2020 Tennessee elections

In the general election, Incumbent United States President Donald Trump won Tennessee with 60.66% of the vote.

Donald Trump won the Republican primary in a landslide victory over former congressman Joe Walsh of Illinois and former governor Bill Weld of Massachusetts.

Vice President Joe Biden garnered the Democratic nomination, beating out Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

March 3, 2020 primary results Incumbent Republican Senator Lamar Alexander announced that he would not run for re-election on December 17, 2018.

[5] Environmentalist, activist and Democratic nominee Marquita Bradshaw, the first black woman to win a major political party nomination in any statewide race in Tennessee,[6] was defeated by Republican nominee Bill Hagerty, former United States Ambassador to Japan and former Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development.

Final results by county
Final results by county:
Trump
  • 50–60%
  • 60–70%
  • 70–80%
  • 80–90%
Biden
  • 50–60%
  • 60–70%
Final results by county
Final results by county:
Biden
  • 30–40%
    40–50%
  • 50–60%
  • 60–70%
Sanders
  • 30–40%
Final results by county
Final results by county:
Trump
  • >90%
Final results by county
Final results by county:
Hagerty
  • 80–90%
  • 70–80%
  • 60–70%
  • 50–60%
Bradshaw
  • 60–70%
  • 50–60%
Results by county:
Bradshaw
  • Bradshaw—60–70%
  • Bradshaw—50–60%
  • Bradshaw—40–50%
  • Bradshaw—<40%
Mackler/Davis tie
  • Mackler/Davis tie—<40%
Kimbrough
  • Kimbrough—<40%
Mackler
  • Mackler—<40%
  • Mackler—<40–50%
Davis
  • Davis—<40%
Results by county:
Hagerty
  • Hagerty—70–80%
  • Hagerty—60–70%
  • Hagerty—50–60%
  • Hagerty—40–50%
  • Hagerty—<40%
Sethi
  • Sethi—40–50%
  • Sethi—50–60%
District results
District results:
Republican
  • 70–80%
  • 60–70%
Democratic
  • >90%
  • 70–80%