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1932 United States presidential election

The 1932 United States presidential election was the 37th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 1932. The election took place against the backdrop of the Great Depression. The incumbent Republican President Herbert Hoover was defeated in a landslide by Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt, the governor of New York and the vice presidential nominee of the 1920 presidential election. Roosevelt was the first Democrat in 80 years to simultaneously win an outright majority of the electoral college and popular vote, a feat last accomplished by Franklin Pierce in 1852, as well as the first Democrat in 56 years to win a majority of the popular vote, which was last done by Samuel J. Tilden in 1876. Roosevelt was the last sitting governor to be elected president until Bill Clinton in 1992. Hoover became the first incumbent president to lose an election to another term since William Howard Taft in 1912, and the last to do so until Gerald Ford lost 44 years later. The election marked the effective end of the Fourth Party System, which had been dominated by Republicans. It was the first time since 1916 that a Democrat was elected president.

1932 United States presidential election

← 1928 November 8, 1932 1936 →

531 members of the Electoral College
266 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout56.8%[1] 0.1 pp
 
Nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt Herbert Hoover
Party Democratic Republican
Home state New York California
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% 39.6%

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

President before election

Herbert Hoover
Republican

Elected President

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democratic

Despite disastrous economic conditions due to the Great Depression, Hoover faced little opposition at the 1932 Republican National Convention. Roosevelt was widely considered the front-runner at the start of the 1932 Democratic National Convention, but was not able to clinch the nomination until the fourth ballot of the convention. The Democratic convention chose a leading Southern Democrat, Speaker of the House John Nance Garner of Texas, as the party's vice presidential nominee. Roosevelt united the party, campaigning on the failures of the Hoover administration. He promised recovery with a "New Deal" for the American people.

Roosevelt won by a landslide in both the electoral and popular votes, carrying every state outside of the Northeast and receiving the highest percentage of the popular vote of any Democratic nominee up to that time. Hoover had won over 58% of the popular vote in the 1928 presidential election, but his share of the popular vote declined to 39.6% in 1932. Socialist Party nominee Norman Thomas won 2.2% of the popular vote. Subsequent Democratic landslides in the 1934 mid-term elections and the 1936 presidential election confirmed the commencement of the Fifth Party System, which was dominated by Roosevelt's New Deal Coalition.[2] Roosevelt's election ended the era of Republican dominance in presidential politics that had lasted since the beginning of the Civil War and the election of 1860.

Background edit

Republican nominee Herbert Hoover had won in the previous election against Democratic nominee Al Smith. Smith had lost the support of the Solid South during the campaign likely due to anti-Catholic sentiment. Hoover had won in a landslide with him winning forty of the forty-eight states giving him 444 electoral votes against Smith's 87. However, the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression weakened the power of the Republicans. In the 1930 elections, the Democrats gained control of the United States House of Representatives, reduced the Republican majority in the United States Senate to one, and won a majority of the governorships.[3]

Smith was the first Democratic nominee in the 20th century to win a majority of the twelve largest cities in the country. The net vote totals in the twelve largest cities shifted from Republican to Democratic with Harding having won 1,540,000 in 1920, Coolidge by 1,308,000 in 1924, while Smith won by 210,000. Samuel Lubell wrote in The Future of American Politics that Franklin D. Roosevelt's victory in the 1932 election was preceded by Smith's increased vote totals in urban areas.[4]

Nominations edit

Democratic Party nomination edit

 
Democratic Party (United States)
1932 Democratic Party ticket
Franklin D. Roosevelt John Nance Garner
for President for Vice President
 
 
44th
Governor of New York
(1929–1932)
39th
Speaker of the House
(1931–1933)

Democratic candidates:

Newsreel footage of Roosevelt's acceptance speech

Smith, who announced his candidacy on February 6, 1932, was a leading candidate as he had remained active in the party and retained his support from the 1928 campaign. Joseph Taylor Robinson, who had been Smith's vice-presidential running mate, announced that he would not be a candidate on March 31, 1932, and gave his support to Franklin D. Roosevelt. Jesse I. Straus conducted a poll of the delegates to the 1928 Democratic National Convention which showed that the majority supported Roosevelt and additional polling showed Roosevelt winning in the primary and general election. Representative Edgar Howard stated that "Nine out of ten men in nine out of ten states are for Roosevelt, and he will be the Democratic choice." Roosevelt announced his campaign on January 23, 1932.[3]

William H. Murray ran in multiple primaries and won one delegate in the North Dakota primary, but failed to win in the Florida, Nebraska, Oregon, and West Virginia primaries. He won in the Ohio primary as he was the only candidate on the ballot, but the delegates were instructed by the convention and not the primary. The Oklahoma convention selected to give him control of its twenty-two member delegation.[3]

Newton D. Baker declined to run in the primaries and instead planned on serving as a compromise candidate if neither Smith nor Roosevelt could win the nomination at the convention balloting. J. Hamilton Lewis won the presidential primary in Illinois on April 12, 1932, and the state's fifty-eight member delegation was instructed to vote for him, but he withdrew before the convention on June 25. The majority of the Illinois delegation supported Melvin Alvah Traylor for the first three ballots before giving their support to Roosevelt on the fourth ballot. Tom Pendergast, a political boss in Missouri, had the state's delegation instructed to vote for James A. Reed, who had run for the nomination in the 1928 election, and the delegation supported Reed for the first three ballots before switching to Roosevelt. Harry F. Byrd and George White were favorite son candidates from their states. A. Harry Moore was a favorite son candidate supported by Lewis, but the delegation of his home state New Jersey voted for Smith.[3]

Both Smith and Roosevelt were against Prohibition, but Smith supported making it a main issue during the campaign while Roosevelt did not. John J. Raskob, who had become the chair of the Democratic National Committee with Smith's support, attempted to have the committee make a statement against prohibition in March 1931, and Smith gave a speech in support of it. James Farley, the chair of the New York State Democratic Committee and later Roosevelt's presidential campaign manager, had the New York committee pass a resolution opposing declarations before the national convention was held. Other state parties supported this resolution causing the vote to not happen. Raskob proposed the declaration again on January 9, 1932, but had the committee not take action on it.[3][5]

Tammany Hall and Roosevelt had a truce during his governorship, but the organization came to openly oppose him for his role in Mayor Jimmy Walker's resignation. Tammany Hall supported Smith for the nomination at the convention causing Roosevelt to refuse to support their mayoral candidate in the 1933 election and to support Fiorello La Guardia in the 1937 election. Tammany Hall's power was also reduced by the adoption of proportional representation for the New York City Council. Roosevelt also gave support to the American Labor Party in order for Democratic voters to support the New Deal without giving support to Tammany Hall candidates. Representative John J. O'Connor, who represented one of the districts with the strongest Tammany influence and was the chair of the House Rules Committee, lost renomination in the Democratic primary and in the general election with the Republican nomination in the 1938 election.[4]

Smith's strategy against Roosevelt was to use favorite son candidates to control the delegations of their states in places that would have otherwise gone for Roosevelt. The majority of Smith's support came from the northeast while Roosevelt's support came from the south and west. Wilbur Lucius Cross, Joseph B. Ely, Frank Hague, J. Howard McGrath, Moore, Raskob, and Jouett Shouse were among Smith's campaign leaders. Roosevelt attempted to have some of the favorite son candidates withdraw using Homer Stille Cummings as a mediator, but he was unsuccessful.[3]

Seventeen states used primaries to select their delegates to the national conventions while the rest used a convention system. Roosevelt controlled the delegations from thirty states and additional delegations from Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas, and South Carolina had supporters of Roosevelt, but were uninstructed. Roosevelt was endorsed at the state convention in Mississippi, but the delegates were left uninstructed. Roosevelt also claimed that he had the support of the twenty-eight delegates from all of the territories. Smith controlled the delegates from four states. The remaining delegations were either uninstructed or under the control of favorite sons. Roosevelt failed to gain control of two-thirds of the delegates which was required for him to gain the nomination.[3][6]: 3–4 

The convention was held in Chicago between June 27 and July 2. The first vote was taken at 4:28 on the morning of July 2, after ten hours of speeches that had begun at 5:00 on the previous afternoon.[7] The Roosevelt delegations from Louisiana and Minnesota were seated giving Roosevelt an additional thirty-two votes. Thomas J. Walsh, an ally of Roosevelt, was elected to chair the convention against Shouse by a vote of 626 to 528. Roosevelt received the most votes on the first three ballots, but he still did not have a two-thirds majority.[8] [3]

John Nance Garner, who had the support of William Randolph Hearst, won in the California primary due to the support of the Texas State Society of California which had 100,000 members. Garner had the support of ninety delegates at the convention and Hearst created a compromise with Roosevelt. Roosevelt, who needed the support of the Californian and Texan delegations to gain a two-thirds majority, would receive the support of Garner's delegates in exchange for Garner being given the vice-presidential nomination. With this agreement, Garner's supporters in California and Texas were released by Sam Rayburn, Garner's campaign manager, and voted for Roosevelt on the fourth ballot, giving him the presidential nomination. Members of the Texas delegation who opposed Roosevelt were led by Amon G. Carter, but the Roosevelt supporters led by Thomas Whitfield Davidson won by a vote of 54 to 51. Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island were the only states whose delegations did not support Roosevelt on the final ballot. Garner won the vice-presidential nomination on the first ballot against Matthew A. Tinley and his nomination was made unanimous.[6][3][5][9]

Presidential ballot 1st ballot 2nd 3rd ballot 4th ballot
Franklin D. Roosevelt 666.25 677.75 682.75 945
Al Smith 201.75 194.25 190.25 190.50
John Nance Garner 90.25 90.25 101.25 0
George White 52 50.5 52.5 0
Melvin Alvah Traylor 42.25 40.25 40.25 3
Harry F. Byrd 25 25 24 0
James A. Reed 24 18 27.5 0
William H. Murray 23 0 0 0
Albert Ritchie 21 23.5 23.5 0
Newton D. Baker 8.5 8 8.5 5.5
Will Rogers 0 22 0 0
James M. Cox 0 0 0 1
Not voting/absent 0 4.5 3.5 0
Reference [3] [3] [3] [3]

Republican Party nomination edit

 
Republican Party (United States)
1932 Republican Party ticket
Herbert Hoover Charles Curtis
for President for Vice President
 
 
31st
President of the United States
(1929–1933)
31st
Vice President of the United States
(1929–1933)

Republican candidates:

 
President Herbert Hoover and White House Press Secretary Theodore Joslin

In November 1931, Senator Hiram Johnson called for Hoover to retire as it would increase the chances of the Republicans winning in the 1932 election. Hoover's opponents in the Republican Party supported giving either former President Calvin Coolidge or Senator Dwight Morrow the party's presidential nomination. Morrow had been elected to the U.S. Senate from New Jersey in 1930, but died on October 5, 1931. On July 31, 1931, an article by James F. Coupal, Coolidge's former White House physician, was published by the St. Paul Dispatch in which Coupal stated that Coolidge would run "if the people of this country evince an unmistakable and unquestionable desire to draft him to pull the country out of this period of depression, and if he can have the presidency without any political or other obligations attached to it". Coolidge did not run for the nomination and an article written by him was published by The Saturday Evening Post on October 3, 1932, in which he gave his support to Hoover and was critical of those who had wanted him to run.[3]

Charles G. Dawes was suggested as a candidate following Morrow's death and the unsuccessful attempt to draft Coolidge, but his selection as president of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation took him out of consideration. Progressive Republicans considered forming a third party, but William Borah, Johnson, George W. Norris, and Gifford Pinchot declined to lead such a movement. An attempt to have progressive leaders in multiple states run against Hoover failed and Borah stated that Hoover could not be defeated.[3]

Hoover formally started his campaign by having Robert H. Lucas, executive director of the Republican National Committee, send out letters to precinct leaders in January 1931. Postmaster General Walter Folger Brown and Treasury Secretary Ogden L. Mills helped manage Hoover's campaign. Theodore Joslin started a publicity campaign to improve Hoover's image.[3]

Joseph I. France, a member of the conservative faction, ran against Hoover in the primary, but only won in states where he was unopposed. These states also had no delegates bounded to their primaries leading to them sending pro-Hoover delegations. At the national convention Lawritz Bernhard Sandblast, a delegate from Oregon, nominated France, but France attempted to address the convention to withdraw his candidacy and instead nominate Coolidge. Hoover had him removed citing that he could not address the convention as he was not a delegate. Hoover, who was nominated by Joseph Scott, won renomination on the first ballot while France only received four delegates.[3]

Dawes was proposed as a replacement for Vice President Charles Curtis, who faced opposition due to his age and prohibitionist stances, and delegations from over twenty states opposed the renomination of Curtis. However, Dawes declined to seek the vice-presidential nomination. Curtis, Alvan T. Fuller, James Harbord, Hanford MacNider, J. Leonard Replogle, and Bertrand Snell were nominated for the vice-presidential balloting. Curtis initially fell 19.25 votes short of winning on the first ballot, but the Pennsylvania delegation changed its support to Curtis causing him to win.[3]

Presidential ballot 1st ballot Vice-presidential ballot 1st ballot
Herbert Hoover 1126.5 Charles Curtis 633.75
John J. Blaine 13 Hanford MacNider 178.75
Calvin Coolidge 4.5 James Harbord 161.75
Joseph I. France 4 Edward Martin 75
Charles G. Dawes 1 Alvan T. Fuller 57
James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr. 1 Bertrand Snell 55
Patrick J. Hurley 25
J. Leonard Replogle 22.75
Charles G. Dawes 9.75
James J. Couzens 2
William S. Kenyon 2
David Sinton Ingalls 2
Hiram Bingham III 1
Not voting 3 Not voting 0
Absent 1 Absent 1
Reference [3] [3] [3]

Other candidates edit

Socialist Party edit

Norman Thomas, who had been the Socialist Party of America's presidential nominee in the 1928 election and ran for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in the 1930 election, and James H. Maurer, who was the party's vice-presidential nominee in the 1928 election, were given the Socialist Party presidential and vice-presidential nominations at the national convention held May 21–24 in Milwaukee. Thomas and his faction unsuccessfully tried to have Morris Hillquit replaced as chair of the party by Daniel Hoan. The Literary Digest's polling predicted that Thomas would receive over two million votes.[3]

Communist Party edit

William Z. Foster, who had been the Communist Party USA's presidential nominee in the 1928 election, was given the presidential nomination at the national convention held from May 28–29 in Chicago, and James W. Ford was given the vice-presidential nomination.[3]

Farmer-Labor Party edit

Frank Webb and former Mayor Jacob S. Coxey Sr. were given the presidential and vice-presidential nominations of the Farmer–Labor Party at its convention on April 28 in Omaha, Nebraska. John R. Brinkley, Thomas Mooney, and Arthur C. Townley had also been proposed as candidates for the nomination. However, Webb was removed from the ticket with the party stating that he was "a tool of the Hoover administration," and Coxey was given the presidential nomination. The Minnesota Farmer–Labor Party did not support the national party's ticket. After having the Farmer-Labor presidential nomination taken from him Webb formed the Liberty Party with him as its presidential nominee while the larger Liberty Party gave its nomination to William Hope Harvey.[3]

Liberal Party edit

Samuel Harden Church, who had formed the Liberal Party in Pennsylvania which received 366,572 votes on its ballot line in the 1930 gubernatorial election, unsuccessfully tried to form a national anti-prohibitionist Liberal Party. Nicholas Murray Butler proposed the creation of a new party on May 19, 1932, which would be composed of the moderate wings of both existing Democratic and Republican parties.[3]

General election edit

Campaign edit

 
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 his speech, he stated, "ours must be a party of liberal thought, of planned action, of the enlightened international outlook, and of the greatest good to the greatest number of our citizens."[10] 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.[11] 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[6]: 244  – and, indeed, the unofficial anthem of the Democratic Party.[12] Democratic leaders in the eastern United States supported having Roosevelt conduct a front porch campaign, but Roosevelt and the leaders in the western United States instead supported an active campaign. Roosevelt gave twenty-seven major speeches during the campaign while Hoover initially planned on giving three major speeches during the campaign, but it was later increased to ten and Hoover traveled over 10,000 miles.[3]

Simeon D. Fess, who had become chair of the Republican National Committee with Hoover's support, resigned from his position and was replaced by Everett Sanders with Hoover's support. Raskob, who became the chair of the Democratic National Convention with Smith's support, was replaced by Farley. Campaign expenditures for both parties fell from the 1928 election to the 1932 election. The combined expenditures of both national committees would be $5,146,027 which was less than $0.13 per voter. This was the lowest amount spent per voter since the 1912 election with most elections costing around $0.19-0.20 per voter and the 1924 presidential election costing $0.15 per voter.[3]

Both parties spent large amounts on radio campaigns with 17-18% of Democratic and over 20% of the Republican national committees spending being towards radio. During the 1928 election the Republicans paid $420,000 to radio companies and increased their spending to $437,000 during the 1932 election. The Democrats reduced their spending with their amount falling from $550,000 during the 1928 election to $343,415 during the 1932 election.[3]

During the campaign NBC and CBS aired 203 programs of paid time that took up 116 hours and 15 minutes. One hundred thirty-six of those programs were for the Republicans, seventy-one for the Democrats, and three for the Socialists. The Republicans had seventy hours and thirty-two minutes, the Democrats had forty-nine hours and thirty-two minutes, and the Socialists had forty-five minutes of air time.[3]

Roosevelt made gains with voters compared to Smith's 1928 campaign. The southerners who had supported Hoover in the 1928 campaign returned to the Democratic Party and progressive Republicans under the leadership of Bronson M. Cutting, Johnson, Robert M. La Follette Jr., Norris, and Henry A. Wallace left the Republicans to support Roosevelt. Farley predicted that Roosevelt would win in forty-four states and later congratulated Sanders on his imagination and courage when Sanders predicted that Hoover would win 338 electoral votes.[3]

After their divisive convention, Democrats united around Roosevelt, who was able to draw more universal support than Al Smith had in 1928.[13] Roosevelt's Protestant background prevented the anti-Catholic attacks Smith faced in 1928, and The Depression seemed to be of much greater concern among the American public than previous cultural battles. Prohibition was increasingly unpopular, and wets offered the argument that states and localities needed the tax money. Hoover proposed a new constitutional amendment that was vague on particulars and satisfied neither side. Roosevelt's platform promised repeal of the 18th Amendment.[14][15]

 
Roosevelt (seated, center) at Greenway Ranch in Williams, Arizona on September 26, 1932. He is accompanied by U.S. Senator from Arizona Carl Hayden standing far right, along with – among others – three Democrats from the U.S. Senate (seated): Pittman, Walsh, and Cohen.

In contrast, Hoover was not supported by many of the more prominent Republicans and violently opposed by others, in particular by a number of senators who had fought him throughout his administration and whose national reputation made their opposition of considerable importance. Many prominent Republicans even went so far as to espouse the cause of the Democratic candidate openly.[16]

Making matters worse for Hoover was the fact that many Americans blamed him for the Great Depression. The outrage caused by the deaths of veterans in the Bonus Army incident in the summer of 1932, 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 thrown at him or his vehicle as he rode through city streets.[17][18] Hoover's unpopularity resulted in Roosevelt adopting a cautious campaign strategy, focused on minimizing gaffes and keeping public attention directed towards his opponent.[19]

As Governor of New York, Roosevelt had garnered a reputation for promoting government help for the impoverished, providing a welcome contrast for many who saw Hoover as a do-nothing president.[20] Roosevelt emphasized working collectively through an expanded federal government to confront the economic crisis, a contrast to Hoover's emphasis on individualism.[19] During the campaign, Roosevelt ran on many of the programs that would later become part of the New Deal during his presidency.[21] It was said that "even a vaguely talented dog-catcher could have been elected president against the Republicans."[22] Hoover even received a letter from an Illinois man that advised, "Vote for Roosevelt and make it unanimous." [23]

Roosevelt employed the radio to great effect during the campaign. He was able to outline his platform while also improving the perception of his personality.[24] In March, 1932, The New York Times quoted radio producer John Carlile, who said that Roosevelt had a "tone of perfect sincerity," while for Hoover, "the microphone betrays deliberate effort in his radio voice."[25] The technology not only allowed Roosevelt to reach far more voters than he could via in-person campaigning, but also drew attention away from his paralysis due to polio.[24] Roosevelt took great pains to hide the effects of the disease from voters, instituting a "gentleman's agreement" with the press that he not be photographed in ways that would highlight his disability.[26]

The election was held on November 8, 1932.

Results edit

 
Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage for the winning candidate. Shades of blue are for Roosevelt (Democratic), shades of red are for Hoover (Republican), grey indicates zero recorded votes and white indicates territories not elevated to statehood.[27]

Roosevelt defeated Hoover in the election. Hoover became the seventh president to lose reelection after John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, and William Howard Taft. Another president would not lose an election to another term until Gerald Ford was defeated by Jimmy Carter in the 1976 presidential election.[28] This was the first election since 1916 (16 years earlier) in which the Democratic candidate won.

Although the "other" vote (the combined vote total for candidates other than the nominees of the two major parties) of 1932 was three times that of 1928, it was considerably less than what had been recorded in 1920, the time of the greatest "other" vote, with the exception of the unusual conditions prevailing in 1912 and 1924.

Roosevelt, the Democratic candidate, received 22,817,883 votes (57.41%), the largest vote ever cast for a candidate for the Presidency up until that time, and over 1,425,000 more than that cast for Hoover four years earlier.

While Hoover had won a greater percentage of the vote in 1928 (as did Harding in 1920), the national swing of 17.59% to the Democrats impressed all who considered the distribution of the vote: more than one-sixth of the electorate had switched from supporting the Republicans to the Democrats. Only once before had there been a comparable shift, in 1920, when there was a 14.65% swing to the Republicans (while there had been a swing to the Democrats of 13.6% in 1912, this was from a three-candidate election).[16]

Roosevelt improved on Smith's net vote total performance in the twelve largest cities. Smith had won those areas by 210,000 votes in the 1928 election while Roosevelt won by 1,791,000 votes. Roosevelt's worst performance in the country was in the eastern United States where all six of the states that voted for Hoover came from. Hoover only won in forty-five counties west of the Mississippi.[3][4]

As of 2024, the swing for the Democrats from Smith in 1928 to Roosevelt remains the largest national swing of the electorate between presidential elections in the history of the United States. The largest swing since came for the Democrats in 1976, when the swing from George McGovern in 1972 to Jimmy Carter was 12.61%.

1932 was a political realignment election: not only did Roosevelt win a sweeping victory over Hoover, but Democrats significantly extended their control over the U.S. House, gaining 101 seats, and also gained 12 seats in the U.S. Senate to gain control of the chamber. Twelve years of Republican leadership came to an end, and 20 consecutive years of Democratic control of the White House began.[29]

Until 1932, the Republicans had controlled the Presidency for 52 of the previous 72 years, dating back to Abraham Lincoln being elected president in 1860. After 1932, Democrats would control the Presidency for 32 of the next 48 years.

Roosevelt led the poll in 2,722 counties, the greatest number ever carried by a candidate up until that time. Of these, 282 had never before been Democratic. Only 374 remained loyally Republican. Half of the total vote of the nation was cast in just eight states (New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin); in these states, Hoover polled 8,592,163 votes. In one section (West South Central), the Republican percentage sank to 16.21%, but in no other section did the party poll less than 30% of the vote cast. However, the relative appeal of the two candidates in 1932 and the decline of the appeal of Hoover as compared with 1928 are shown in the fact that the Republican vote increased in 1932 in only 87 counties, while the Democratic vote increased in 3,003 counties. Herbert Hoover also failed to flip any counties.

The vote cast for Hoover, and the fact that in only one section of the nation (West South Central) did he have less than 500,000 votes and in only three states outside of the South less than 50,000 votes, made it clear that the nation remained a two-party electorate, and that everywhere, despite the overwhelming triumph of the Democrats, there was a party membership devoted to neither the new administration nor the proposals of the Socialist candidate who had polled 75% of the "other" vote (as well as the highest raw vote total of his campaigns).[30]

This election marks the last time as of 2024 that a Republican presidential candidate won a majority of black and African-American votes: as New Deal policies took effect, the strong support of black voters for these programs began a transition from their traditional support for Republicans to providing solid majorities for Democrats.

The Roosevelt ticket swept every region of the country except the Northeast, 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 split in two.

Michigan voted Democratic for the first time since the emergence of the Republican Party in 1854, and Minnesota was carried by a Democrat for the first time since its admission to statehood in 1858, leaving Vermont as the only remaining state never to be carried by a Democratic candidate (which it would not be until 1964).

In contrast to the state's solid support of Republicans prior to this election, Minnesota has continued supporting Democrats in every presidential election but three since 1932 (the exceptions were in 1952, 1956, and 1972).

Roosevelt's victory with 472 electoral votes stood until the 1964 victory of Lyndon B. Johnson, who won 486 electoral votes in 1964, as the most ever won by a first-time contestant in a presidential election. Roosevelt also bettered the national record of 444 electoral votes set by Hoover only four years earlier, but would shatter his own record when he was re-elected in 1936 with 523 votes.

This was the last election in which Connecticut, Delaware, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania voted Republican until 1948.

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 57.41% 472 John Nance Garner Texas 472
Herbert Hoover (incumbent) Republican California 15,761,254 39.65% 59 Charles Curtis Kansas 59
Norman Thomas Socialist New York 884,885 2.23% 0 James H. Maurer Pennsylvania 0
William Z. Foster Communist Illinois 103,307 0.26% 0 James W. Ford Alabama 0
William David Upshaw Prohibition Georgia 81,905 0.21% 0 Frank S. Regan Illinois 0
William Hope Harvey Liberty Arkansas 53,425 0.13% 0 Frank Hemenway Washington 0
Verne L. Reynolds Socialist Labor New York 34,038 0.09% 0 John W. Aiken Massachusetts 0
Jacob S. Coxey Sr. Farmer-Labor Ohio 7,431 0.02% 0 Julius Reiter Minnesota 0
Other 4,376 0.01% 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.

Popular vote
Roosevelt
57.41%
Hoover
39.65%
Thomas
2.23%
Foster
0.26%
Others
0.45%
Electoral vote
Roosevelt
88.89%
Hoover
11.11%

Geography of results edit

 

Cartographic gallery edit

Results by state edit

Source: [31]

States/districts won by Roosevelt/Garner
States/districts won by Hoover/Curtis
State
EV
Roosevelt/Garner
Democratic
Hoover/Curtis
Republican
Thomas/Maurer
Socialist
Other Margin Total
votes
Votes %
EV
Votes %
EV
Votes %
EV
Votes %
EV
Votes %
Alabama 11 207,910 84.74 11 34,675 14.13 2,030 0.83 739 0.30 173,235 70.61 245,354
Arizona 3 79,264 67.03 3 36,104 30.53 2,618 2.21 265 0.22 43,160 36.50 118,251
Arkansas 9 189,602 85.96 9 28,467 12.91 1,269 0.58 1,224 0.55 161,135 73.06 220,562
California 22 1,324,157 58.39 22 847,902 37.39 63,299 2.79 32,608 1.44 476,255 21.00 2,267,966
Colorado 6 250,877 54.81 6 189,617 41.43 13,591 2.97 3,611 0.79 61,260 13.38 457,696
Connecticut 8 281,632 47.40 288,420 48.54 8 20,480 3.45 3,651 0.61 −6,788 −1.14 594,183
Delaware 3 54,319 48.11 57,073 50.55 3 1,376 1.22 133 0.12 −2,754 −2.44 112,901
Florida 7 206,307 74.68 7 69,170 25.04 775 0.28 137,137 49.64 276,252
Georgia 12 234,118 91.60 12 19,863 7.77 461 0.18 1,148 0.45 214,255 83.83 255,590
Idaho 4 109,479 58.66 4 71,417 38.27 526 0.28 5,203 2.79 38,062 20.39 186,625
Illinois 29 1,882,304 55.23 29 1,432,756 42.04 67,258 1.97 25,608 0.75 449,548 13.19 3,407,926
Indiana 14 862,054 54.67 14 677,184 42.94 21,388 1.36 16,301 1.03 184,870 11.72 1,576,927
Iowa 11 598,019 57.69 11 414,433 39.98 20,467 1.97 3,768 0.36 183,586 17.71 1,036,687
Kansas 9 424,204 53.56 9 349,498 44.13 18,276 2.31 74,706 9.43 791,978
Kentucky 11 580,574 59.06 11 394,716 40.15 3,853 0.39 3,920 0.40 185,858 18.91 983,063
Louisiana 10 249,418 92.79 10 18,853 7.01 533 0.20 230,565 85.77 268,804
Maine 5 128,907 43.19 166,631 55.83 5 2,489 0.83 417 0.14 −37,724 −12.64 298,444
Maryland 8 314,314 61.50 8 184,184 36.04 10,489 2.05 2,067 0.40 130,130 25.46 511,054
Massachusetts 17 800,148 50.64 17 736,959 46.64 34,305 2.17 8,702 0.55 63,189 4.00 1,580,114
Michigan 19 871,700 52.36 19 739,894 44.44 39,205 2.35 13,966 0.84 131,806 7.92 1,664,765
Minnesota 11 600,806 59.91 11 363,959 36.29 25,476 2.54 12,602 1.26 236,847 23.62 1,002,843
Mississippi 9 140,168 95.98 9 5,180 3.55 686 0.47 134,988 92.44 146,034
Missouri 15 1,025,406 63.69 15 564,713 35.08 16,374 1.02 3,401 0.21 460,693 28.62 1,609,894
Montana 4 127,286 58.80 4 78,078 36.07 7,891 3.65 3,224 1.49 49,208 22.73 216,479
Nebraska 7 359,082 62.98 7 201,177 35.29 9,876 1.73 2 0.00 157,905 27.70 570,137
Nevada 3 28,756 69.41 3 12,674 30.59 16,082 38.82 41,430
New Hampshire 4 100,680 48.99 103,629 50.42 4 947 0.46 264 0.13 −2,949 −1.43 205,520
New Jersey 16 806,394 49.49 16 775,406 47.59 42,988 2.64 4,719 0.29 30,988 1.90 1,629,507
New Mexico 3 95,089 62.72 3 54,217 35.76 1,776 1.17 524 0.35 40,872 26.96 151,606
New York 47 2,534,959 54.07 47 1,937,963 41.33 177,397 3.78 38,295 0.82 596,996 12.73 4,688,614
North Carolina 13 497,566 69.93 13 208,344 29.28 5,591 0.79 289,222 40.65 711,501
North Dakota 4 178,350 69.59 4 71,772 28.00 3,521 1.37 2,647 1.03 106,578 41.58 256,290
Ohio 26 1,301,695 49.88 26 1,227,319 47.03 64,094 2.46 16,620 0.64 74,376 2.85 2,609,728
Oklahoma 11 516,468 73.30 11 188,165 26.70 328,303 46.59 704,633
Oregon 5 213,871 57.99 5 136,019 36.88 15,450 4.19 3,468 0.94 77,852 21.11 368,808
Pennsylvania 36 1,295,948 45.33 1,453,540 50.84 36 91,223 3.19 18,466 0.65 −157,592 −5.51 2,859,177
Rhode Island 4 146,604 55.08 4 115,266 43.31 3,138 1.18 1,162 0.44 31,338 11.77 266,170
South Carolina 8 102,347 98.03 8 1,978 1.89 82 0.08 100,369 96.13 104,407
South Dakota 4 183,515 63.62 4 99,212 34.40 1,551 0.54 4,160 1.44 84,303 29.23 288,438
Tennessee 11 259,473 66.49 11 126,752 32.48 1,796 0.46 2,235 0.57 132,721 34.01 390,256
Texas 23 760,348 88.06 23 97,959 11.35 4,450 0.52 669 0.08 662,389 76.72 863,426
Utah 4 116,750 56.52 4 84,795 41.05 4,087 1.98 946 0.46 31,955 15.47 206,578
Vermont 3 56,266 41.08 78,984 57.66 3 1,533 1.12 197 0.14 −22,718 −16.58 136,980
Virginia 11 203,979 68.46 11 89,637 30.09 2,382 0.80 1,944 0.65 114,342 38.38 297,942
Washington 8 353,260 57.46 8 208,645 33.94 17,080 2.78 35,829 5.83 144,615 23.52 614,814
West Virginia 8 405,124 54.47 8 330,731 44.47 5,133 0.69 2,786 0.37 74,393 10.00 743,774
Wisconsin 12 707,410 63.46 12 347,741 31.19 53,379 4.79 6,278 0.56 359,669 32.26 1,114,808
Wyoming 3 54,370 56.07 3 39,583 40.82 2,829 2.92 180 0.19 14,787 15.25 96,962
Total 531 22,821,277 57.41 472 15,761,254 39.65 59 884,885 2.23 284,482 0.72 7,060,023 17.76 39,751,898
Roosevelt/Garner
Democratic
Hoover/Curtis
Republican
Thomas/Maurer
Socialist
Others Margin Total
votes

Close states edit

Margin of victory less than 5% (74 electoral votes):

  1. Connecticut, 1.14% (6,788 votes)
  2. New Hampshire, 1.43% (2,949 votes)
  3. New Jersey, 1.90% (30,988 votes)
  4. Delaware, 2.44% (2,754 votes)
  5. Ohio, 2.85% (74,376 votes)
  6. Massachusetts, 4.00% (63,189 votes)

Margin of victory between 5% and 10% (64 electoral votes):

  1. Pennsylvania, 5.51% (157,592 votes)
  2. Michigan, 7.92% (131,806 votes)
  3. Kansas, 9.43% (74,706 votes)

Tipping point state:

  1. Iowa, 17.71% (183,586 votes)

Statistics edit

Counties with highest percent of vote (Democratic)

  1. Wilkinson County, Georgia 100.00%
  2. Armstrong County, South Dakota 100.00%
  3. Lancaster County, South Carolina 99.84%
  4. Sharkey County, Mississippi 99.82%
  5. Colleton County, South Carolina 99.69%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Republican)

  1. Johnson County, Tennessee 84.51%
  2. Jackson County, Kentucky 84.28%
  3. Leslie County, Kentucky 82.96%
  4. Owsley County, Kentucky 79.08%
  5. Sevier County, Tennessee 77.01%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Other)

  1. Sheridan County, Montana 32.54%
  2. Thurston County, Washington 23.12%
  3. Clallam County, Washington 22.73%
  4. Berks County, Pennsylvania 22.17%
  5. Lake County, Minnesota 21.75%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ History of American Political Parties
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Donnelly, Thomas (1935). The 1932 Campaign,: An Analysis. Farrar & Rinehart.
  4. ^ a b c Murphy, Paul (1974). Political Parties In American History, Volume 3, 1890-present. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  5. ^ a b "Roosevelt Nominated on Fourth Ballot; Garner Expected to be His Running Mate; Governor Will Fly to Convention Today". The New York Times. July 2, 1932. from the original on February 4, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c Neal, Stephen (2010). Happy Days Are Here Again: The 1932 Democratic Convention, the Emergence of FDR--and How America Was Changed Forever. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780062015419.
  7. ^ O'Mara, Margaret. Pivotal Tuesdays. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 94.
  8. ^ Henning, Arthur S. (July 2, 1932). "Pick Roosevelt; Here Today". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 13, 2020.(subscription required)
  9. ^ Patenaude, Lionel (1975). The Garner Vote Switch to Roosevelt: 1932 Democratic Convention. Texas State Historical Association.
  10. ^ . The American Presidency Project. Archived from the original on December 5, 2017. Retrieved November 24, 2017.
  11. ^ Alter, Jonathan (2006). The defining moment : FDR's hundred days and the triumph of hope. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 115–116. ISBN 978-0-7432-4600-2.
  12. ^ Arnold Shaw, The jazz age: popular music in the 1920s (1989) p. 228
  13. ^ . boundless.com. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved July 14, 2013.
  14. ^ "Prohibition After the 1932 Elections" CQ Researcher
  15. ^ Herbert Brucker, "How Long, O Prohibition?" The North American Review, 234#4 (1932), pp. 347–357. online
  16. ^ a b The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, pg. 29
  17. ^ "Overall Unemployment Rate in the U.S. Civilian Labor Force, 1920–2007". Infoplease.com. Retrieved November 4, 2008.
  18. ^ "Timeline of the Great Depression". Hyperhistory.com. Retrieved November 4, 2008.
  19. ^ a b William E. Leuchtenburg (October 4, 2016). "Franklin D. Roosevelt: Campaigns and Elections". Retrieved October 20, 2020.
  20. ^ Leuchtenburg, William E. (2009). Herbert Hoover. Times Books. pp. 138–139.
  21. ^ Rauchway, Eric (2019). "The New Deal Was on the Ballot in 1932". Modern American History. 2 (2): 201–213. doi:10.1017/mah.2018.42. ISSN 2515-0456.
  22. ^ Cambell, Jeff (November 19, 2008). "Hoover's Popularity". Lonely Planet.
  23. ^ Will, George F. (November 9, 2000). "No, the System Worked". Washington Post. Retrieved January 9, 2021.
  24. ^ a b O'Mara, Margaret. Pivotal Tuesdays. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 97.
  25. ^ "Search For Ideal Radio Voice Is An Unending Task". The New York Times. March 20, 1932. Retrieved October 13, 2020.(subscription required)
  26. ^ Pressman, Matthew (July 12, 2013). "The myth of FDR's secret disability". Time. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  27. ^ The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932 – Google Books. Stanford University Press. 1934. ISBN 9780804716963. Retrieved August 12, 2014.
  28. ^ "How many US presidents have lost a second term? All the one-term presidents". The Independent. November 8, 2020. from the original on February 4, 2022.
  29. ^ Gibbs, Nancy (November 10, 2008). . Time. Archived from the original on November 11, 2008.
  30. ^ The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, p. 30
  31. ^ "1932 Presidential General Election Data – National". Retrieved April 8, 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Andersen, Kristi. The Creation of a Democratic Majority: 1928–1936 (1979), statistical study of voting patterns
  • Burns, James Macgregor. Roosevelt the Lion and the Fox (1956) online pp 123–52.
  • Carcasson, Martin. "Herbert Hoover and the presidential campaign of 1932: The failure of apologia." Presidential Studies Quarterly 28.2 (1998): 349–365. in JSTOR
  • Eden, Robert (1993). "On the Origins of the Regime of Pragmatic Liberalism: John Dewey, Adolf A. Berle, and FDR's Commonwealth Club Address of 1932". Studies in American Political Development. 7: 74–150. doi:10.1017/S0898588X00000699.
  • Freidel, Frank Franklin D. Roosevelt The Triumph (1956) covers 1929–32 in depth online
  • Freidel, Frank. "Election of 1932", in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., ed., The Coming to Power: Critical Presidential Elections in American History (1981)
  • Gosnell, Harold F., Champion Campaigner: Franklin D. Roosevelt (1952)
  • Gosnell, Harold F.; Gill, Norman N. (1935). "An Analysis of the 1932 Presidential Vote in Chicago". American Political Science Review. 29 (6): 967–984. doi:10.2307/1947313. JSTOR 1947313.
  • Houck, Davis W. (2004). "FDR's Commonwealth Club Address: Redefining Individualism, Adjudicating Greatness". Rhetoric & Public Affairs. 7 (3): 259–282. doi:10.1353/rap.2005.0006. S2CID 144548607.
  • Hoover, Herbert. The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover: The Great Depression, 1929–1941 (1952)
  • Nicolaides, Becky M. (1988). "Radio electioneering in the American presidential campaigns of 1932 and 1936". Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. 8 (2): 115–138. doi:10.1080/01439688800260171.
  • O'Mara, Margaret (2015). Pivotal Tuesdays. doi:10.9783/9780812291711. ISBN 9780812291711.
  • Peel, Roy V.; Donnelly, Thomas C. (1936). "The 1932 Campaign: An Analysis". Journal of Educational Sociology. 9 (8): 510. doi:10.2307/2262331. JSTOR 2262331.
  • Pietrusza, David 1932: The Rise of Hitler and FDR: Two Tales of Politics, Betrayal and Unlikely Destiny (2015)
  • Ritchie, Donald A. Electing FDR: The New Deal Campaign of 1932 (2007)
  • Ritchie, Donald A. (2011). "The Election of 1932". A Companion to Franklin D. Roosevelt. pp. 77–95. doi:10.1002/9781444395181.ch5. ISBN 9781444395181.
  • Robinson, Edgar Eugene. The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932 (Stanford university press, 1940) voting returns for every county
  • Schlesinger, Jr., Arthur M. The Crisis of the Old Order (1957), pp 427–54 online

Primary sources edit

  • Chester, Edward W A guide to political platforms (1977) online
  • Porter, Kirk H. and Donald Bruce Johnson, eds. National party platforms, 1840-1964 (1965) online 1840-1956

External links edit

  • 1932 popular vote by counties

    1932, united, states, presidential, election, 37th, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1932, election, took, place, against, backdrop, great, depression, incumbent, republican, president, herbert, hoover, defeated, landslide, democra. The 1932 United States presidential election was the 37th quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 8 1932 The election took place against the backdrop of the Great Depression The incumbent Republican President Herbert Hoover was defeated in a landslide by Democrat Franklin D Roosevelt the governor of New York and the vice presidential nominee of the 1920 presidential election Roosevelt was the first Democrat in 80 years to simultaneously win an outright majority of the electoral college and popular vote a feat last accomplished by Franklin Pierce in 1852 as well as the first Democrat in 56 years to win a majority of the popular vote which was last done by Samuel J Tilden in 1876 Roosevelt was the last sitting governor to be elected president until Bill Clinton in 1992 Hoover became the first incumbent president to lose an election to another term since William Howard Taft in 1912 and the last to do so until Gerald Ford lost 44 years later The election marked the effective end of the Fourth Party System which had been dominated by Republicans It was the first time since 1916 that a Democrat was elected president 1932 United States presidential election 1928 November 8 1932 1936 531 members of the Electoral College266 electoral votes needed to winTurnout56 8 1 0 1 pp Nominee Franklin D Roosevelt Herbert HooverParty Democratic RepublicanHome state New York CaliforniaRunning mate John Nance Garner Charles CurtisElectoral vote 472 59States carried 42 6Popular vote 22 821 277 15 761 254Percentage 57 4 39 6 Presidential election results map Blue denotes those won by Roosevelt Garner red denotes states won by Hoover Curtis Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state President before electionHerbert HooverRepublican Elected President Franklin D RooseveltDemocraticDespite disastrous economic conditions due to the Great Depression Hoover faced little opposition at the 1932 Republican National Convention Roosevelt was widely considered the front runner at the start of the 1932 Democratic National Convention but was not able to clinch the nomination until the fourth ballot of the convention The Democratic convention chose a leading Southern Democrat Speaker of the House John Nance Garner of Texas as the party s vice presidential nominee Roosevelt united the party campaigning on the failures of the Hoover administration He promised recovery with a New Deal for the American people Roosevelt won by a landslide in both the electoral and popular votes carrying every state outside of the Northeast and receiving the highest percentage of the popular vote of any Democratic nominee up to that time Hoover had won over 58 of the popular vote in the 1928 presidential election but his share of the popular vote declined to 39 6 in 1932 Socialist Party nominee Norman Thomas won 2 2 of the popular vote Subsequent Democratic landslides in the 1934 mid term elections and the 1936 presidential election confirmed the commencement of the Fifth Party System which was dominated by Roosevelt s New Deal Coalition 2 Roosevelt s election ended the era of Republican dominance in presidential politics that had lasted since the beginning of the Civil War and the election of 1860 Contents 1 Background 2 Nominations 2 1 Democratic Party nomination 2 2 Republican Party nomination 2 3 Other candidates 2 3 1 Socialist Party 2 3 2 Communist Party 2 3 3 Farmer Labor Party 2 3 4 Liberal Party 3 General election 3 1 Campaign 3 2 Results 3 3 Geography of results 3 3 1 Cartographic gallery 3 4 Results by state 3 5 Close states 3 5 1 Statistics 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 6 1 Primary sources 7 External linksBackground editRepublican nominee Herbert Hoover had won in the previous election against Democratic nominee Al Smith Smith had lost the support of the Solid South during the campaign likely due to anti Catholic sentiment Hoover had won in a landslide with him winning forty of the forty eight states giving him 444 electoral votes against Smith s 87 However the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression weakened the power of the Republicans In the 1930 elections the Democrats gained control of the United States House of Representatives reduced the Republican majority in the United States Senate to one and won a majority of the governorships 3 Smith was the first Democratic nominee in the 20th century to win a majority of the twelve largest cities in the country The net vote totals in the twelve largest cities shifted from Republican to Democratic with Harding having won 1 540 000 in 1920 Coolidge by 1 308 000 in 1924 while Smith won by 210 000 Samuel Lubell wrote in The Future of American Politics that Franklin D Roosevelt s victory in the 1932 election was preceded by Smith s increased vote totals in urban areas 4 Nominations editDemocratic Party nomination edit Main articles 1932 Democratic National Convention and 1932 Democratic Party presidential primaries nbsp Democratic Party United States 1932 Democratic Party ticketFranklin D Roosevelt John Nance Garnerfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 44thGovernor of New York 1929 1932 39thSpeaker of the House 1931 1933 Democratic candidates Franklin D Roosevelt governor of New York Al Smith campaign former governor of New York and 1928 Democratic presidential nominee John Nance Garner U S Speaker of the House of Texas William H Murray governor of Oklahoma nbsp Governor Franklin D Roosevelt of New York nbsp Former Governor Al Smith of New York campaign nbsp Speaker of the House John Nance Garner of Texas nbsp Governor William H Murray of Oklahoma source source source source source source source Newsreel footage of Roosevelt s acceptance speechSmith who announced his candidacy on February 6 1932 was a leading candidate as he had remained active in the party and retained his support from the 1928 campaign Joseph Taylor Robinson who had been Smith s vice presidential running mate announced that he would not be a candidate on March 31 1932 and gave his support to Franklin D Roosevelt Jesse I Straus conducted a poll of the delegates to the 1928 Democratic National Convention which showed that the majority supported Roosevelt and additional polling showed Roosevelt winning in the primary and general election Representative Edgar Howard stated that Nine out of ten men in nine out of ten states are for Roosevelt and he will be the Democratic choice Roosevelt announced his campaign on January 23 1932 3 William H Murray ran in multiple primaries and won one delegate in the North Dakota primary but failed to win in the Florida Nebraska Oregon and West Virginia primaries He won in the Ohio primary as he was the only candidate on the ballot but the delegates were instructed by the convention and not the primary The Oklahoma convention selected to give him control of its twenty two member delegation 3 Newton D Baker declined to run in the primaries and instead planned on serving as a compromise candidate if neither Smith nor Roosevelt could win the nomination at the convention balloting J Hamilton Lewis won the presidential primary in Illinois on April 12 1932 and the state s fifty eight member delegation was instructed to vote for him but he withdrew before the convention on June 25 The majority of the Illinois delegation supported Melvin Alvah Traylor for the first three ballots before giving their support to Roosevelt on the fourth ballot Tom Pendergast a political boss in Missouri had the state s delegation instructed to vote for James A Reed who had run for the nomination in the 1928 election and the delegation supported Reed for the first three ballots before switching to Roosevelt Harry F Byrd and George White were favorite son candidates from their states A Harry Moore was a favorite son candidate supported by Lewis but the delegation of his home state New Jersey voted for Smith 3 Both Smith and Roosevelt were against Prohibition but Smith supported making it a main issue during the campaign while Roosevelt did not John J Raskob who had become the chair of the Democratic National Committee with Smith s support attempted to have the committee make a statement against prohibition in March 1931 and Smith gave a speech in support of it James Farley the chair of the New York State Democratic Committee and later Roosevelt s presidential campaign manager had the New York committee pass a resolution opposing declarations before the national convention was held Other state parties supported this resolution causing the vote to not happen Raskob proposed the declaration again on January 9 1932 but had the committee not take action on it 3 5 Tammany Hall and Roosevelt had a truce during his governorship but the organization came to openly oppose him for his role in Mayor Jimmy Walker s resignation Tammany Hall supported Smith for the nomination at the convention causing Roosevelt to refuse to support their mayoral candidate in the 1933 election and to support Fiorello La Guardia in the 1937 election Tammany Hall s power was also reduced by the adoption of proportional representation for the New York City Council Roosevelt also gave support to the American Labor Party in order for Democratic voters to support the New Deal without giving support to Tammany Hall candidates Representative John J O Connor who represented one of the districts with the strongest Tammany influence and was the chair of the House Rules Committee lost renomination in the Democratic primary and in the general election with the Republican nomination in the 1938 election 4 Smith s strategy against Roosevelt was to use favorite son candidates to control the delegations of their states in places that would have otherwise gone for Roosevelt The majority of Smith s support came from the northeast while Roosevelt s support came from the south and west Wilbur Lucius Cross Joseph B Ely Frank Hague J Howard McGrath Moore Raskob and Jouett Shouse were among Smith s campaign leaders Roosevelt attempted to have some of the favorite son candidates withdraw using Homer Stille Cummings as a mediator but he was unsuccessful 3 Seventeen states used primaries to select their delegates to the national conventions while the rest used a convention system Roosevelt controlled the delegations from thirty states and additional delegations from Arkansas Indiana Kansas and South Carolina had supporters of Roosevelt but were uninstructed Roosevelt was endorsed at the state convention in Mississippi but the delegates were left uninstructed Roosevelt also claimed that he had the support of the twenty eight delegates from all of the territories Smith controlled the delegates from four states The remaining delegations were either uninstructed or under the control of favorite sons Roosevelt failed to gain control of two thirds of the delegates which was required for him to gain the nomination 3 6 3 4 The convention was held in Chicago between June 27 and July 2 The first vote was taken at 4 28 on the morning of July 2 after ten hours of speeches that had begun at 5 00 on the previous afternoon 7 The Roosevelt delegations from Louisiana and Minnesota were seated giving Roosevelt an additional thirty two votes Thomas J Walsh an ally of Roosevelt was elected to chair the convention against Shouse by a vote of 626 to 528 Roosevelt received the most votes on the first three ballots but he still did not have a two thirds majority 8 3 John Nance Garner who had the support of William Randolph Hearst won in the California primary due to the support of the Texas State Society of California which had 100 000 members Garner had the support of ninety delegates at the convention and Hearst created a compromise with Roosevelt Roosevelt who needed the support of the Californian and Texan delegations to gain a two thirds majority would receive the support of Garner s delegates in exchange for Garner being given the vice presidential nomination With this agreement Garner s supporters in California and Texas were released by Sam Rayburn Garner s campaign manager and voted for Roosevelt on the fourth ballot giving him the presidential nomination Members of the Texas delegation who opposed Roosevelt were led by Amon G Carter but the Roosevelt supporters led by Thomas Whitfield Davidson won by a vote of 54 to 51 Connecticut Massachusetts New Jersey New York and Rhode Island were the only states whose delegations did not support Roosevelt on the final ballot Garner won the vice presidential nomination on the first ballot against Matthew A Tinley and his nomination was made unanimous 6 3 5 9 Presidential ballot 1st ballot 2nd 3rd ballot 4th ballotFranklin D Roosevelt 666 25 677 75 682 75 945Al Smith 201 75 194 25 190 25 190 50John Nance Garner 90 25 90 25 101 25 0George White 52 50 5 52 5 0Melvin Alvah Traylor 42 25 40 25 40 25 3Harry F Byrd 25 25 24 0James A Reed 24 18 27 5 0William H Murray 23 0 0 0Albert Ritchie 21 23 5 23 5 0Newton D Baker 8 5 8 8 5 5 5Will Rogers 0 22 0 0James M Cox 0 0 0 1Not voting absent 0 4 5 3 5 0Reference 3 3 3 3 Republican Party nomination edit Main article 1932 Republican National Convention nbsp Republican Party United States 1932 Republican Party ticketHerbert Hoover Charles Curtisfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 31stPresident of the United States 1929 1933 31stVice President of the United States 1929 1933 Republican candidates Herbert Hoover President of the United States Joseph I France former Senator from Maryland Calvin Coolidge former President of the United States declined Dwight Morrow Senator from New Jersey died nbsp President Herbert Hoover nbsp Former Senator Joseph I France from Maryland nbsp Calvin Coolidge former President of the United States declined nbsp Senator Dwight Morrow from New Jersey died nbsp President Herbert Hoover and White House Press Secretary Theodore JoslinIn November 1931 Senator Hiram Johnson called for Hoover to retire as it would increase the chances of the Republicans winning in the 1932 election Hoover s opponents in the Republican Party supported giving either former President Calvin Coolidge or Senator Dwight Morrow the party s presidential nomination Morrow had been elected to the U S Senate from New Jersey in 1930 but died on October 5 1931 On July 31 1931 an article by James F Coupal Coolidge s former White House physician was published by the St Paul Dispatch in which Coupal stated that Coolidge would run if the people of this country evince an unmistakable and unquestionable desire to draft him to pull the country out of this period of depression and if he can have the presidency without any political or other obligations attached to it Coolidge did not run for the nomination and an article written by him was published by The Saturday Evening Post on October 3 1932 in which he gave his support to Hoover and was critical of those who had wanted him to run 3 Charles G Dawes was suggested as a candidate following Morrow s death and the unsuccessful attempt to draft Coolidge but his selection as president of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation took him out of consideration Progressive Republicans considered forming a third party but William Borah Johnson George W Norris and Gifford Pinchot declined to lead such a movement An attempt to have progressive leaders in multiple states run against Hoover failed and Borah stated that Hoover could not be defeated 3 Hoover formally started his campaign by having Robert H Lucas executive director of the Republican National Committee send out letters to precinct leaders in January 1931 Postmaster General Walter Folger Brown and Treasury Secretary Ogden L Mills helped manage Hoover s campaign Theodore Joslin started a publicity campaign to improve Hoover s image 3 Joseph I France a member of the conservative faction ran against Hoover in the primary but only won in states where he was unopposed These states also had no delegates bounded to their primaries leading to them sending pro Hoover delegations At the national convention Lawritz Bernhard Sandblast a delegate from Oregon nominated France but France attempted to address the convention to withdraw his candidacy and instead nominate Coolidge Hoover had him removed citing that he could not address the convention as he was not a delegate Hoover who was nominated by Joseph Scott won renomination on the first ballot while France only received four delegates 3 Dawes was proposed as a replacement for Vice President Charles Curtis who faced opposition due to his age and prohibitionist stances and delegations from over twenty states opposed the renomination of Curtis However Dawes declined to seek the vice presidential nomination Curtis Alvan T Fuller James Harbord Hanford MacNider J Leonard Replogle and Bertrand Snell were nominated for the vice presidential balloting Curtis initially fell 19 25 votes short of winning on the first ballot but the Pennsylvania delegation changed its support to Curtis causing him to win 3 Presidential ballot 1st ballot Vice presidential ballot 1st ballotHerbert Hoover 1126 5 Charles Curtis 633 75John J Blaine 13 Hanford MacNider 178 75Calvin Coolidge 4 5 James Harbord 161 75Joseph I France 4 Edward Martin 75Charles G Dawes 1 Alvan T Fuller 57James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr 1 Bertrand Snell 55Patrick J Hurley 25J Leonard Replogle 22 75Charles G Dawes 9 75James J Couzens 2William S Kenyon 2David Sinton Ingalls 2Hiram Bingham III 1Not voting 3 Not voting 0Absent 1 Absent 1Reference 3 3 3 Other candidates edit Socialist Party edit Norman Thomas who had been the Socialist Party of America s presidential nominee in the 1928 election and ran for a seat in the U S House of Representatives in the 1930 election and James H Maurer who was the party s vice presidential nominee in the 1928 election were given the Socialist Party presidential and vice presidential nominations at the national convention held May 21 24 in Milwaukee Thomas and his faction unsuccessfully tried to have Morris Hillquit replaced as chair of the party by Daniel Hoan The Literary Digest s polling predicted that Thomas would receive over two million votes 3 Communist Party edit William Z Foster who had been the Communist Party USA s presidential nominee in the 1928 election was given the presidential nomination at the national convention held from May 28 29 in Chicago and James W Ford was given the vice presidential nomination 3 Farmer Labor Party edit Frank Webb and former Mayor Jacob S Coxey Sr were given the presidential and vice presidential nominations of the Farmer Labor Party at its convention on April 28 in Omaha Nebraska John R Brinkley Thomas Mooney and Arthur C Townley had also been proposed as candidates for the nomination However Webb was removed from the ticket with the party stating that he was a tool of the Hoover administration and Coxey was given the presidential nomination The Minnesota Farmer Labor Party did not support the national party s ticket After having the Farmer Labor presidential nomination taken from him Webb formed the Liberty Party with him as its presidential nominee while the larger Liberty Party gave its nomination to William Hope Harvey 3 Liberal Party edit Samuel Harden Church who had formed the Liberal Party in Pennsylvania which received 366 572 votes on its ballot line in the 1930 gubernatorial election unsuccessfully tried to form a national anti prohibitionist Liberal Party Nicholas Murray Butler proposed the creation of a new party on May 19 1932 which would be composed of the moderate wings of both existing Democratic and Republican parties 3 General election editCampaign edit nbsp 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 his speech he stated ours must be a party of liberal thought of planned action of the enlightened international outlook and of the greatest good to the greatest number of our citizens 10 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 11 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 6 244 and indeed the unofficial anthem of the Democratic Party 12 Democratic leaders in the eastern United States supported having Roosevelt conduct a front porch campaign but Roosevelt and the leaders in the western United States instead supported an active campaign Roosevelt gave twenty seven major speeches during the campaign while Hoover initially planned on giving three major speeches during the campaign but it was later increased to ten and Hoover traveled over 10 000 miles 3 Simeon D Fess who had become chair of the Republican National Committee with Hoover s support resigned from his position and was replaced by Everett Sanders with Hoover s support Raskob who became the chair of the Democratic National Convention with Smith s support was replaced by Farley Campaign expenditures for both parties fell from the 1928 election to the 1932 election The combined expenditures of both national committees would be 5 146 027 which was less than 0 13 per voter This was the lowest amount spent per voter since the 1912 election with most elections costing around 0 19 0 20 per voter and the 1924 presidential election costing 0 15 per voter 3 Both parties spent large amounts on radio campaigns with 17 18 of Democratic and over 20 of the Republican national committees spending being towards radio During the 1928 election the Republicans paid 420 000 to radio companies and increased their spending to 437 000 during the 1932 election The Democrats reduced their spending with their amount falling from 550 000 during the 1928 election to 343 415 during the 1932 election 3 During the campaign NBC and CBS aired 203 programs of paid time that took up 116 hours and 15 minutes One hundred thirty six of those programs were for the Republicans seventy one for the Democrats and three for the Socialists The Republicans had seventy hours and thirty two minutes the Democrats had forty nine hours and thirty two minutes and the Socialists had forty five minutes of air time 3 Roosevelt made gains with voters compared to Smith s 1928 campaign The southerners who had supported Hoover in the 1928 campaign returned to the Democratic Party and progressive Republicans under the leadership of Bronson M Cutting Johnson Robert M La Follette Jr Norris and Henry A Wallace left the Republicans to support Roosevelt Farley predicted that Roosevelt would win in forty four states and later congratulated Sanders on his imagination and courage when Sanders predicted that Hoover would win 338 electoral votes 3 After their divisive convention Democrats united around Roosevelt who was able to draw more universal support than Al Smith had in 1928 13 Roosevelt s Protestant background prevented the anti Catholic attacks Smith faced in 1928 and The Depression seemed to be of much greater concern among the American public than previous cultural battles Prohibition was increasingly unpopular and wets offered the argument that states and localities needed the tax money Hoover proposed a new constitutional amendment that was vague on particulars and satisfied neither side Roosevelt s platform promised repeal of the 18th Amendment 14 15 nbsp Roosevelt seated center at Greenway Ranch in Williams Arizona on September 26 1932 He is accompanied by U S Senator from Arizona Carl Hayden standing far right along with among others three Democrats from the U S Senate seated Pittman Walsh and Cohen In contrast Hoover was not supported by many of the more prominent Republicans and violently opposed by others in particular by a number of senators who had fought him throughout his administration and whose national reputation made their opposition of considerable importance Many prominent Republicans even went so far as to espouse the cause of the Democratic candidate openly 16 Making matters worse for Hoover was the fact that many Americans blamed him for the Great Depression The outrage caused by the deaths of veterans in the Bonus Army incident in the summer of 1932 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 thrown at him or his vehicle as he rode through city streets 17 18 Hoover s unpopularity resulted in Roosevelt adopting a cautious campaign strategy focused on minimizing gaffes and keeping public attention directed towards his opponent 19 As Governor of New York Roosevelt had garnered a reputation for promoting government help for the impoverished providing a welcome contrast for many who saw Hoover as a do nothing president 20 Roosevelt emphasized working collectively through an expanded federal government to confront the economic crisis a contrast to Hoover s emphasis on individualism 19 During the campaign Roosevelt ran on many of the programs that would later become part of the New Deal during his presidency 21 It was said that even a vaguely talented dog catcher could have been elected president against the Republicans 22 Hoover even received a letter from an Illinois man that advised Vote for Roosevelt and make it unanimous 23 Roosevelt employed the radio to great effect during the campaign He was able to outline his platform while also improving the perception of his personality 24 In March 1932 The New York Times quoted radio producer John Carlile who said that Roosevelt had a tone of perfect sincerity while for Hoover the microphone betrays deliberate effort in his radio voice 25 The technology not only allowed Roosevelt to reach far more voters than he could via in person campaigning but also drew attention away from his paralysis due to polio 24 Roosevelt took great pains to hide the effects of the disease from voters instituting a gentleman s agreement with the press that he not be photographed in ways that would highlight his disability 26 The election was held on November 8 1932 Results edit nbsp Results by county explicitly indicating the percentage for the winning candidate Shades of blue are for Roosevelt Democratic shades of red are for Hoover Republican grey indicates zero recorded votes and white indicates territories not elevated to statehood 27 Roosevelt defeated Hoover in the election Hoover became the seventh president to lose reelection after John Adams John Quincy Adams Martin Van Buren Grover Cleveland Benjamin Harrison and William Howard Taft Another president would not lose an election to another term until Gerald Ford was defeated by Jimmy Carter in the 1976 presidential election 28 This was the first election since 1916 16 years earlier in which the Democratic candidate won Although the other vote the combined vote total for candidates other than the nominees of the two major parties of 1932 was three times that of 1928 it was considerably less than what had been recorded in 1920 the time of the greatest other vote with the exception of the unusual conditions prevailing in 1912 and 1924 Roosevelt the Democratic candidate received 22 817 883 votes 57 41 the largest vote ever cast for a candidate for the Presidency up until that time and over 1 425 000 more than that cast for Hoover four years earlier While Hoover had won a greater percentage of the vote in 1928 as did Harding in 1920 the national swing of 17 59 to the Democrats impressed all who considered the distribution of the vote more than one sixth of the electorate had switched from supporting the Republicans to the Democrats Only once before had there been a comparable shift in 1920 when there was a 14 65 swing to the Republicans while there had been a swing to the Democrats of 13 6 in 1912 this was from a three candidate election 16 Roosevelt improved on Smith s net vote total performance in the twelve largest cities Smith had won those areas by 210 000 votes in the 1928 election while Roosevelt won by 1 791 000 votes Roosevelt s worst performance in the country was in the eastern United States where all six of the states that voted for Hoover came from Hoover only won in forty five counties west of the Mississippi 3 4 As of 2024 the swing for the Democrats from Smith in 1928 to Roosevelt remains the largest national swing of the electorate between presidential elections in the history of the United States The largest swing since came for the Democrats in 1976 when the swing from George McGovern in 1972 to Jimmy Carter was 12 61 1932 was a political realignment election not only did Roosevelt win a sweeping victory over Hoover but Democrats significantly extended their control over the U S House gaining 101 seats and also gained 12 seats in the U S Senate to gain control of the chamber Twelve years of Republican leadership came to an end and 20 consecutive years of Democratic control of the White House began 29 Until 1932 the Republicans had controlled the Presidency for 52 of the previous 72 years dating back to Abraham Lincoln being elected president in 1860 After 1932 Democrats would control the Presidency for 32 of the next 48 years Roosevelt led the poll in 2 722 counties the greatest number ever carried by a candidate up until that time Of these 282 had never before been Democratic Only 374 remained loyally Republican Half of the total vote of the nation was cast in just eight states New York New Jersey Pennsylvania Ohio Illinois Indiana Michigan and Wisconsin in these states Hoover polled 8 592 163 votes In one section West South Central the Republican percentage sank to 16 21 but in no other section did the party poll less than 30 of the vote cast However the relative appeal of the two candidates in 1932 and the decline of the appeal of Hoover as compared with 1928 are shown in the fact that the Republican vote increased in 1932 in only 87 counties while the Democratic vote increased in 3 003 counties Herbert Hoover also failed to flip any counties The vote cast for Hoover and the fact that in only one section of the nation West South Central did he have less than 500 000 votes and in only three states outside of the South less than 50 000 votes made it clear that the nation remained a two party electorate and that everywhere despite the overwhelming triumph of the Democrats there was a party membership devoted to neither the new administration nor the proposals of the Socialist candidate who had polled 75 of the other vote as well as the highest raw vote total of his campaigns 30 This election marks the last time as of 2024 that a Republican presidential candidate won a majority of black and African American votes as New Deal policies took effect the strong support of black voters for these programs began a transition from their traditional support for Republicans to providing solid majorities for Democrats The Roosevelt ticket swept every region of the country except the Northeast 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 split in two Michigan voted Democratic for the first time since the emergence of the Republican Party in 1854 and Minnesota was carried by a Democrat for the first time since its admission to statehood in 1858 leaving Vermont as the only remaining state never to be carried by a Democratic candidate which it would not be until 1964 In contrast to the state s solid support of Republicans prior to this election Minnesota has continued supporting Democrats in every presidential election but three since 1932 the exceptions were in 1952 1956 and 1972 Roosevelt s victory with 472 electoral votes stood until the 1964 victory of Lyndon B Johnson who won 486 electoral votes in 1964 as the most ever won by a first time contestant in a presidential election Roosevelt also bettered the national record of 444 electoral votes set by Hoover only four years earlier but would shatter his own record when he was re elected in 1936 with 523 votes This was the last election in which Connecticut Delaware New Hampshire and Pennsylvania voted Republican until 1948 Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteFranklin D Roosevelt Democratic New York 22 821 277 57 41 472 John Nance Garner Texas 472Herbert Hoover incumbent Republican California 15 761 254 39 65 59 Charles Curtis Kansas 59Norman Thomas Socialist New York 884 885 2 23 0 James H Maurer Pennsylvania 0William Z Foster Communist Illinois 103 307 0 26 0 James W Ford Alabama 0William David Upshaw Prohibition Georgia 81 905 0 21 0 Frank S Regan Illinois 0William Hope Harvey Liberty Arkansas 53 425 0 13 0 Frank Hemenway Washington 0Verne L Reynolds Socialist Labor New York 34 038 0 09 0 John W Aiken Massachusetts 0Jacob S Coxey Sr Farmer Labor Ohio 7 431 0 02 0 Julius Reiter Minnesota 0Other 4 376 0 01 Other Total 39 751 898 100 531 531Needed to win 266 266Source 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 Popular voteRoosevelt 57 41 Hoover 39 65 Thomas 2 23 Foster 0 26 Others 0 45 Electoral voteRoosevelt 88 89 Hoover 11 11 Geography of results edit nbsp nbsp Results by county shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the voteCartographic gallery edit nbsp Presidential election results by county nbsp Democratic presidential election results by county nbsp Republican presidential election results by county nbsp Other presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Democratic presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Republican presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Other presidential election results by countyResults by state edit Source 31 States districts won by Roosevelt GarnerStates districts won by Hoover CurtisState EV Roosevelt GarnerDemocratic Hoover CurtisRepublican Thomas MaurerSocialist Other Margin TotalvotesVotes EV Votes EV Votes EV Votes EV Votes Alabama 11 207 910 84 74 11 34 675 14 13 2 030 0 83 739 0 30 173 235 70 61 245 354Arizona 3 79 264 67 03 3 36 104 30 53 2 618 2 21 265 0 22 43 160 36 50 118 251Arkansas 9 189 602 85 96 9 28 467 12 91 1 269 0 58 1 224 0 55 161 135 73 06 220 562California 22 1 324 157 58 39 22 847 902 37 39 63 299 2 79 32 608 1 44 476 255 21 00 2 267 966Colorado 6 250 877 54 81 6 189 617 41 43 13 591 2 97 3 611 0 79 61 260 13 38 457 696Connecticut 8 281 632 47 40 288 420 48 54 8 20 480 3 45 3 651 0 61 6 788 1 14 594 183Delaware 3 54 319 48 11 57 073 50 55 3 1 376 1 22 133 0 12 2 754 2 44 112 901Florida 7 206 307 74 68 7 69 170 25 04 775 0 28 137 137 49 64 276 252Georgia 12 234 118 91 60 12 19 863 7 77 461 0 18 1 148 0 45 214 255 83 83 255 590Idaho 4 109 479 58 66 4 71 417 38 27 526 0 28 5 203 2 79 38 062 20 39 186 625Illinois 29 1 882 304 55 23 29 1 432 756 42 04 67 258 1 97 25 608 0 75 449 548 13 19 3 407 926Indiana 14 862 054 54 67 14 677 184 42 94 21 388 1 36 16 301 1 03 184 870 11 72 1 576 927Iowa 11 598 019 57 69 11 414 433 39 98 20 467 1 97 3 768 0 36 183 586 17 71 1 036 687Kansas 9 424 204 53 56 9 349 498 44 13 18 276 2 31 74 706 9 43 791 978Kentucky 11 580 574 59 06 11 394 716 40 15 3 853 0 39 3 920 0 40 185 858 18 91 983 063Louisiana 10 249 418 92 79 10 18 853 7 01 533 0 20 230 565 85 77 268 804Maine 5 128 907 43 19 166 631 55 83 5 2 489 0 83 417 0 14 37 724 12 64 298 444Maryland 8 314 314 61 50 8 184 184 36 04 10 489 2 05 2 067 0 40 130 130 25 46 511 054Massachusetts 17 800 148 50 64 17 736 959 46 64 34 305 2 17 8 702 0 55 63 189 4 00 1 580 114Michigan 19 871 700 52 36 19 739 894 44 44 39 205 2 35 13 966 0 84 131 806 7 92 1 664 765Minnesota 11 600 806 59 91 11 363 959 36 29 25 476 2 54 12 602 1 26 236 847 23 62 1 002 843Mississippi 9 140 168 95 98 9 5 180 3 55 686 0 47 134 988 92 44 146 034Missouri 15 1 025 406 63 69 15 564 713 35 08 16 374 1 02 3 401 0 21 460 693 28 62 1 609 894Montana 4 127 286 58 80 4 78 078 36 07 7 891 3 65 3 224 1 49 49 208 22 73 216 479Nebraska 7 359 082 62 98 7 201 177 35 29 9 876 1 73 2 0 00 157 905 27 70 570 137Nevada 3 28 756 69 41 3 12 674 30 59 16 082 38 82 41 430New Hampshire 4 100 680 48 99 103 629 50 42 4 947 0 46 264 0 13 2 949 1 43 205 520New Jersey 16 806 394 49 49 16 775 406 47 59 42 988 2 64 4 719 0 29 30 988 1 90 1 629 507New Mexico 3 95 089 62 72 3 54 217 35 76 1 776 1 17 524 0 35 40 872 26 96 151 606New York 47 2 534 959 54 07 47 1 937 963 41 33 177 397 3 78 38 295 0 82 596 996 12 73 4 688 614North Carolina 13 497 566 69 93 13 208 344 29 28 5 591 0 79 289 222 40 65 711 501North Dakota 4 178 350 69 59 4 71 772 28 00 3 521 1 37 2 647 1 03 106 578 41 58 256 290Ohio 26 1 301 695 49 88 26 1 227 319 47 03 64 094 2 46 16 620 0 64 74 376 2 85 2 609 728Oklahoma 11 516 468 73 30 11 188 165 26 70 328 303 46 59 704 633Oregon 5 213 871 57 99 5 136 019 36 88 15 450 4 19 3 468 0 94 77 852 21 11 368 808Pennsylvania 36 1 295 948 45 33 1 453 540 50 84 36 91 223 3 19 18 466 0 65 157 592 5 51 2 859 177Rhode Island 4 146 604 55 08 4 115 266 43 31 3 138 1 18 1 162 0 44 31 338 11 77 266 170South Carolina 8 102 347 98 03 8 1 978 1 89 82 0 08 100 369 96 13 104 407South Dakota 4 183 515 63 62 4 99 212 34 40 1 551 0 54 4 160 1 44 84 303 29 23 288 438Tennessee 11 259 473 66 49 11 126 752 32 48 1 796 0 46 2 235 0 57 132 721 34 01 390 256Texas 23 760 348 88 06 23 97 959 11 35 4 450 0 52 669 0 08 662 389 76 72 863 426Utah 4 116 750 56 52 4 84 795 41 05 4 087 1 98 946 0 46 31 955 15 47 206 578Vermont 3 56 266 41 08 78 984 57 66 3 1 533 1 12 197 0 14 22 718 16 58 136 980Virginia 11 203 979 68 46 11 89 637 30 09 2 382 0 80 1 944 0 65 114 342 38 38 297 942Washington 8 353 260 57 46 8 208 645 33 94 17 080 2 78 35 829 5 83 144 615 23 52 614 814West Virginia 8 405 124 54 47 8 330 731 44 47 5 133 0 69 2 786 0 37 74 393 10 00 743 774Wisconsin 12 707 410 63 46 12 347 741 31 19 53 379 4 79 6 278 0 56 359 669 32 26 1 114 808Wyoming 3 54 370 56 07 3 39 583 40 82 2 829 2 92 180 0 19 14 787 15 25 96 962Total 531 22 821 277 57 41 472 15 761 254 39 65 59 884 885 2 23 284 482 0 72 7 060 023 17 76 39 751 898Roosevelt GarnerDemocratic Hoover CurtisRepublican Thomas MaurerSocialist Others Margin TotalvotesClose states edit Margin of victory less than 5 74 electoral votes Connecticut 1 14 6 788 votes New Hampshire 1 43 2 949 votes New Jersey 1 90 30 988 votes Delaware 2 44 2 754 votes Ohio 2 85 74 376 votes Massachusetts 4 00 63 189 votes Margin of victory between 5 and 10 64 electoral votes Pennsylvania 5 51 157 592 votes Michigan 7 92 131 806 votes Kansas 9 43 74 706 votes Tipping point state Iowa 17 71 183 586 votes Statistics edit Counties with highest percent of vote Democratic Wilkinson County Georgia 100 00 Armstrong County South Dakota 100 00 Lancaster County South Carolina 99 84 Sharkey County Mississippi 99 82 Colleton County South Carolina 99 69 Counties with highest percent of vote Republican Johnson County Tennessee 84 51 Jackson County Kentucky 84 28 Leslie County Kentucky 82 96 Owsley County Kentucky 79 08 Sevier County Tennessee 77 01 Counties with highest percent of vote Other Sheridan County Montana 32 54 Thurston County Washington 23 12 Clallam County Washington 22 73 Berks County Pennsylvania 22 17 Lake County Minnesota 21 75 See also edit1932 United States Senate elections 1932 United States House of Representatives elections History of the United States 1918 1945 Timeline of the Great Depression Causes of the Great Depression Great Contraction First inauguration of Franklin D Roosevelt Presidency of Franklin D RooseveltReferences edit National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Election Project CQ Press History of American Political Parties a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Donnelly Thomas 1935 The 1932 Campaign An Analysis Farrar amp Rinehart a b c Murphy Paul 1974 Political Parties In American History Volume 3 1890 present G P Putnam s Sons a b Roosevelt Nominated on Fourth Ballot Garner Expected to be His Running Mate Governor Will Fly to Convention Today The New York Times July 2 1932 Archived from the original on February 4 2022 a b c Neal Stephen 2010 Happy Days Are Here Again The 1932 Democratic Convention the Emergence of FDR and How America Was Changed Forever HarperCollins ISBN 9780062015419 O Mara Margaret Pivotal Tuesdays Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 94 Henning Arthur S July 2 1932 Pick Roosevelt Here Today Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 13 2020 subscription required Patenaude Lionel 1975 The Garner Vote Switch to Roosevelt 1932 Democratic Convention Texas State Historical Association Address Accepting the Presidential Nomination at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago The American Presidency Project Archived from the original on December 5 2017 Retrieved November 24 2017 Alter Jonathan 2006 The defining moment FDR s hundred days and the triumph of hope New York Simon amp Schuster pp 115 116 ISBN 978 0 7432 4600 2 Arnold Shaw The jazz age popular music in the 1920s 1989 p 228 The Election of 1932 Franklin D Roosevelt and the First New Deal boundless com Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved July 14 2013 Prohibition After the 1932 Elections CQ Researcher Herbert Brucker How Long O Prohibition The North American Review 234 4 1932 pp 347 357 online a b The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson pg 29 Overall Unemployment Rate in the U S Civilian Labor Force 1920 2007 Infoplease com Retrieved November 4 2008 Timeline of the Great Depression Hyperhistory com Retrieved November 4 2008 a b William E Leuchtenburg October 4 2016 Franklin D Roosevelt Campaigns and Elections Retrieved October 20 2020 Leuchtenburg William E 2009 Herbert Hoover Times Books pp 138 139 Rauchway Eric 2019 The New Deal Was on the Ballot in 1932 Modern American History 2 2 201 213 doi 10 1017 mah 2018 42 ISSN 2515 0456 Cambell Jeff November 19 2008 Hoover s Popularity Lonely Planet Will George F November 9 2000 No the System Worked Washington Post Retrieved January 9 2021 a b O Mara Margaret Pivotal Tuesdays Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 97 Search For Ideal Radio Voice Is An Unending Task The New York Times March 20 1932 Retrieved October 13 2020 subscription required Pressman Matthew July 12 2013 The myth of FDR s secret disability Time Retrieved August 12 2013 The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Google Books Stanford University Press 1934 ISBN 9780804716963 Retrieved August 12 2014 How many US presidents have lost a second term All the one term presidents The Independent November 8 2020 Archived from the original on February 4 2022 Gibbs Nancy November 10 2008 When New President Meets Old It s Not Always Pretty Time Archived from the original on November 11 2008 The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson p 30 1932 Presidential General Election Data National Retrieved April 8 2013 Further reading editAndersen Kristi The Creation of a Democratic Majority 1928 1936 1979 statistical study of voting patterns Burns James Macgregor Roosevelt the Lion and the Fox 1956 online pp 123 52 Carcasson Martin Herbert Hoover and the presidential campaign of 1932 The failure of apologia Presidential Studies Quarterly 28 2 1998 349 365 in JSTOR Eden Robert 1993 On the Origins of the Regime of Pragmatic Liberalism John Dewey Adolf A Berle and FDR s Commonwealth Club Address of 1932 Studies in American Political Development 7 74 150 doi 10 1017 S0898588X00000699 Freidel Frank Franklin D Roosevelt The Triumph 1956 covers 1929 32 in depth online Freidel Frank Election of 1932 in Arthur M Schlesinger Jr ed The Coming to Power Critical Presidential Elections in American History 1981 Gosnell Harold F Champion Campaigner Franklin D Roosevelt 1952 Gosnell Harold F Gill Norman N 1935 An Analysis of the 1932 Presidential Vote in Chicago American Political Science Review 29 6 967 984 doi 10 2307 1947313 JSTOR 1947313 Houck Davis W 2004 FDR s Commonwealth Club Address Redefining Individualism Adjudicating Greatness Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 7 3 259 282 doi 10 1353 rap 2005 0006 S2CID 144548607 Hoover Herbert The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover The Great Depression 1929 1941 1952 Nicolaides Becky M 1988 Radio electioneering in the American presidential campaigns of 1932 and 1936 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 8 2 115 138 doi 10 1080 01439688800260171 O Mara Margaret 2015 Pivotal Tuesdays doi 10 9783 9780812291711 ISBN 9780812291711 Peel Roy V Donnelly Thomas C 1936 The 1932 Campaign An Analysis Journal of Educational Sociology 9 8 510 doi 10 2307 2262331 JSTOR 2262331 Pietrusza David 1932 The Rise of Hitler and FDR Two Tales of Politics Betrayal and Unlikely Destiny 2015 Ritchie Donald A Electing FDR The New Deal Campaign of 1932 2007 Ritchie Donald A 2011 The Election of 1932 A Companion to Franklin D Roosevelt pp 77 95 doi 10 1002 9781444395181 ch5 ISBN 9781444395181 Robinson Edgar Eugene The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Stanford university press 1940 voting returns for every county Schlesinger Jr Arthur M The Crisis of the Old Order 1957 pp 427 54 onlinePrimary sources edit Chester Edward W A guide to political platforms 1977 online Porter Kirk H and Donald Bruce Johnson eds National party platforms 1840 1964 1965 online 1840 1956External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States presidential election 1932 1932 popular vote by countiesElection of 1932 in Counting the Votes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php 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