrill Cook edged former teachers union president Lily Eskelsen in only close contest.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 20R, 9D; New Senate: 17R, 12D. Old House: 55R, 20D; New House: 54R, 21D.
PROPOSITIONS - Voters amended Constitution to require two-thirds voter approval for any citizen initiative concerning wildlife; deprive incarcerated felons of voting right.
VERMONT
GOVERNOR - Howard Dean, Democrat in office since 1991, survived stiffest challenge yet, winning 56 percent vs. 41 percent for feisty farmer Ruth Dwyer.
SENATE - Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy won 72 percent - including the vote of his opponent, retired dairy farmer Fred Tuttle, 79, who didn't want to go to Washington. Tuttle got 23 percent.
HOUSE - Bernard Sanders, only independent in Congress, won easily, 64 percent to Republican Mark Candon's 33 percent.
LEGISLATURE - Democrats maintained 17-13 control of the Senate. Democrats were expected to lose some of their 89 seats in the House; Republicans added to their 57 seats and other parties also added to their four seats.
VIRGINIA
HOUSE - Democrat James P. Moran Jr., Clinton ally-turned-critic, trounced Republican Demaris Miller, wife of former Reagan budget director Jim Miller, in Washington suburbs. All 11 Virginia congressmen re-elected convincingly.
WASHINGTON
SENATE - Incumbent Democrat Patty Murray, self-described "mom in tennis shoes," walked over conservative GOP firebrand Linda Smith in year's only woman-vs.-woman Senate race, 59 percent to 41 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 3D, 6R; New: 5D, 4R. Democrat Brian Baird beat Republican Don Benton in bitter campaign to succeed Smith.
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 23D, 26R; New Senate: 26D, 23R. Old House: 41D, 57R; New House: 48D, 50R. Several races in both houses undecided.
PROPOSITIONS - Approved ban on government affirmative action. Approved medical use of marijuana. Approved increase in minimum wage. Defeated ban on late-term abortions.
WEST VIRGINIA
HOUSE - Before and after: 3D, 0R.
LEGISLATURE: Old Senate: 25D, 9R; New Senate 29D, 5R. Old House: 74D, 26R; New House, 75D, 25R.
WISCONSIN
SENATE - Democratic incumbent Russ Feingold edged Rep. Mark Neumann, 50 percent to 49 percent.
GOVERNOR - Republican Tommy Thompson coasted to record fourth four-year term over Democrat Ed Garvey, former NFL union leader, 60 percent to 38 percent.
HOUSE - Old: 5D, 4R; New: same. Democratic state Rep. Tammy Baldwin, one of three lesbians running for Congress nationwide, defeated Republican Josephine Musser.
LEGISLATURE - Old Senate: 17R, 16D; New Senate: same. Old Assembly: 53R, 46D; New Assembly: 54R, 44D, with one race leaning Republican.
WYOMING
GOVERNOR - Gov. Jim Geringer claimed 16-point victory over bar owner and Democratic state Sen. John Vinich, who blamed state's economic woes on incumbent.
HOUSE - GOP incumbent Barbara Cubin defeated journalist Scott Farris to win third term as state's lone representative in the House.
LEGISLATURE - House breakdown stayed the same, with Republicans holding a 43-17 majority. Democrats picked up one Senate seat, still in minority, 20-10.
PROPOSITIONS - Approved constitutional amendment that makes it harder to get initiatives on ballot.
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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
National results
GOVERNORS
. Dem GOP Other
Won 11 23 2
Holdovers 6 8 0
Trend 17 31 2
Current 17 32 1
Net Change 0 -1 +1
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
... Dem GOP Other
Won 210 223 1
Leading 1 0 0
Trend 211 223 1
Current 206 228 1
Net Change +5 -5 0
U.S. SENATE
... Dem GOP Other
Won 17 16 0
Leading 1 0 0
Holdovers 27 39 0
Trend 45 55 0
Current 45 55 0
Net Change 0 0 0