The 1976 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 2, 1976. All 50 states and the District of Columbia, were part of the 1976 United States presidential election. Voters chose 17 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.
New Jersey was won by the Republican nominees, incumbent President Gerald Ford of Michigan and his running mate Senator Bob Dole of Kansas. Ford and Dole defeated the Democratic nominees, Governor Jimmy Carter of Georgia and his running mate Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota.
Ford narrowly carried New Jersey with 50.08% of the vote to Carter's 47.92%, a victory margin of 2.16%. Anti-war former Democratic Senator Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota, running as an Independent presidential candidate, came in a distant third, with 1.09%.
New Jersey weighed in for this election as about 4% more Republican than the national average. New Jersey in this era was a swing state with a slight Republican lean, and Gerald Ford, a moderate Republican, held enough appeal among New Jersey's many moderate suburban voters to carry the state 50âÂÂ48 even as Jimmy Carter narrowly won nationally by a 50âÂÂ48 margin. As of the 2024 presidential election, this is the last time a Democrat won the presidency and/or the national popular vote without winning New Jersey. The state would not vote for a losing candidate again until 2000, and for the loser of the popular vote until 2004.
Reflecting the closeness of the statewide result, Ford and Carter virtually split New Jersey's 21 counties: Ford won 11 counties to Carter's 10. The native Southerner Jimmy Carter performed unusually well among rural voters in South Jersey, winning 6 out of 7 of the southernmost counties in the state. Carter's strongest county by vote share was rural Cumberland County in the far south of the state by the Delaware border, where he won 58âÂÂ41. However his comfortable victories in more populous traditional Democratic base counties are what made him competitive statewide: in Essex County, he won 55âÂÂ42, in Hudson County, he won 55âÂÂ44, and in Mercer County, he won 53âÂÂ45. He also won heavily populated Middlesex County, but by a narrow 51âÂÂ47 margin.
The Northern moderate Ford, however, edged out Carter statewide with comfortable victories in heavily populated suburban counties which were dominated by moderate Republicans. In most presidential elections in this era, the most Republican county in the state would usually be rural, sparsely populated Sussex County. While Ford did win Sussex County decisively by a 60âÂÂ38 margin, Ford's strongest county by vote share was actually suburban Morris County, where he beat Carter 61âÂÂ37. In suburban Monmouth County, Ford won 54âÂÂ44. Other important victories for Ford were in fairly populated Ocean County, which he won 57âÂÂ41, and Passaic County, which he won 51âÂÂ46. However Ford's biggest prize was very heavily populated Bergen County, which went decisively to Ford by a 56âÂÂ43 margin. This was the first time since 1916 that a Democrat won the presidency without Passaic County.