A second Democrat, Barbara B. Gypin, polled 35 votes (1 percent).
The Australian Democrats polled their lowest vote since their creation in 1977, and lost the three Senate seats they were defending.
If the Democrats had polled better, they would have collected Family First and Liberal preferences and won the final vacancy.
After Clegg became Leader, the polls were mixed; the Liberal Democrats occasionally polled above 20 points, averaging around 19%.
In 1955, a party split denied him reelection, although the Democrats polled more votes together than did the Republican opponents.
Three other Democrats polled a total of 14 percent of the primary vote.
Left and Democrats contested the 2007 parliamentary elections and polled 13.2% of the vote.
Before their catastrophic collapse in recent years, the Democrats polled impressive results in the western near-city suburbs.
The Democrats polled a combined 57 percent of the vote to the GOP candidates' 43 percent.
The People's Party and the Democrats had between them polled over 5,500,000 votes in 1928, but in 1932 they polled less than a million.