Democratic: Bill Clinton (incumbent President, former Governor of Arkansas) Running mate: Al Gore (incumbent Vice President, former Senator of Tennessee) Republican: Bob Dole (Senator of Kansas) Running mate: Jack Kemp (former Cabinet Secretary and congressman of New York) Reform Party: H. Ross Perot (businessman from Texas) Pat Choate (economist from the District of Columbia)
The most recent US Senate race in California was 2012, between incumbent US Senator Diane Feinstein (D) and Elizabeth Emken (R). Senator Feinstein was re-elected. The next US Senate race in California is not until 2016, when Senator Barbara Boxer (D) will be up for re-election.
Mitt Romney and Barack Obama
In 1854 , Senator Stephen A. Douglas prosposed a bill that would divide the Nebraska territory into two terriotories - Nebraska and Kansas .
The two main candidates are Mike Bloomberg (again), and Bill Thompson.
If you are asking about current day (2016), the remaining two Democratic primary candidates are former First Lady and former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, and current US Senator from Vermont Bernie Sanders.
Steve Poizner and Meg Whitman
Barack Obama and hillary Clinton lmao,Biden NOT hilary
The Kansas-Nebraska Act was concerned with the admission of the Kansas and Nebraska territories into the USA. Since the two sections could not agree whether these future states should be slave or free, Senator Stephen Douglas of Illinois suggested that the people of each state should vote on it. The result was Bleeding Kansas.
Abraham Lincoln
The running of two Democrats effectively split the party in the 1860 election. The two candidates received votes from the Democratic Party, while the entire Republican Party, which held the majority of the larger North, threw its weight behind Lincoln. Southerners feared his election would ruin their way of life, and seceded from the union.
The main purpose of the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 was to give voters in each of the two territories the right to vote on whether slavery would be allowed before the territories applied for statehood.