1964 United States presidential election in Wyoming
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
County Results
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Elections in Wyoming |
---|
The 1964 United States presidential election in Wyoming took place on November 3, 1964, as part of the 1964 United States presidential election. State voters chose three[2] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Wyoming was won by incumbent Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson, with 56.56% of the popular vote, against the Republican nominee, Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater, with 43.44% of the popular vote, representing a margin of victory of 13.2%.[3][4] Johnson's victory was part of a nationwide landslide in which he captured many traditionally Republican states, and Wyoming was no exception.
Johnson enjoyed bipartisan support due to sympathy over the Assassination of his predecessor John F. Kennedy in 1963, along with support for many of his programs such as the Great Society, which aimed to eliminate poverty in America, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed racial discrimination. Goldwater, a believer in free markets and low taxes, famously opposed both of these programs, and suggested making social security voluntary, which cost him a great deal of support among moderates – including Republicans – who viewed him as too conservative. Nelson Rockefeller and George W. Romney, the governors of New York and Michigan respectively, refused to endorse Goldwater. He did receive some support from Nixon and former President Dwight D. Eisenhower; however, the former wanted to see much of Goldwater's agenda struck down, while Eisenhower's support was limited to a single commercial, as he never fully forgave the Arizona Senator for calling many of his biggest accomplishments as president such as the Interstate Highway System "a dime store New Deal.[5] Democrats successfully portrayed him as an extremist, most famously with the Daisy Television Ad. With Johnson's victory, Democrat Gale W. McGee held his Senate seat and Democrats flipped the state's sole congressional seat. They even managed to regain control of the Wyoming House of Representatives and got within a single seat of capturing the State Senate, an astounding achievement in a state that political pundits had written off in the years prior as "too red".[6]
Despite his stunning defeat, Goldwater's campaign began a long term political realignment in American politics, with conservatives beginning to sway towards the Republican Party, ultimately culminating in the 1980 presidential victory of Ronald Reagan, who had supported Goldwater in 1964, famously giving a speech on his behalf titled "A Time For Choosing", which raised over $1 million for the Republican nominee's campaign,[7] and launching Reagan into the national political spotlight. Additionally, many Northeastern liberals who had previously favored the Republicans began to move towards the Democrats, which would ultimately flip the Northeast blue in 1992.
As of 2024, this remains the last presidential election in which Wyoming has voted Democratic; in fact, no Democrat since has reached even 40% of the state's vote. This is also the last occasion that Laramie County (home to the capital and largest city of Cheyenne), Fremont County, Sheridan County, Park County, Uinta County, Lincoln County, Goshen County, Big Horn County, Platte County, or Hot Springs County have voted for a Democratic presidential nominee.[8]
Results
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Lyndon B. Johnson (inc.) | 80,718 | 56.56% | |
Republican | Barry Goldwater | 61,998 | 43.44% | |
Total votes | 142,716 | 100.00% |
Results by county
County[9] | Lyndon B. Johnson Democrat |
Barry Goldwater Republican |
Margin | Total votes cast | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Albany | 6,019 | 67.31% | 2,923 | 32.69% | 3,096 | 34.62% | 8,942 |
Big Horn | 2,690 | 50.21% | 2,668 | 49.79% | 22 | 0.42% | 5,358 |
Campbell | 1,196 | 42.68% | 1,606 | 57.32% | -410 | -14.64% | 2,802 |
Carbon | 4,322 | 66.68% | 2,160 | 33.32% | 2,162 | 33.36% | 6,482 |
Converse | 1,250 | 44.50% | 1,559 | 55.50% | -309 | -11.00% | 2,809 |
Crook | 780 | 39.12% | 1,214 | 60.88% | -434 | -21.76% | 1,994 |
Fremont | 5,985 | 55.45% | 4,809 | 44.55% | 1,176 | 10.90% | 10,794 |
Goshen | 2,749 | 51.35% | 2,604 | 48.65% | 145 | 2.70% | 5,353 |
Hot Springs | 1,380 | 52.91% | 1,228 | 47.09% | 152 | 5.82% | 2,608 |
Johnson | 852 | 34.19% | 1,640 | 65.81% | -788 | -31.62% | 2,492 |
Laramie | 16,059 | 65.22% | 8,563 | 34.78% | 7,496 | 30.44% | 24,622 |
Lincoln | 2,273 | 55.66% | 1,811 | 44.34% | 462 | 11.32% | 4,084 |
Natrona | 11,167 | 52.42% | 10,135 | 47.58% | 1,032 | 4.84% | 21,302 |
Niobrara | 843 | 42.90% | 1,122 | 57.10% | -279 | -14.20% | 1,965 |
Park | 3,745 | 50.32% | 3,698 | 49.68% | 47 | 0.64% | 7,443 |
Platte | 1,890 | 56.25% | 1,470 | 43.75% | 420 | 12.50% | 3,360 |
Sheridan | 4,747 | 51.39% | 4,491 | 48.61% | 256 | 2.78% | 9,238 |
Sublette | 791 | 46.78% | 900 | 53.22% | -109 | -6.44% | 1,691 |
Sweetwater | 5,969 | 75.43% | 1,944 | 24.57% | 4,025 | 50.86% | 7,913 |
Teton | 968 | 47.24% | 1,081 | 52.76% | -113 | -5.52% | 2,049 |
Uinta | 1,929 | 61.93% | 1,186 | 38.07% | 743 | 23.86% | 3,115 |
Washakie | 1,695 | 49.74% | 1,713 | 50.26% | -18 | -0.52% | 3,408 |
Weston | 1,419 | 49.07% | 1,473 | 50.93% | -54 | -1.86% | 2,892 |
Totals | 80,718 | 56.56% | 61,998 | 43.44% | 18,720 | 13.12% | 142,716 |
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
See also
References
- ^ "United States Presidential election of 1964 – Encyclopædia Britannica". Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ "1964 Election for the Forty-Fifth Term (1965–69)". Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ "1964 Presidential General Election Results – Wyoming". Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ "The American Presidency Project – Election of 1964". Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ "The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Social Security".
- ^ Hinckley, John T. (January 22, 1965). "The 1964 Election in Wyoming". The Western Political Quarterly. 18 (2): 523–526. doi:10.2307/445300. JSTOR 445300.
- ^ Cannon, Lou (June 6, 2004). "Actor, Governor, President, Icon". The Washington Post. p. A01.
- ^ Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
- ^ a b Wyoming Secretary of State (1965). "Summary - Official Vote General Election, November 3, 1964". 1965 Wyoming Official Directory and 1964 Election Returns. p. 62. Retrieved October 18, 2024.