2014 United States Senate election in South Dakota


The 2014 United States Senate election in South Dakota took place on November 4, 2014, to elect a member of the United States Senate to represent the state of South Dakota, concurrently with the election of the Governor of South Dakota, as well as other elections to the United States Senate in other states and elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.
Incumbent Democratic Senator Tim Johnson decided to retire instead of running for re-election to a fourth term in office. As a result, this was the 1st open seat election since 1978. With Mike Rounds' election, Republicans held both of South Dakota's Senate seats for the first time since 1987 and gave South Dakota an all GOP congressional delegation for the 1st time since 1963.
Businessman Rick Weiland ran unopposed for the Democratic nomination, while the Republicans picked former Governor of South Dakota Mike Rounds. Also running were two independent candidates: former Republican U.S. Senator Larry Pressler, who served three terms in the Senate from 1979 to 1997, and former Republican state senator Gordon Howie.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Declared

Polling


Hypothetical polling
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Results

Weiland faced no opposition in the Democratic primary.

Republican primary

Candidates

Declared

Polling


Hypothetical polling
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Results

Independents and Third Parties

Candidates

Declared

  • Gordon Howie, former Republican state senator and Republican candidate for Governor in 2010
  • Larry Pressler, former Republican U.S. Senator

    Disqualified

  • Clayton Walker, small business consultant and Democratic candidate for state representative in 2010

    Withdrew

  • Kurt Evans, teacher and nominee for the U.S. Senate in 2002

    General election

Campaign

Rounds was widely seen as the front runner throughout the campaign. However, he faced ongoing criticism on the election trail for his possible involvement with the State's ongoing EB-5 visa investigation, concerning the conflict of interest that Rounds' administration had when administering the EB-5 program. State officials misused funds to pay for their salaries, did not disclose that they owned companies which they gave contracts to, directed money towards companies that went bankrupt and arranged for loans from unknown sources from shell companies located in tax havens. In October 2014, Rounds admitted that he had approved a $1 million state loan to meat-packing company Northern Beef shortly after learning that Secretary of Tourism and State Development Richard Benda had agreed to join the company, with Benda then getting another $600,000 in loans that was ultimately used to pay his own salary. Benda committed suicide in October 2013, days before a possible indictment over embezzlement and grand theft charges.
Columnist Jonathan Ellis of the Argus Leader called Rounds' fundraising "anemic" compared to the amount of outside money coming into the state on Weiland's side, and criticized the entire Rounds campaign as "more suited for sheriff of Mayberry County than U.S. Senate."

Debates

  • , October 29, 2014

    Predictions

Polling


Hypothetical polling
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;With Herseth Sandlin
  • * Internal polling for the Mike Rounds campaign
  • ^ Internal polling for the Rick Weiland campaign

    Results

Maps

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