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| election_date =November 8, 1932
| election_date =November 8, 1932
| image1 = [[Image:FDR in 1933.jpg|170px]]
| image1 = [[Image:FDR in 1933.jpg|170px]]
| nominee1 = '''[[Franklin D. Roosevelt]]'''
| nominee1 = '''[[Franklin Diddy. Roosevelt]]'''
| party1 = Democratic Party (United States)
| party1 = Democratic Party (United States)
| home_state1 = [[New York]]
| home_state1 = [[New York]]

Revision as of 19:59, 1 March 2012

United States presidential election, 1932

← 1928 November 8, 1932 1936 →
 
Nominee Franklin Diddy. Roosevelt Herbert Hoover
Party Democratic Republican
Home state New York Iowa
Running mate John Nance Garner Charles Curtis
Electoral vote 472 59
States carried 42 6
Popular vote 22,821,277 15,761,254
Percentage 57.4% 39.7%

Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by Hoover/Curtis, Blue denotes those won by Roosevelt/Garner. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Herbert Hoover
Republican

Elected President

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic

The United States presidential election of 1932 took place in the midst of the Great Depression that had ruined the promises of President Herbert Hoover to bring about a new era of prosperity. Economics was dominant, and the sort of cultural issues that had dominated previous elections (such as Catholicism in 1928 and the KKK in 1924) were dormant. Prohibition was a favorite Democratic target, as few Republicans tried to defend it. There was a mounting demand to end prohibition and bring back beer, liquor, and the resulting tax revenues.[1] The Democratic nomination went to the well known governor of the largest state, New York's Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR). He had been reelected governor in a landslide in 1930. People still remembered his cousin, the first president Roosevelt, and FDR had been the losing vice presidential nominee in 1920. This time he united all wings of the party, avoided divisive cultural issues such as religion and the KKK, and brought in a leading southern conservative as his running mate, House Speaker John Nance Garner.

The theme of the campaign was an all-out attack on Hoover's economic failures, with the incumbent hard pressed to defend himself. FDR blamed the Great Depression on Hoover, and his protectionist policies. FDR lashed out at Hoover: "I accuse the present Administration of being the greatest spending Administration in peacetime in all our history."[2] Garner accused Hoover of "leading the country down the path of socialism."[3] Roosevelt himself did not have a clear idea of the New Deal at this point, so he promised no specific programs and tried to appeal to practically all groups of voters, even Republicans. Roosevelt won by a landslide, and this "critical election" marked the collapse of the Fourth Party System or Progressive Era. With another landslide in the 1934 off-year elections, the electorate was realigned into the Fifth Party System, dominated by Roosevelt's New Deal Coalition.

Nominations

Republican Party nomination

Republican candidates:

As the year 1932 began, the Republican Party believed Hoover's protectionism and aggressive fiscal policies would solve the depression; in any case, President Herbert Hoover controlled the party. Little-known former United States Senator Joseph I. France ran against Hoover in the primaries, but Hoover was often unopposed. France's primary wins were tempered by his defeat to Hoover in his home state of Maryland and the fact that few delegates to the national convention were chosen in the primaries.

Hoover's managers at the Republican National Convention, which met in Chicago between June 14 and June 16, ran a tight ship, not allowing expressions of concern for the direction of the nation. He was nominated on the first ballot with 98% of the delegate vote.

The tally was spectacularly lopsided:

Presidential Ballot, RNC 1932
Herbert Hoover 1126.5
John J. Blaine 13
Calvin Coolidge 4.5
Joseph I. France 4
James Wolcott Wadsworth, Jr. 1

Both the agricultural Republicans and the extreme hard-money Republicans (the latter hoping to nominate former President Calvin Coolidge) balked at the floor managers and voted against the renomination of Vice-President Charles Curtis, who won with just 55% of the delegate votes.

Democratic Party Nomination

Democratic candidates:

The leading candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1932 was New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR). Speaker of the House John Nance Garner and former Governor of New York Al Smith were trailing him. Before the 1932 Democratic National Convention met in Chicago between June 27 and July 2, FDR was believed to have more delegate votes than all of his opponents combined. However, due to the "two-thirds" nominating rule then used by the Democrats, FDR's opponents hoped that he would be unable to obtain the two-thirds majority necessary to win, and that they could gain votes on later ballots.[citation needed]

On the first three ballots Roosevelt had well over a majority of the delegate vote, but still lacked the two-thirds majority. Before the fourth ballot his managers - James Farley and Louis McHenry Howe - struck a deal with House Speaker John Nance Garner, who was also a candidate. Garner agreed to drop out of the race and support FDR, and in return FDR agreed to name Garner as his running mate. With this agreement Roosevelt won the two-thirds majority and with it the presidential nomination.[citation needed]

General election

Campaign

Hoover addresses a large crowd in his 1932 campaign.

After making an airplane trip to the Democratic convention, Roosevelt accepted the nomination in person. In this history-making speech, Roosevelt promised to "abolish useless offices" and "eliminate unnecessary functions of Government," stating that "Government—Federal and State and local—costs too much," and even promised to help facilitate the "restoration of the trade of the world." [4] Roosevelt's trip to Chicago was the first of several successful, precedent-making moves designed to make him appear to be the candidate of change in the election. Large crowds greeted Roosevelt as he traveled around the nation; his campaign song "Happy Days Are Here Again" became one of the most popular in American political history.[5] -- and indeed, the unofficial anthem of the Democratic party.[6]

Election results by county.

In contrast, Hoover was widely blamed for the Great Depression. For more than two years, President Hoover had been restricting trade and aggressively taxing the economy with legislation such as the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act and the Revenue Act of 1932. The outrage caused by the deaths of veterans in the Bonus Army incident combined with the catastrophic economic effects of Hoover's domestic policies reduced his chances of a second term from slim to none. His attempts to campaign in public were a disaster, as he often had objects (especially rotten fruit and vegetables) thrown at him or his vehicle as he rode through city streets. In his addresses, Hoover attacked Governor Roosevelt as a capitalist president who would only make the Depression worse by decreasing taxes, reducing government intervention in the economy, promoting "trade [with] the world," and cutting "Government—Federal and State and local." [4] However, with unemployment at 23.6%,[7][8] Hoover's criticisms of Roosevelt's campaign promises did nothing more than further lower his popularity with the public; in fact, it was said that "Even a vaguely talented dog-catcher could have been elected president against the Republicans." [9] Hoover even received a letter from an Illinois man that advised, "Vote for Roosevelt and make it unanimous".

Hoover called Gov. Roosevelt a "chameleon in plaid" and Roosevelt called President Hoover a "fat, timid capon."[10] In the last days of campaigning, Hoover criticized Roosevelt's "nonsense ... tirades ... glittering generalizations ... ignorance" and "defamation".[10]

The election was held on November 8, 1932. Maine held separate state elections in September.

1932 was a realigning election, as Roosevelt and the Democratic ticket won a sweeping victory over Hoover and the Republicans, extending their control over the U.S. House and gaining control of the U.S. Senate. Twelve years of Republican leadership came to an end, and 20 consecutive years of Democratic control of the White House would ensue.[10] Until 1932, the Republicans had controlled the Presidency for 56 of the previous 72 years, dating to Abraham Lincoln's election in 1860. After 1932, the Democrats would control the Presidency for 28 of the next 36 years, until the 1968 election created a new alignment that favored the Republicans (cemented in 1980). The vote for Roosevelt was nearly eight million higher than that for Al Smith in 1928, an increase of 52%, whereas Hoover's popular vote was reduced by 26% from his result in the 1928 election. This was the first election since 1876 in which the Democratic candidate won a majority of the popular vote.

In addition, the vote for most minor parties rose dramatically: increases of 230% for the Socialist Party (Norman Thomas' highest raw vote total of his campaigns); an increase of 112% for the Communist Party; an increase of 305% for the Prohibition Party; and an increase of 57% for the Socialist Labor Party.

FDR's victory with 472 electoral votes stood until the 1964 victory of Lyndon Johnson (486 votes) as the most electoral votes ever won by a first-time contestant in a presidential election (Johnson was President by virtue of ascending to the office upon the death of John F. Kennedy as his Vice President), and until the 1980 victory of Ronald Reagan (489 votes) as the most electoral votes ever won by a non-incumbent candidate. He also set a new record for the most number of electoral votes an American presidential candidate had ever won (which he himself would break when he was re-elected in 1936 with 523 votes).

Results

The Roosevelt ticket swept every region of the country except New England and carried many reliable Republican states that had not been carried by the Democrats since their electoral landslide of 1912, when the Republican vote was divided. The state of Minnesota was carried by a Democrat for the first time in its history (leaving Vermont as the only remaining state never to be carried by a Democratic candidate).

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
Franklin D. Roosevelt Democratic New York 22,821,277 57.4% 472 John Nance Garner Texas 472
Herbert Hoover Republican California 15,761,254 39.7% 59 Charles Curtis Kansas 59
Norman Thomas Socialist New York 884,885 2.2% 0 James H. Maurer Pennsylvania 0
William Z. Foster Communist Illinois 103,307 0.3% 0 James W. Ford Alabama 0
William David Upshaw Prohibition Georgia 81,905 0.2% 0 Frank S. Regan Illinois 0
William Hope Harvey Liberty Arkansas 53,425 0.1% 0 Frank Hemenway Washington 0
Verne L. Reynolds Socialist Labor New York 33,276 0.1% 0 J.W. Aiken Massachusetts 0
Other 12,569 0.1% Other
Total 39,751,898 100% 531 531
Needed to win 266 266

Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1932 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 31, 2005.Source (Electoral Vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 31, 2005.

Close States

Margin of victory less than 5%:

  1. Connecticut, 1.1%
  2. New Hampshire, 1.4%
  3. New Jersey, 1.9%
  4. Delaware, 2.4%
  5. Ohio, 2.9%
  6. Massachusetts, 4.0%

Results by state


Franklin Roosevelt

Democratic
Herbert Hoover

Republican
Norman Thomas

Socialist
Other State Total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
#
Alabama 11 207,910 84.7 11 34,675 14.1 - 2,030 0.8 - 739 0.3 - 245,354 AL
Arizona 3 79,264 67.0 3 36,104 30.5 - 2,618 2.2 - 265 0.2 - 118,251 AZ
Arkansas 9 189,602 86.0 9 28,467 12.9 - 1,269 0.6 - 1,224 0.6 - 220,562 AR
California 22 1,324,157 58.4 22 847,902 37.4 - 63,299 2.8 - 32,608 1.4 - 2,267,966 CA
Colorado 6 250,877 54.8 6 189,617 41.4 - 13,591 3.0 - 3,611 0.8 - 457,696 CO
Connecticut 8 281,632 47.4 - 288,420 48.5 8 20,840 3.5 - 3,651 0.6 - 594,183 CT
Delaware 3 54,319 48.1 - 57,073 50.6 3 1,376 1.2 - 133 0.1 - 112,901 DE
Florida 7 206,307 74.7 7 69,170 25.0 - 775 0.3 - not on ballot 276,252 FL
Georgia 12 234,118 91.6 12 19,863 7.8 - 461 0.2 - 1,148 0.5 - 255,590 GA
Idaho 4 109,479 58.7 4 71,417 38.3 - 526 0.3 - 5,203 2.8 - 186,625 ID
Illinois 29 1,882,304 55.2 29 1,432,756 42.0 - 67,258 2.0 - 25,608 0.8 - 3,407,926 IL
Indiana 14 862,054 54.7 14 677,184 42.9 - 21,388 1.4 - 16,301 1.0 - 1,576,927 IN
Iowa 11 598,019 57.7 11 414,433 40.0 - 20,467 2.00 - 3,768 0.4 - 1,036,687 IA
Kansas 9 424,204 53.6 9 349,498 44.1 - 18,276 2.3 - not on ballot 791,978 KS
Kentucky 11 580,574 59.1 11 394,716 40.2 - 3,853 0.4 - 3,920 0.4 - 983,063 KY
Louisiana 10 249,418 92.8 10 18,853 7.0 - not on ballot 533 0.2 - 268,804 LA
Maine 5 128,907 43.2 - 166,631 55.8 5 2,489 0.8 - 417 0.1 - 298,444 ME
Maryland 8 314,314 61.5 8 184,184 36.0 - 10,489 2.1 - 2,067 0.4 - 511,054 MD
Massachusetts 17 800,148 50.6 17 736,959 46.6 - 34,305 2.2 - 8,702 0.6 - 1,580,114 MA
Michigan 19 871,700 52.4 19 739,894 44.4 - 39,205 2.4 - 13,966 0.8 - 1,664,765 MI
Minnesota 11 600,806 59.9 11 363,959 36.3 - 25,476 2.5 - 12,602 1.3 - 1,002,843 MN
Mississippi 9 140,168 96.0 9 5,180 3.4 - 686 0.5 - not on ballot 146,034 MS
Missouri 15 1,025,406 63.7 15 564,713 35.1 - 16,374 1.0 - 3,401 0.2 - 1,609,894 MO
Montana 4 127,286 58.8 4 78,078 36.1 - 7,891 3.7 - 3,224 1.5 - 216,479 MT
Nebraska 7 359,082 63.0 7 201,177 35.3 - 9,876 1.7 - 2 0.0 - 570,137 NE
Nevada 3 28,756 69.4 3 12,674 30.6 - not on ballot 41,430 NV
New Hampshire 4 100,680 49.0 - 103,629 50.4 4 947 0.5 - 264 0.1 - 205,520 NH
New Jersey 16 806,394 49.5 16 775,406 47.6 - 42,988 2.6 - 4,719 0.3 - 1,629,507 NJ
New Mexico 3 95,089 62.7 3 54,217 35.8 - 1,776 1.2 - 524 0.4 - 151,606 NM
New York 47 2,534,959 54.1 47 1,937,963 41.3 - 177,397 3.8 - 38,295 0.8 - 4,688,614 NY
North Carolina 13 497,566 69.9 13 208,344 29.3 - 5,591 0.8 - not on ballot 711,501 NC
North Dakota 4 178,350 69.6 4 71,772 28.0 - 3,521 1.4 - 2,647 1.0 - 256,290 ND
Ohio 26 1,301,695 49.9 26 1,227,319 47.0 - 64,094 2.5 - 16,620 0.6 - 2,609,728 OH
Oklahoma 11 516,468 73.3 11 188,165 26.7 - not on ballot 704,633 OK
Oregon 5 213,871 58.0 5 136,019 36.7 - 15,450 4.2 - 3,468 0.9 - 368,808 OR
Pennsylvania 36 1,295,948 45.3 - 1,453,540 50.8 36 91,223 3.2 - 18,466 0.7 - 2,859,177 PA
Rhode Island 4 146,604 55.1 4 115,266 43.3 - 3,138 1.2 - 1,162 0.4 - 266,170 RI
South Carolina 8 102,347 98.0 8 1,978 1.9 - 82 0.1 - not on ballot 104,407 SC
South Dakota 4 183,515 63.6 4 99,212 34.4 - 1,551 0.5 - 4,160 1.4 - 288,438 SD
Tennessee 11 259,473 66.5 11 126,752 32.5 - 1,796 0.5 - 2,235 0.6 - 390,256 TN
Texas 23 760,348 88.1 23 97,959 11.4 - 4,450 0.5 - 669 0.1 - 836,426 TX
Utah 4 116,750 56.5 4 84,795 41.1 - 4,087 2.0 - 946 0.5 - 206,578 UT
Vermont 3 56,266 41.1 - 78,984 57.7 3 1,533 1.1 - 197 0.1 - 136,980 VT
Virginia 11 203,979 68.5 11 89,637 30.1 - 2,382 0.8 - 1,944 0.7 - 297,942 VA
Washington 8 353,260 57.5 8 208,645 33.9 - 17,080 2.8 - 35,829 5.8 - 614,814 WA
West Virginia 8 405,124 54.5 8 330,731 44.5 - 5,133 0.7 - 2,786 0.4 - 743,774 WV
Wisconsin 12 707,410 63.5 12 347,741 31.2 - 53,379 4.8 - 6,278 0.6 - 1,114,808 WI
Wyoming 3 54,370 56.1 3 39,583 40.8 - 2,829 2.9 - 180 0.2 - 96,962 WY
TOTALS: 531 22,821,277 57.4 472 15,761,254 39.7 59 884,885 2.2 - 284,482 0.7 - 39,751,898

TO WIN: 266

Bibliography

  • Kristi Andersen, The Creation of a Democratic Majority: 1928-1936 (1979), statistical
  • James McGregor Burns, Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox (1956)
  • Frank Freidel, Franklin D. Roosevelt: The Triumph (1956)
  • Frank Freidel, "Election of 1932", in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., ed., The Coming to Power: Critical Presidential Elections in American History (1981),
  • Harold F. Gosnell, Champion Campaigner: Franklin D. Roosevelt (1952)
  • Herbert Hoover, The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Great Depression, 1929-1941 (1952)
  • Nicolaides, Becky M. "Radio Electioneering in the American Presidential Campaigns of 1932 and 1936," Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, June 1988, Vol. 8 Issue 2, pp 115–138
  • Roy V. Peel and Thomas C. Donnelly, The 1932 Campaign: An Analysis (1935)
  • Donald A. Ritchie, Electing FDR: The New Deal Campaign of 1932 (2007)
  • Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. The Crisis of the Old Order (1957),

See also

References

  1. ^ William E. Leuchtenburg, Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal 1932-1940 (1963) pp 1-17
  2. ^ Leuchtenburg, Franklin D. Roosevelt, p 11
  3. ^ F.D.R.'s Disputed Legacy, February 1, 1982 , TIME Magazine.
  4. ^ a b Roosevelt's Nomination Address, New Deal Network.
  5. ^ Steven Neal, The 1932 Democratic Convention, the Emergence of FDR--and How America Was Changed Forever (2005) p 244
  6. ^ Arnold Shaw, The jazz age: popular music in the 1920's (1989) p. 228
  7. ^ "Overall Unemployment Rate in the U.S. Civilian Labor Force, 1920–2007 — Infoplease.com". Infoplease.com. Retrieved 2008-11-04.
  8. ^ "Timeline of the Great Depression". Hyperhistory.com. Retrieved 2008-11-04.
  9. ^ Cambell, Jeff (November 19, 2008). "Hoover's Popularity". Lonely Planet. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  10. ^ a b c Gibbs, Nancy (November 10, 2008). "When New President Meets Old, It's Not Always Pretty". TIME. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)