UNITED STATES PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, 1932


The 'United States presidential election of 1932' took place as the effects of the 1929 Stock Market Crash and the Great Depression were being felt intensely across the country. President Hoover's popularity was falling as voters felt he was unable to reverse the economic collapse, or deal with prohibition. Roosevelt saw that Hoover's failure to deal with these problems could be used as a platform for his own election, promising reform in his policy called the New Deal. Although vague about how he would remedy the situation, Roosevelt won by a landslide, and this "critical election" marked the collapse of the Fourth Party System or Progressive Era. The voters soon were realigned into the Fifth Party System, dominated by Roosevelt's New Deal Coalition.

Contents
Nominations
Democratic Party nomination
Republican Party nomination
General election
Campaign
Results
Results by state
Bibliography
See also
External links
Navigation

Nominations


Democratic Party nomination

At the Democratic Party Convention in Chicago, Franklin D. Roosevelt succeeded in getting the party's nomination on the fourth ballot, triumphing over 1928 Democratic candidate Al Smith. Roosevelt, achieved this by making a deal with media baron William Randolph Hearst in which FDR would make John Nance Garner, the Speaker of the House of Representatives and also a candidate, his Vice President.
As the fourth ballot progressed, William G. McAdoo, whose own presidential ambitions were thwarted by Smith eight years before, gleefully changed California's votes from Garner to Roosevelt, and, as seen on the chart below, everyone's supporters but Smith's followed suit.
Presidential Balloting, DNC 1932
ballot 1 2 34
New York Gov. Franklin Roosevelt 666.5 677682 945
Former New York Gov. Al Smith 201194190 190
Speaker of the U.S. House John Nance Garner90.25 90.25 101.3 -
Ohio Governor George White5250.5 52.5 -
Former Virginia Gov. Harry F. Byrd25 24 25-
Melvin A. Traylor42.5 40 40 -
Missouri Sen. James A. Reed24 1827-
Maryland Gov. Albert C. Ritchie21 23 23-
Oklahoma Gov. William "Alfalfa Bill" Murray23 - --
Will Rogers - 22--
Newton Baker 8.5 8.5 8.5-

The Democratic Party Platform included repeal of Prohibition (devolving the decision of allowing or prohibiting alcohol to the individual states to decide for themselves).
Republican Party nomination

As the year 1932 began, the Republican Party still had hopes that the worst of the Depression was over; in any case President Herbert Hoover controlled the party. Little-known former U.S. Senator Joseph I. France ran against Hoover in the primaries, often unopposed. His primary wins were tempered by two events: first, Hoover entered the Maryland primary and defeated France in his home state; second, few delegates to the national convention were chosen in the primaries.
Hoover's managers at the Republican National Convention ran a tight ship, not allowing expressions of concern for the direction of the nation. Hoover was nominated on the first ballot with 98% of the delegate vote.
The tally was:
Presidential Ballot, RNC 1932
President Herbert Hoover 1126.5
John J. Blaine 13
Former President Calvin Coolidge 4.5
Former U.S. Senator Joseph I. France 4
James W. Wadsworth 1

Both the agricultural Republicans and the extreme hard money Republicans (the latter hoping to nominate 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.

General election


Campaign

After making a dangerous airplane trip from his Hyde Park Home to the Democratic convention, Roosevelt accepted the nomination in person. In this history-making speech, he committed himself to battling the Great Depression in the United States with a "New Deal" when he stated: "I pledge you, I pledge myself, to a new deal for the American people."
President Hoover was widely blamed for the depression; for over 2 years Hoover had been issuing statements that the worst was over, only to have the economy make further downturns.
The election was held on November 8, 1932. Maine held separate state elections in September.
1932 was a realigning election. 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 twenty years of Democratic control would ensue. The vote for Roosevelt was nearly 8 million higher than that for Smith in 1928, an increase of 52%. Hoover's popular vote was reduced by 26% from his result in the 1928 election. In addition, the vote for most minor parties rose dramatically: increases of 230% for the Socialist Party (Norman Thomas's 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.
Results

'Source (Popular Vote):'
'Source (Electoral Vote):'
Results by state


Franklin Roosevelt

Democratic
Herbert Hoover

Republican
Norman Thomas

Socialist
OtherState Total
Stateelectoral
votes
#%electoral
votes
#%electoral
votes
#%electoral
votes
#%electoral
votes
#
Alabama11207,91084.71134,67514.1-2,0300.8-7390.3-245,354AL
Arizona379,26467.0336,10430.5-2,6182.2-2650.2-118,251AZ
Arkansas9189,60286.0928,46712.9-1,2690.6-1,2240.6-220,562AR
California221,324,15758.422847,90237.4-63,2992.8-32,6081.4-2,267,966CA
Colorado6250,87754.86189,61741.4-13,5913.0-3,6110.8-457,696CO
Connecticut8281,63247.4-288,42048.5820,8403.5-3,6510.6-594,183CT
Delaware354,31948.1-57,07350.631,3761.2-1330.1-112,901DE
Florida7206,30774.7769,17025.0-7750.3-''not on ballot''276,252FL
Georgia12234,11891.61219,8637.8-4610.2-1,1480.5-255,590GA
Idaho4109,47958.7471,41738.3-5260.3-5,2032.8-186,625ID
Illinois291,882,30455.2291,432,75642.0-67,2582.0-25,6080.8-3,407,926IL
Indiana14862,05454.714677,18442.9-21,3881.4-16,3011.0-1,576,927IN
Iowa11598,01957.711414,43340.0-20,4672.00-3,7680.4-1,036,687IA
Kansas9424,20453.69349,49844.1-18,2762.3-''not on ballot''791,978KS
Kentucky11580,57459.111394,71640.2-3,8530.4-3,9200.4-983,063KY
Louisiana10249,41892.81018,8537.0-''not on ballot''5330.2-268,804LA
Maine5128,90743.2-166,63155.852,4890.8-4170.1-298,444ME
Maryland8314,31461.58184,18436.0-10,4892.1-2,0670.4-511,054MD
Massachusetts17800,14850.617736,95946.6-34,3052.2-8,7020.6-1,580,114MA
Michigan19871,70052.419739,89444.4-39,2052.4-13,9660.8-1,664,765MI
Minnesota11600,80659.911363,95936.3-25,4762.5-12,6021.3-1,002,843MN
Mississippi9140,16896.095,1803.4-6860.5-''not on ballot''146,034MS
Missouri151,025,40663.715564,71335.1-16,3741.0-3,4010.2-1,609,894MO
Montana4127,28658.8478,07836.1-7,8913.7-3,2241.5-216,479MT
Nebraska7359,08263.07201,17735.3-9,8761.7-20.0-570,137NE
Nevada328,75669.4312,67430.6-''not on ballot''41,430NV
New Hampshire4100,68049.0-103,62950.449470.5-2640.1-205,520NH
New Jersey16806,39449.516775,40647.6-42,9882.6-4,7190.3-1,629,507NJ
New Mexico395,08962.7354,21735.8-1,7761.2-5240.4-151,606NM
New York472,534,95954.1471,937,96341.3-177,3973.8-38,2950.8-4,688,614NY
North Carolina13497,56669.913208,34429.3-5,5910.8-''not on ballot''711,501NC
North Dakota4178,35069.6471,77228.0-3,5211.4-2,6471.0-256,290ND
Ohio261,301,69549.9261,227,31947.0-64,0942.5-16,6200.6-2,609,728OH
Oklahoma11516,46873.311188,16526.7-''not on ballot''704,633OK
Oregon5213,87158.05136,01936.7-15,4504.2-3,4680.9-368,808OR
Pennsylvania361,295,94845.3-1,453,54050.83691,2233.2-18,4660.7-2,859,177PA
Rhode Island4146,60455.14115,26643.3-3,1381.2-1,1620.4-266,170RI
South Carolina8102,34798.081,9781.9-820.1-''not on ballot''104,407SC
South Dakota4183,51563.6499,21234.4-1,5510.5-4,1601.4-288,438SD
Tennessee11259,47366.511126,75232.5-1,7960.5-2,2350.6-390,256TN
Texas23760,34888.12397,95911.4-4,4500.5-6690.1-836,426TX
Utah4116,75056.5484,79541.1-4,0872.0-9460.5-206,578UT
Vermont356,26641.1-78,98457.731,5331.1-1970.1-136,980VT
Virginia11203,97968.51189,63730.1-2,3820.8-1,9440.7-297,942VA
Washington8353,26057.58208,64533.9-17,0802.8-35,8295.8-614,814WA
West Virginia8405,12454.58330,73144.5-5,1330.7-2,7860.4-743,774WV
Wisconsin12707,41063.512347,74131.2-53,3794.8-6,2780.6-1,114,808WI
Wyoming354,37056.1339,58340.8-2,8292.9-1800.2-96,962WY
TOTALS:53122,821,27757.447215,761,25439.759884,8852.2-284,4820.7-39,751,898

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)

★ Hoover, Herbert, ''The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Great Depression'', 1929-1941 (1952)

★ Peel, Roy V. and Thomas C. Donnelly, ''The 1932 Campaign: An Analysis'' (1935)

★ Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. ''The Crisis of the Old Order'' (1957),

See also



United States Senate election, 1932

United States House election, 1932

History of the United States (1918-1945)

External links



1932 popular vote by counties

Navigation



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