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1940 Democratic National Convention

The 1940 Democratic National Convention was held at the Chicago Stadium in Chicago, Illinois from July 15 to July 18, 1940. The convention resulted in the nomination of President Franklin D. Roosevelt for an unprecedented third term. Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace from Iowa was nominated for vice president.

1940 Democratic National Convention
1940 presidential election
Nominees
Roosevelt and Wallace
Convention
Date(s)July 15–18, 1940
CityChicago, Illinois
VenueChicago Stadium
Candidates
Presidential nomineeFranklin D. Roosevelt of New York
Vice presidential nomineeHenry A. Wallace of Iowa
Voting
Total delegates1093
Votes needed for nomination547 (majority)
Results (president)Roosevelt (NY): 946 (86.32%)
Farley (NY): 72 (6.57%)
Garner (TX): 61 (5.57%)
Tydings (MD): 9 (0.82%)
Cordell Hull (TN): 5 (0.47%)
Results (vice president)Wallace (IA): 626 (59.3%)
Bankhead (AL): 329 (31.17%)
McNutt (IN): 68 (6.44%)
Others: 32.5 (3.07%)
‹ 1936 · 1944 ›

Despite the unprecedented bid for a third term, Roosevelt was nominated on the first ballot. Roosevelt's most formidable challengers were his former campaign manager James Farley and Vice President John Nance Garner. Both had sought the nomination for the presidency and soundly lost to Roosevelt who would be "drafted" at the convention. Henry Wallace was Roosevelt's preferred choice for the vice presidency. His candidacy was opposed vehemently by some delegates, particularly the conservative wing of the party which had been unenthusiastic about Wallace's liberal positions. Nonetheless, Wallace was ultimately nominated with the votes of 59% of the delegates, on the first ballot.[1]

Background Edit

By late 1939 President Franklin D. Roosevelt's plans regarding a possible third term in 1940 affected national politics. A Republican leader told H. V. Kaltenborn in September 1939, for example, that Congressional distrust of the president was a cause of the controversy over revising the Neutrality Acts of 1930s. The politician, who supported selling weapons to Britain and France, claimed that Roosevelt could "regain the complete confidence of Congress and the country" by announcing that he would not run for a third term. An unnamed Roosevelt advisor said, however, that doing so would reduce the president's influence on Congress and the Democratic party. Roosevelt would not announce his intentions until spring 1940, the advisor said.[2]

Throughout the winter of 1939, and the spring and summer of 1940, whether Roosevelt would run again remained unknown. The "two-term" tradition, although not yet enshrined in the U.S. Constitution as the 22nd Amendment, had been established by President George Washington when he refused to run for a third term in 1796, and the tradition was further supported by Thomas Jefferson.[1] Roosevelt, however, refused to give a definitive statement as to his willingness to be a candidate, even indicating to his old friend and political kingmaker James Farley[3] that he would not be a candidate again and that he could seek the nomination; Farley thus began his campaign.[4] Millard Tydings also announced his candidacy; the Maryland senator and member of the anti-Roosevelt conservative coalition would likely be a favorite son at the convention, but was also a possible compromise candidate for an anti-New Deal Democratic Party after Roosevelt's presidency.[5]

Roosevelt told others of his plans not to run, including Cordell Hull, Frances Perkins, and Daniel J. Tobin. His wife Eleanor was opposed to a third term. Perhaps the most definitive evidence of Roosevelt's intention to not run for a third term is that in January 1940 he signed a contract to write 26 articles a year for Collier's for three years after leaving the presidency in January 1941. However, as Nazi Germany defeated France and threatened Britain in the summer of 1940, Roosevelt decided that only he had the necessary experience and skills to see the nation safely through the Nazi threat. His belief that no other Democrat who would continue the New Deal could win was likely also a reason.[4] He was aided by the party's political bosses, who feared that no Democrat except Roosevelt could defeat the charismatic Wendell Willkie, the Republican candidate.[citation needed]

Presidential nomination Edit

Presidential candidates Edit

By the convention Farley and Vice President John Nance Garner were declared candidates, and Paul McNutt was a possibility.[4] Roosevelt still did not want to declare openly for re-nomination, so his backers arranged a stunt at the convention. Roosevelt dictated a message on the phone to Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley, which Barkley read out to the convention during the first day's proceedings. It concluded

The President has never had, and has not today, any desire or purpose to continue in the office of President, to be a candidate for that office, or to be nominated by the convention for that office. He wishes in earnestness and sincerity to make it clear that all of the delegates in this convention are free to vote for any candidate.[4]

John Gunther later wrote that Barkley's message "can scarcely be said to have conveyed the whole or literal truth".[4]

The "Voice from the Sewers" Edit

After the reading of Roosevelt's message, the convention sat in shocked silence for a moment. The silence was then broken by a voice thundering over the stadium loudspeakers: "We want Roosevelt! We want Roosevelt!" The voice was Thomas D. Garry, Superintendent of Chicago's Department of Sanitation (the sewers department), a trusted henchman of Chicago Mayor Ed Kelly. Garry was stationed in a basement room with a microphone, waiting for that moment. Kelly had posted hundreds of Chicago city workers and precinct captains around the hall; other Democratic bosses had brought followers from their home territories. All of them joined Garry's chant. Within a few seconds, hundreds of delegates joined in. Many poured into the aisles, carrying state delegation standards for impromptu demonstrations. Whenever the chant began to die down, state chairmen, who also had microphones connected to the speakers, added their own endorsements: "New Jersey wants Roosevelt! Arizona wants Roosevelt! Iowa wants Roosevelt!"[6][7]

Life wrote the following week that "the shabby pretense ... fooled nobody", describing it as a "cynical, end-justifies-the-means alliance of New Deal reformers with self-seeking city bosses to engineer the 'draft'" and "one of the shoddiest and most hypocritical spectacles in [US] history".[8] The effect of the "voice from the sewers" was overwhelming. The next day Roosevelt was nominated by an 86% majority.

Balloting Edit

Roosevelt was nominated on the first ballot:

Presidential Balloting[9]
Candidate 1st
Roosevelt 946.43
Farley 72.90
Garner 61
Tydings 9.50
Hull 5.67
Absent 3.50
Not Voting 1

Presidential Balloting / 3rd Day of Convention (July 17, 1940)

Vice Presidential nomination Edit

 
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt speaking on the final day of the convention

Because Garner had opposed Roosevelt's re-election, the party had to choose a new vice presidential nominee.[10] Roosevelt asked Secretary of State Hull to serve as his running mate, but Hull preferred to remain in his Cabinet position.[11] Roosevelt's aides also strongly considered South Carolina Senator James F. Byrnes, but the president settled on Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace.[11] Farley was considered, but was not selected, because both he and Roosevelt were from New York State; if they had run together, the electors from New York could not have voted for both, in keeping with the terms of the Twelfth Amendment to the Constitution.[12] Others considered were Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley,[13] Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas,[13] and House Speaker William B. Bankhead of Alabama.[14]

Roosevelt chose Wallace because of Wallace's positions on the New Deal and aid to Britain, and because he hoped that Wallace would appeal to agricultural voters.[11] Eleanor Roosevelt had flown to Chicago to campaign;[15] after her husband's nomination, she gave what came to be known as her "No Ordinary Time" speech in support of Wallace.[12][16] Though many Democrats regarded Wallace as a mystic or an intellectual, the delegates acquiesced; Wallace won the nomination on the first ballot over Bankhead.[14]

The Roosevelt–Wallace ticket defeated the Republican ticket to win the 1940 presidential election. Roosevelt's decision to select his own running mate set a powerful precedent, and presidential candidates after 1940 became much more influential in the choice of their running mate.[11]

Balloting Edit

Wallace was nominated on the first ballot:

Vice Presidential Balloting[17]
Candidate 1st (Before Shifts) 1st (After Shifts)
Wallace 627.70 681.20
Bankhead 327.27 286.27
McNutt 66.63 63.13
Adams 11.50 11.50
Farley 8 5
Jones 5.90 5.90
O'Mahoney 3 3
Barkley 2 2
Brown 1 0
Johnson 1 1
Lucas 1 1
Timmons 1 0
Walsh 0.50 0.50
Absent / Not Voting 43.50 39.50

Vice Presidential Balloting / 4th Day of Convention (July 18, 1940)

Roosevelt's acceptance speech Edit

Franklin D. Roosevelt, playing coy about his intentions to seek a third term, did not attend the convention himself, instead sending his wife Eleanor there on his behalf.[18]

Franklin D. Roosevelt accepted his party's nomination after the convention had closed. Shortly after midnight Eastern time on July 19, 1940, Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech from the White House in front of news radio microphones and newsreel cameras.[18]

Later that morning, the American Pathé sent footage of his speech to New York City, where it was developed and had a portion aired on television at 3:30 Eastern time, making Roosevelt the first incumbent president to be shown on television accepting his party's nomination.[18]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b . Chicago Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2008-07-23. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
  2. ^ Kaltenborn, H. V. (1939-09-22). CBS H. V. Kaltenborn Commentary (Radio). Event occurs at 8:45.
  3. ^ "Farley Dies -- Jun 10, 1976 -- NBC -- Vanderbilt Television News Archive". from the original on 2012-03-10. Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  4. ^ a b c d e Gunther, John (1950). Roosevelt in Retrospect. Harper & Brothers. pp. 308–309.
  5. ^ Lawrence, David (August 4, 1939). "Favorite Son Groups Will be Numerous at 1940 Convention of Democrats". The Day (New London). p. 4. Retrieved 2023-09-28 – via Google News Archive Search.
  6. ^ "President Roosevelt Answerd a Call to Run for a Third Term". Life. 1940-07-29. p. 15. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  7. ^ , Time
  8. ^ "New Deal Reformers and City Bosses Engineered the Third-Term "Draft"". Life. 1940-07-29. p. 16. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  9. ^ "The Only Ballot". The New York Times. July 18, 1940.
  10. ^ "VP John Garner". US Senate. US Senate. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  11. ^ a b c d Moe, Richard (12 August 2013). Roosevelt's Second Act: The Election of 1940 and the Politics of War. Oxford University Press. pp. 199–205. ISBN 9780199981939. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  12. ^ a b Boller, Paul (2004). Presidential Campaigns. Oxford University Press. p. 252. ISBN 9780195167160.
  13. ^ a b Sigelman, Lee; Wahlbeck, Paul (December 1997). "The "Veepstakes": Strategic Choice in Presidential Running Mate Selection". The American Political Science Review. 91 (4): 858. doi:10.2307/2952169. JSTOR 2952169.
  14. ^ a b Dunn, Susan (4 June 2013). 1940: FDR, Willkie, Lindbergh, Hitler-the Election Amid the Storm. Yale University Press. pp. 143–148. ISBN 9780300190861. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  15. ^ Goodwin, Doris Kearns (1994). No Ordinary Time: Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0684804484.
  16. ^ Roosevelt, Eleanor - "This Is No Ordinary Time", Speech to the 1940 Democratic National Convention, July 1940, FDR Library Archives. Accessed 2016-01-01
  17. ^ "For Vice President". The New York Times. July 19, 1940.
  18. ^ a b c "Television, FDR and the 1940 Presidential Conventions". fdr.blogs.archives.gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum/National Archives. 28 July 2020. Retrieved 10 August 2020.

Further reading Edit

  • Donahoe, Bernard F. Private Plans and Public Dangers: The Story of FDR's Third Nomination (University of Notre Dame Press, 1965).

External links Edit

  • Democratic Party Platform of 1940 at The American Presidency Project
  • Roosevelt Nomination Acceptance Speech for President at DNC (transcript) at The American Presidency Project

1940, democratic, national, convention, held, chicago, stadium, chicago, illinois, from, july, july, 1940, convention, resulted, nomination, president, franklin, roosevelt, unprecedented, third, term, secretary, agriculture, henry, wallace, from, iowa, nominat. The 1940 Democratic National Convention was held at the Chicago Stadium in Chicago Illinois from July 15 to July 18 1940 The convention resulted in the nomination of President Franklin D Roosevelt for an unprecedented third term Secretary of Agriculture Henry A Wallace from Iowa was nominated for vice president 1940 Democratic National Convention1940 presidential electionNominees Roosevelt and WallaceConventionDate s July 15 18 1940CityChicago IllinoisVenueChicago StadiumCandidatesPresidential nomineeFranklin D Roosevelt of New YorkVice presidential nomineeHenry A Wallace of IowaVotingTotal delegates1093Votes needed for nomination547 majority Results president Roosevelt NY 946 86 32 Farley NY 72 6 57 Garner TX 61 5 57 Tydings MD 9 0 82 Cordell Hull TN 5 0 47 Results vice president Wallace IA 626 59 3 Bankhead AL 329 31 17 McNutt IN 68 6 44 Others 32 5 3 07 1936 1944 Despite the unprecedented bid for a third term Roosevelt was nominated on the first ballot Roosevelt s most formidable challengers were his former campaign manager James Farley and Vice President John Nance Garner Both had sought the nomination for the presidency and soundly lost to Roosevelt who would be drafted at the convention Henry Wallace was Roosevelt s preferred choice for the vice presidency His candidacy was opposed vehemently by some delegates particularly the conservative wing of the party which had been unenthusiastic about Wallace s liberal positions Nonetheless Wallace was ultimately nominated with the votes of 59 of the delegates on the first ballot 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Presidential nomination 2 1 Presidential candidates 2 2 The Voice from the Sewers 2 3 Balloting 3 Vice Presidential nomination 3 1 Balloting 4 Roosevelt s acceptance speech 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground EditBy late 1939 President Franklin D Roosevelt s plans regarding a possible third term in 1940 affected national politics A Republican leader told H V Kaltenborn in September 1939 for example that Congressional distrust of the president was a cause of the controversy over revising the Neutrality Acts of 1930s The politician who supported selling weapons to Britain and France claimed that Roosevelt could regain the complete confidence of Congress and the country by announcing that he would not run for a third term An unnamed Roosevelt advisor said however that doing so would reduce the president s influence on Congress and the Democratic party Roosevelt would not announce his intentions until spring 1940 the advisor said 2 Throughout the winter of 1939 and the spring and summer of 1940 whether Roosevelt would run again remained unknown The two term tradition although not yet enshrined in the U S Constitution as the 22nd Amendment had been established by President George Washington when he refused to run for a third term in 1796 and the tradition was further supported by Thomas Jefferson 1 Roosevelt however refused to give a definitive statement as to his willingness to be a candidate even indicating to his old friend and political kingmaker James Farley 3 that he would not be a candidate again and that he could seek the nomination Farley thus began his campaign 4 Millard Tydings also announced his candidacy the Maryland senator and member of the anti Roosevelt conservative coalition would likely be a favorite son at the convention but was also a possible compromise candidate for an anti New Deal Democratic Party after Roosevelt s presidency 5 Roosevelt told others of his plans not to run including Cordell Hull Frances Perkins and Daniel J Tobin His wife Eleanor was opposed to a third term Perhaps the most definitive evidence of Roosevelt s intention to not run for a third term is that in January 1940 he signed a contract to write 26 articles a year for Collier s for three years after leaving the presidency in January 1941 However as Nazi Germany defeated France and threatened Britain in the summer of 1940 Roosevelt decided that only he had the necessary experience and skills to see the nation safely through the Nazi threat His belief that no other Democrat who would continue the New Deal could win was likely also a reason 4 He was aided by the party s political bosses who feared that no Democrat except Roosevelt could defeat the charismatic Wendell Willkie the Republican candidate citation needed Presidential nomination EditPresidential candidates Edit nbsp PresidentFranklin D Rooseveltof New York nbsp Postmaster GeneralJames Farleyof New York nbsp Vice PresidentJohn Nance Garnerof Texas nbsp SenatorMillard Tydingsof Maryland nbsp State SecretaryCordell Hullof Tennessee Not Nominated nbsp FSA AdministratorPaul V McNuttof Indiana Not Nominated nbsp SenatorBurton K Wheelerof Montana Not Nominated By the convention Farley and Vice President John Nance Garner were declared candidates and Paul McNutt was a possibility 4 Roosevelt still did not want to declare openly for re nomination so his backers arranged a stunt at the convention Roosevelt dictated a message on the phone to Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley which Barkley read out to the convention during the first day s proceedings It concluded The President has never had and has not today any desire or purpose to continue in the office of President to be a candidate for that office or to be nominated by the convention for that office He wishes in earnestness and sincerity to make it clear that all of the delegates in this convention are free to vote for any candidate 4 John Gunther later wrote that Barkley s message can scarcely be said to have conveyed the whole or literal truth 4 The Voice from the Sewers Edit After the reading of Roosevelt s message the convention sat in shocked silence for a moment The silence was then broken by a voice thundering over the stadium loudspeakers We want Roosevelt We want Roosevelt The voice was Thomas D Garry Superintendent of Chicago s Department of Sanitation the sewers department a trusted henchman of Chicago Mayor Ed Kelly Garry was stationed in a basement room with a microphone waiting for that moment Kelly had posted hundreds of Chicago city workers and precinct captains around the hall other Democratic bosses had brought followers from their home territories All of them joined Garry s chant Within a few seconds hundreds of delegates joined in Many poured into the aisles carrying state delegation standards for impromptu demonstrations Whenever the chant began to die down state chairmen who also had microphones connected to the speakers added their own endorsements New Jersey wants Roosevelt Arizona wants Roosevelt Iowa wants Roosevelt 6 7 Life wrote the following week that the shabby pretense fooled nobody describing it as a cynical end justifies the means alliance of New Deal reformers with self seeking city bosses to engineer the draft and one of the shoddiest and most hypocritical spectacles in US history 8 The effect of the voice from the sewers was overwhelming The next day Roosevelt was nominated by an 86 majority Balloting Edit Roosevelt was nominated on the first ballot Presidential Balloting 9 Candidate 1stRoosevelt 946 43Farley 72 90Garner 61Tydings 9 50Hull 5 67Absent 3 50Not Voting 1Presidential Balloting 3rd Day of Convention July 17 1940 nbsp 1st Presidential BallotVice Presidential nomination Edit nbsp First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt speaking on the final day of the conventionBecause Garner had opposed Roosevelt s re election the party had to choose a new vice presidential nominee 10 Roosevelt asked Secretary of State Hull to serve as his running mate but Hull preferred to remain in his Cabinet position 11 Roosevelt s aides also strongly considered South Carolina Senator James F Byrnes but the president settled on Secretary of Agriculture Henry A Wallace 11 Farley was considered but was not selected because both he and Roosevelt were from New York State if they had run together the electors from New York could not have voted for both in keeping with the terms of the Twelfth Amendment to the Constitution 12 Others considered were Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley 13 Supreme Court Justice William O Douglas 13 and House Speaker William B Bankhead of Alabama 14 Roosevelt chose Wallace because of Wallace s positions on the New Deal and aid to Britain and because he hoped that Wallace would appeal to agricultural voters 11 Eleanor Roosevelt had flown to Chicago to campaign 15 after her husband s nomination she gave what came to be known as her No Ordinary Time speech in support of Wallace 12 16 Though many Democrats regarded Wallace as a mystic or an intellectual the delegates acquiesced Wallace won the nomination on the first ballot over Bankhead 14 The Roosevelt Wallace ticket defeated the Republican ticket to win the 1940 presidential election Roosevelt s decision to select his own running mate set a powerful precedent and presidential candidates after 1940 became much more influential in the choice of their running mate 11 Balloting Edit Wallace was nominated on the first ballot Vice Presidential Balloting 17 Candidate 1st Before Shifts 1st After Shifts Wallace 627 70 681 20Bankhead 327 27 286 27McNutt 66 63 63 13Adams 11 50 11 50Farley 8 5Jones 5 90 5 90O Mahoney 3 3Barkley 2 2Brown 1 0Johnson 1 1Lucas 1 1Timmons 1 0Walsh 0 50 0 50Absent Not Voting 43 50 39 50Vice Presidential Balloting 4th Day of Convention July 18 1940 nbsp 1st Vice Presidential Ballot Before Shifts nbsp 1st Vice Presidential Ballot After Shifts Roosevelt s acceptance speech EditFranklin D Roosevelt playing coy about his intentions to seek a third term did not attend the convention himself instead sending his wife Eleanor there on his behalf 18 Franklin D Roosevelt accepted his party s nomination after the convention had closed Shortly after midnight Eastern time on July 19 1940 Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech from the White House in front of news radio microphones and newsreel cameras 18 Later that morning the American Pathe sent footage of his speech to New York City where it was developed and had a portion aired on television at 3 30 Eastern time making Roosevelt the first incumbent president to be shown on television accepting his party s nomination 18 See also Edit1940 Democratic Party presidential primaries List of Democratic National Conventions U S presidential nomination convention 1940 Republican National Convention 22nd AmendmentReferences Edit a b The 1940 Democratic National Convention Chicago Historical Society Archived from the original on 2008 07 23 Retrieved 2008 03 27 Kaltenborn H V 1939 09 22 CBS H V Kaltenborn Commentary Radio Event occurs at 8 45 Farley Dies Jun 10 1976 NBC Vanderbilt Television News Archive Archived from the original on 2012 03 10 Retrieved 2009 09 15 a b c d e Gunther John 1950 Roosevelt in Retrospect Harper amp Brothers pp 308 309 Lawrence David August 4 1939 Favorite Son Groups Will be Numerous at 1940 Convention of Democrats The Day New London p 4 Retrieved 2023 09 28 via Google News Archive Search President Roosevelt Answerd a Call to Run for a Third Term Life 1940 07 29 p 15 Retrieved 2021 06 01 Edward Joseph Kelly obituary Time New Deal Reformers and City Bosses Engineered the Third Term Draft Life 1940 07 29 p 16 Retrieved 2021 06 01 The Only Ballot The New York Times July 18 1940 VP John Garner US Senate US Senate Retrieved 7 October 2015 a b c d Moe Richard 12 August 2013 Roosevelt s Second Act The Election of 1940 and the Politics of War Oxford University Press pp 199 205 ISBN 9780199981939 Retrieved 7 October 2015 a b Boller Paul 2004 Presidential Campaigns Oxford University Press p 252 ISBN 9780195167160 a b Sigelman Lee Wahlbeck Paul December 1997 The Veepstakes Strategic Choice in Presidential Running Mate Selection The American Political Science Review 91 4 858 doi 10 2307 2952169 JSTOR 2952169 a b Dunn Susan 4 June 2013 1940 FDR Willkie Lindbergh Hitler the Election Amid the Storm Yale University Press pp 143 148 ISBN 9780300190861 Retrieved 7 October 2015 Goodwin Doris Kearns 1994 No Ordinary Time Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt The Home Front in World War II New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0684804484 Roosevelt Eleanor This Is No Ordinary Time Speech to the 1940 Democratic National Convention July 1940 FDR Library Archives Accessed 2016 01 01 For Vice President The New York Times July 19 1940 a b c Television FDR and the 1940 Presidential Conventions fdr blogs archives gov Franklin D Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum National Archives 28 July 2020 Retrieved 10 August 2020 Further reading EditDonahoe Bernard F Private Plans and Public Dangers The Story of FDR s Third Nomination University of Notre Dame Press 1965 External links EditDemocratic Party Platform of 1940 at The American Presidency Project Roosevelt Nomination Acceptance Speech for President at DNC transcript at The American Presidency ProjectPreceded by1936Philadelphia Pennsylvania Democratic National Conventions Succeeded by1944Chicago Illinois Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1940 Democratic National Convention amp oldid 1177710471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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