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1964 United States presidential election

The 1964 United States presidential election was the 45th quadrennial presidential election. It was held on Tuesday, November 3, 1964. Incumbent Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson defeated Senator Barry Goldwater, the Republican nominee, in a landslide. Johnson was the fourth and most recent vice-president to ascend to the presidency following the death of his predecessor and to win a full term in his own right. With 61.1% of the popular vote, Lyndon B. Johnson won the largest share of the popular vote for the Democratic Party in history, and the highest for any candidate since the advent of widespread popular elections in the 1820s.

1964 United States presidential election

← 1960 November 3, 1964 1968 →

538 members of the Electoral College
270 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout62.8%[1] 1.0 pp
 
Nominee Lyndon B. Johnson Barry Goldwater
Party Democratic Republican
Home state Texas Arizona
Running mate Hubert Humphrey William E. Miller
Electoral vote 486 52
States carried 44 + DC 6
Popular vote 43,129,040 27,175,754
Percentage 61.1% 38.5%

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Presidential election results map. Blue denotes states won by Johnson/Humphrey and red denotes those won by Goldwater/Miller. Numbers indicate electoral votes cast by each state.

President before election

Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic

Elected President

Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic

Johnson took office on November 22, 1963, and emphasized the continuation of his assassinated predecessor, John F. Kennedy. He easily defeated a primary challenge by Governor George Wallace of Alabama, to win the nomination to a full term. At the 1964 Democratic National Convention, Johnson selected Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota as his running mate. In the Republican contest Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona, a leader of his party's conservative faction, defeated liberal Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York and Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania.

Johnson championed his passage of the Civil Rights Act, and advocated a series of anti-poverty programs collectively known as the Great Society. Goldwater espoused a low-tax, small-government philosophy. Although he supported previous attempts at enacting civil rights legislation in 1957 and 1960, Goldwater opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, saying it violated individual liberty and states' rights. Democrats successfully portrayed Goldwater as a dangerous extremist, most famously in the "Daisy" television advertisement. The Republicans were divided between its moderate and conservative factions, with Rockefeller and other moderate party leaders refusing to campaign for Goldwater. Johnson led by wide margins in all polls during the campaign.

Johnson carried 44 states and the District of Columbia, which voted for the first time in this election. Goldwater won his home state and swept the five states of the Deep South, due to the Democratic Party's strong support of civil rights and desegregation. Several southern states had not voted for a Republican presidential candidate since the end of Reconstruction in 1877. This was the last election in which the Democratic Party won a majority of the white vote, with 59% of white voters shunning Goldwater for Johnson. This was the last election in which the Democratic nominee carried Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska,[a] Kansas, or Oklahoma, and the only election ever in which the Democrat carried Alaska. This marked the first presidential election in history in which a Democrat carried Vermont, and conversely, the first in which a Republican carried Georgia. This was also the last election until 1992 in which the Democrat carried California, Colorado, Illinois, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, New Jersey, New Hampshire, or Vermont, as well as the last election until 2008 in which the Democrat carried Virginia or Indiana. As such, this was the most recent presidential election in which the entire Midwestern region voted Democratic. As of 2023, this marks the last time that a Democratic presidential candidate has won more than 400 electoral votes.

Johnson's landslide victory coincided with the defeat of many conservative Republican congressmen. The subsequent 89th Congress would pass major legislation such as the Social Security Amendments of 1965 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The 1964 election marked the beginning of a major, long-term re-alignment in American politics, as Goldwater's unsuccessful bid significantly influenced the modern conservative movement. The movement of conservatives to the Republican Party continued, culminating in the 1980 presidential victory of Ronald Reagan.

Assassination of President John F. Kennedy edit

 
President and Mrs. Kennedy in the Dallas motorcade

President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, in Dallas, Texas. Supporters were shocked and saddened by the loss of the charismatic President, while opposition candidates were put in the awkward position of running against the policies of a slain political figure.[2]

During the following period of mourning, Republican leaders called for a political moratorium, so as not to appear disrespectful.[3][4] As such, little politicking was done by the candidates of either major party until January 1964, when the primary season officially began.[5] At the time, most political pundits saw Kennedy's assassination as leaving the nation politically unsettled.[2]

Nominations edit

Democratic Party edit

 
Democratic Party (United States)
1964 Democratic Party ticket
Lyndon B. Johnson Hubert Humphrey
for President for Vice President
 
 
36th
President of the United States
(1963–1969)
U.S. Senator
from Minnesota
(1949–1964)
Campaign
 

Candidates edit

The only candidate other than President Johnson to actively campaign was then-Alabama Governor George Wallace, who ran in a number of northern primaries, though his candidacy was more to promote the philosophy of states' rights among a northern audience; while expecting some support from delegations in the South, Wallace was certain that he was not in contention for the Democratic nomination.[6] Johnson received 1,106,999 votes in the primaries.

At the national convention, the integrated Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) claimed the seats for delegates for Mississippi, not on the grounds of Party rules, but because the official Mississippi delegation had been elected by a white primary system. The national party's liberal leaders supported an even division of the seats between the two Mississippi delegations; Johnson was concerned that, while the regular Democrats of Mississippi would probably vote for Goldwater anyway, rejecting them would lose him the South. Eventually, Hubert Humphrey, Walter Reuther, and the black civil rights leaders, including Roy Wilkins, Martin Luther King Jr., and Bayard Rustin, worked out a compromise: The MFDP took two seats; the regular Mississippi delegation was required to pledge to support the party ticket; and no future Democratic convention would accept a delegation chosen by a discriminatory poll. Joseph L. Rauh Jr., the MFDP's lawyer, initially refused this deal, but they eventually took their seats. Many white delegates from Mississippi and Alabama refused to sign any pledge, and left the convention; and many young civil rights workers were offended by any compromise.[7] Johnson biographers Rowland Evans and Robert Novak claim that the MFDP fell under the influence of "black radicals" and rejected their seats.[8] Johnson lost Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, and South Carolina.

Johnson also faced trouble from Robert F. Kennedy, President Kennedy's younger brother and the U.S. Attorney General. Kennedy and Johnson's relationship was troubled from the time Robert Kennedy was a Senate staffer. Then-Majority Leader Johnson surmised that Kennedy's hostility was the direct result of the fact that Johnson frequently recounted a story that embarrassed Kennedy's father, Joseph P. Kennedy, the ambassador to the United Kingdom. According to his recounting, Johnson and President Franklin D. Roosevelt misled the ambassador, upon a return visit to the United States, to believe that Roosevelt wished to meet in Washington for friendly purposes; in fact, Roosevelt planned to — and did — fire the ambassador, due to the ambassador's well publicized views.[9] The Johnson–Kennedy hostility was rendered mutual in the 1960 primaries and the 1960 Democratic National Convention, when Robert Kennedy had tried to prevent Johnson from becoming his brother's running mate, a move that deeply embittered both men.

In early 1964, despite his personal animosity for the president, Kennedy had tried to force Johnson to accept him as his running mate. Johnson eliminated this threat by announcing that none of his cabinet members would be considered for second place on the Democratic ticket. Johnson also became concerned that Kennedy might use his scheduled speech at the 1964 Democratic Convention to create a groundswell of emotion among the delegates to make him Johnson's running mate; he prevented this by deliberately scheduling Kennedy's speech on the last day of the convention, after his running mate had already been chosen. Shortly after the 1964 Democratic Convention, Kennedy decided to leave Johnson's cabinet and run for the U.S. Senate in New York; he won the general election in November. Johnson chose United States Senator Hubert Humphrey from Minnesota, a liberal and civil rights activist, as his running mate.

Republican Party edit

 
Republican Party (United States)
1964 Republican Party ticket
Barry Goldwater William E. Miller
for President for Vice President
 
 
U.S. Senator
from Arizona
(1953–1965, 1969–1987)
U.S. Representative
from New York
(1951–1965)
Campaign
 

Candidates edit

In Order of Delegates and Votes Won.
Barry Goldwater William Scranton Margaret Chase Smith Nelson Rockefeller Hiram Fong Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. George W. Romney Walter Judd
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
U.S Senator from

Arizona

(1953–65, 1969–87)

Governor

of Pennsylvania (1963–67)

U.S. Senator from Maine

(1949–73)

Governor

of New York (1959–73)

U.S Senator

from Hawaii (1959–77)

Ambassador to the United Nations

(1953–60)

Governor

of Michigan (1963–69)

Former Representative from Minnesota

(1963–69)

 
 
 
 
2,267,079 votes

1,220 PD

245,401 votes

50 PD

227.007 votes

22 PD

1,304,204 votes

6 PD

5 PD 386,661 votes

3 PD

1,955 votes

1 PD

1 PD
Harold Stassen Jim Rhodes John W. Byrnes
 
 
 
Former Governor

of Minnesota (1939–43)

Governor

of Ohio (1953–71, 1975–83)

Representative from Wisconsin

(1945–73)

114,083 votes 615,754 votes 299,612 votes

Primaries edit

 
Republican primaries results by state
Technically, in South Dakota and Florida, Goldwater finished in second to "Unpledged Delegates", but he finished before all other candidates.

The Republican Party (GOP) was badly divided in 1964 between its conservative and moderate-liberal factions. Former vice president Richard Nixon, who had been beaten by Kennedy in the extremely close 1960 presidential election, decided not to run. Nixon, a moderate with ties to both wings of the GOP, had been able to unite the factions in 1960; in his absence, the way was clear for the two factions to engage in a hard-fought campaign for the nomination. Barry Goldwater, a Senator from Arizona, was the champion of the conservatives. The conservatives had historically been based in the American Midwest, but beginning in the 1950s, they had been gaining in power in the South and West, and the core of Goldwater's support came from suburban conservative Republicans. The conservatives favored a low-tax, small federal government which supported individual rights and business interests, and opposed social welfare programs. They also supported an internationalist and interventionist foreign policy. The conservatives resented the dominance of the GOP's moderate wing, which was based in the Northeastern United States. Since 1940, the Eastern moderates had defeated conservative presidential candidates at the GOP's national conventions. The conservatives believed the Eastern Republicans were little different from liberal Democrats in their philosophy and approach to government. Goldwater's chief opponent for the Republican nomination was Nelson Rockefeller, the Governor of New York and the long-time leader of the GOP's liberal faction.

In 1961, a group of twenty-two conservatives, headed by Ohio Representative John M. Ashbrook, lawyer and National Review publisher William A. Rusher, and scholar F. Clifton White, met privately in Chicago to discuss the formation of a grass-roots organization to secure the nomination of a conservative as the 1964 Republican candidate. The main headquarters for the organization were established at Suite 3505 of the Chanin Building in New York City, leading members to refer to themselves as the "Suite 3505 Committee". Following the 1962 mid-term elections, they formally backed Goldwater, who notified them that he did not want to run for the presidency. In April 1963, they formed the Draft Goldwater Committee, chaired by Texas Republican Party Chairman Peter O'Donnell. The committee solidified growing conservative strength in the West and South, and began working to gain control of state parties in the Midwest from liberal Republicans. Throughout the rest of the year, speculation about a potential Goldwater candidacy grew, and grass-roots activism and efforts among conservative Republicans expanded.

Initially, Rockefeller was considered the front-runner, ahead of Goldwater. However, in 1963, two years after Rockefeller's divorce from his first wife, he married Margaretta "Happy" Murphy, who was nearly 18 years younger than he and had just divorced her husband and surrendered her four children to his custody.[10] The fact that Murphy had suddenly divorced her husband before marrying Rockefeller led to rumors that Rockefeller had been having an extra-marital affair with her. This angered many social conservatives and female voters within the GOP, many of whom called Rockefeller a "wife stealer".[10] After his remarriage, Rockefeller's lead among Republicans lost 20 points overnight.[10] Senator Prescott Bush of Connecticut, the father of President George H. W. Bush and grandfather of President George W. Bush, was among Rockefeller's critics on this issue: "Have we come to the point in our life as a nation where the governor of a great state — one who perhaps aspires to the nomination for president of the United States — can desert a good wife, mother of his grown children, divorce her, then persuade a young mother of four youngsters to abandon her husband and their four children and marry the governor?"[10]

In the first primary, in New Hampshire, both Rockefeller and Goldwater were considered to be the favorites, but the voters instead gave a surprising victory to the U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., Nixon's running mate in 1960 and a former Massachusetts senator. Lodge was a write-in candidate. He went on to win the Massachusetts and New Jersey primaries, before withdrawing his candidacy because he had finally decided he did not want the Republican nomination.[11]

Despite his defeat in New Hampshire, Goldwater pressed on, winning the Illinois, Texas, and Indiana primaries, with little opposition, and Nebraska's primary, after a stiff challenge from a draft-Nixon movement. Goldwater also won a number of state caucuses, and gathered even more delegates. Meanwhile, Nelson Rockefeller won the West Virginia and Oregon primaries against Goldwater, and William Scranton won in his home state of Pennsylvania. Both Rockefeller and Scranton also won several state caucuses, mostly in the Northeast.

The final showdown between Goldwater and Rockefeller was in the California primary. In spite of the previous accusations regarding his marriage, Rockefeller led Goldwater in most opinion polls in California, and he appeared headed for victory when his new wife gave birth to a son, Nelson Rockefeller Jr., three days before the primary.[10] His son's birth brought the issue of adultery front and center, and Rockefeller suddenly lost ground in the polls. Combined with Goldwater conservatives' expanded dedicated efforts and superior organizing,[10] Goldwater won the primary by a narrow 51–48% margin, thus eliminating Rockefeller as a serious contender and all but clinching the nomination. With Rockefeller's elimination, the party's moderates and liberals turned to William Scranton, the Governor of Pennsylvania, in the hopes that he could stop Goldwater. However, as the Republican Convention began, Goldwater was seen as the heavy favorite to win the nomination. This was notable, as it signified a shift to a more conservative-leaning Republican Party.

Total popular vote

Convention edit

The 1964 Republican National Convention, July 13–16 at Daly City, California's Cow Palace arena, was one of the most bitter[clarification needed] on record.[citation needed][when?] The party's moderates and conservatives openly expressed their contempt for each other. Rockefeller was loudly booed when he came to the podium for his speech; in his speech, he roundly criticized the party's conservatives, which led many conservatives in the galleries to yell and scream at him. A group of moderates tried to rally behind Scranton to stop Goldwater, but Goldwater's forces easily brushed his challenge aside,[citation needed] and Goldwater was nominated on the first ballot. The presidential tally was as follows:

The vice-presidential nomination went to little-known Republican Party Chairman William E. Miller, a Representative from western New York. Goldwater stated that he chose Miller simply because "he drives [President] Johnson nuts". This would be the only Republican ticket between 1948 and 1976 that did not include Nixon.

In accepting his nomination, Goldwater uttered his most famous phrase (a quote from Cicero suggested by speechwriter Harry Jaffa): "I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue."[12] For many GOP moderates, Goldwater's speech was seen as a deliberate insult,[citation needed] and many of these moderates would defect to the Democrats in the fall election.

General election edit

Campaign edit

 
First page of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Although Goldwater had been successful in rallying conservatives, he was unable to broaden his base of support for the general election. Shortly before the Republican Convention, he had alienated moderate and liberal Republicans by his vote against the Civil Rights Act of 1964,[13][failed verification][original research?] which Johnson supported following Kennedy's death and signed into law. While a staunch supporter of racial equality, having voted in favor of the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights acts bills and the 24th Amendment to the Constitution, Goldwater felt that desegregation was primarily a states' rights issue, rather than a national policy, and believed the 1964 act to be unconstitutional. Goldwater's vote against the legislation helped cause African-Americans to overwhelmingly support Johnson.[14] Goldwater had previously voted in favor of the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights acts, but only after proposing "restrictive amendments" to them.[14] Goldwater was famous for speaking "off-the-cuff" at times, and many of his former statements were given wide publicity by the Democrats. In the early 1960s, Goldwater had called the Eisenhower administration "a dime store New Deal", and the former president never fully forgave him or offered him his full support in the election.[citation needed]

In December 1961, he told a news conference that "sometimes, I think this country would be better off if we could just saw off the Eastern Seaboard and let it float out to sea", a remark which indicated his dislike of the liberal economic and social policies that were often associated with that part of the nation. That comment came back to hurt him, in the form of a Johnson television commercial,[15] as did remarks about making Social Security voluntary (something that even his running mate Miller felt would lead to the destruction of the system)[16] and selling the Tennessee Valley Authority. In his most famous verbal gaffe, Goldwater once joked that the U.S. military should "lob one [a nuclear bomb] into the men's room of the Kremlin" in the Soviet Union.

Goldwater was also hurt by the reluctance of many prominent moderate Republicans to support him. Governors Nelson Rockefeller of New York and George W. Romney of Michigan refused to endorse Goldwater due to his stance on civil rights and his proposal to make Social Security voluntary, and did not campaign for him. On the other hand, former Vice President Richard Nixon and Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania loyally supported the GOP ticket and campaigned for Goldwater, although Nixon did not entirely agree with Goldwater's political stances and said that it would "be a tragedy" if Goldwater's platform were not "challenged and repudiated" by the Republicans. Scranton also felt that Goldwater's proposal of voluntarizing Social Security was the "worst kind of fiscal responsibility".[17] The New York Herald-Tribune, a voice for eastern Republicans (and a target for Goldwater activists during the primaries), supported Johnson in the general election. Some moderates even formed a "Republicans for Johnson" organization, although most prominent GOP politicians avoided being associated with it.[18]

Shortly before the Republican convention, CBS reporter Daniel Schorr wrote from Germany that, "It looks as though Senator Goldwater, if nominated, will be starting his campaign here in Bavaria, center of Germany's right wing". He noted that a prior Goldwater interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel was an "appeal to right-wing elements". However, there was no ulterior motive for the trip; it was just a vacation.[19]

Fact magazine published an article polling psychiatrists around the country as to Goldwater's sanity. Some 1,189 psychiatrists appeared to agree that Goldwater was "emotionally unstable" and unfit for office, though none of the members had actually interviewed him. The article received heavy publicity and resulted in a change to the ethics guidelines of the American Psychiatric Association, now known as the Goldwater rule. In a libel suit, a federal court awarded Goldwater $1 in compensatory damages, and $75,000 in punitive damages.[20][21][22][23][24]

Eisenhower's strong backing could have been an asset to the Goldwater campaign, but instead, its absence was clearly noticed. When questioned about the presidential capabilities of the former president's younger brother, university administrator Milton S. Eisenhower, in July 1964, Goldwater replied: "One Eisenhower in a generation is enough." However, Eisenhower did not openly repudiate Goldwater, and made one television commercial for Goldwater's campaign.[25] A prominent Hollywood celebrity who vigorously supported Goldwater was Ronald Reagan. Reagan gave a well-received televised speech supporting Goldwater; it was so popular that Goldwater's advisors had it played on local television stations around the nation. Many historians consider this speech — "A Time for Choosing" — to mark the beginning of Reagan's transformation from an actor to a political leader. In 1966, Reagan would be elected Governor of California.

Meanwhile, President Johnson was concerned he could lose the election by appearing soft on Communism.[26] On July 10, the USS Maddox was ordered into the Gulf of Tonkin, authorized to "maintain contact with the U.S. military command in Saigon ... and arrange 'such communications ... as may be desired'".[27] On July 30, South Vietnamese commandos tried to attack the North Vietnamese radar station on the island of Hon Me,[28] with the USS Maddox sufficiently close that the North Vietnamese believed it was there to provide cover for that commando raid.[29] North Vietnam filed an official complaint with the International Control Commission, accusing the United States of being behind the raid.[28] On August 2, the Maddox reported having been attacked by three North Vietnamese Navy torpedo boats.[30] Johnson called Soviet Premier Khrushchev, saying the US did not want war and asking the Soviets to convince North Vietnam to not attack American warships.[31] The next day, August 3, South Vietnamese raided Cape Vinhson and Cua Ron.[29] That night, in the middle of a thunderstorm, the Maddox intercepted radio messages that gave them "the 'impression' that Communist patrol boats were bracing for [another] assault". They called for air support from the USS Ticonderoga. The pilots didn't see anything, but the Maddox and the nearby USS Turner Joy started shooting in all directions. However, after the incident, all US personnel involved acknowledged they had neither seen nor heard Communist gunfire. Nevertheless, Johnson and an aide Kenneth O'Donnell agreed that Johnson "would have to respond firmly to defend himself against Goldwater and the Republican right wing". Johnson denounced the attack as "unprovoked" and secured essentially a blank check to do anything he thought necessary in Vietnam, and left Goldwater looking like an irresponsible hawk.[32]

Ads and slogans edit

Full "Daisy" advertisement

Johnson positioned himself as a moderate, and succeeded in portraying Goldwater as an extremist. CIA Director William Colby asserted that Tracy Barnes instructed the CIA to spy on the Goldwater campaign and the Republican National Committee, to provide information to Johnson's campaign; E. Howard Hunt, later implicated as a ringleader in the Watergate scandal, disputed this, instead claiming the operation had been ordered by the White House.[33]

Goldwater had a habit of making blunt statements about war, nuclear weapons, and economics that could be turned against him. Most famously, the Johnson campaign broadcast a television commercial on September 7 dubbed the "Daisy Girl" ad, which featured a little girl picking petals from a daisy in a field, counting the petals, which then segues into a launch countdown and a nuclear explosion.[34] The ads were in response to Goldwater's advocacy of "tactical" nuclear weapons use in Vietnam.[35] "Confessions of a Republican", another Johnson ad, features a monologue from a man who tells viewers that he had previously voted for Eisenhower and Nixon, but now worries about the "men with strange ideas", "weird groups", and "the head of the Ku Klux Klan" who were supporting Goldwater; he concludes that "either they're not Republicans, or I'm not".[36] Voters increasingly viewed Goldwater as a right-wing fringe candidate. His slogan, "In your heart, you know he's right", was successfully parodied by the Johnson campaign into, "In your guts, you know he's nuts", or, "In your heart, you know he might" (as in "he might push the nuclear button"), or even, "In your heart, he's too far right".[37][38]

The Johnson campaign's greatest concern may have been voter complacency leading to low turnout in key states. To counter this, all of Johnson's broadcast ads concluded with the line: "Vote for President Johnson on November 3. The stakes are too high for you to stay home."[39][40] The Democratic campaign used two other slogans: "All the way with LBJ";[41][42][43] and, "LBJ for the USA".[44]

The election campaign was disrupted for a week by the death of former president Herbert Hoover on October 20, 1964, because it was considered disrespectful to be campaigning during a time of mourning. Hoover died of natural causes. He had been U.S. president from 1929 to 1933. Both major candidates attended his funeral.[45]

Johnson led in all opinion polls by huge margins throughout the entire campaign.[46]

Results edit

 
Election results by county.

The election was held on November 3, 1964. Johnson beat Goldwater in the general election, winning over 61% of the popular vote. Johnson became the only Democrat between 1944 and 1976 to win a majority of the popular vote. In the end, Goldwater won only his native state of Arizona and five Deep South states — Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina — which had been increasingly alienated by Democratic civil rights policies, and where Jim Crow laws tended to be still active to varying degrees, before the following year's Voting Rights Act outlawed them entirely.

The five Southern states that voted for Goldwater swung over dramatically to support him. For instance, in Mississippi, where Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt had won 97% of the popular vote in 1936, Goldwater won 87% of the vote.[47] Of these states, Louisiana had been the only state where a Republican had won even once since Reconstruction.

 
Results by congressional district.

The 1964 election was a major transition point for the South, and an important step in the process by which the Democrats' former "Solid South" became a Republican bastion. Nonetheless, Johnson still managed to eke out a bare popular majority of 51–49% (6.307 to 5.993 million) in the eleven former Confederate states. Conversely, Johnson was the first Democrat ever to carry the state of Vermont in a presidential election, and only the second Democrat, after Woodrow Wilson in 1912, when the Republican Party was divided, to carry Maine since the Republican Party was founded in 1854. Maine and Vermont had been the only states that FDR had failed to carry during any of his four successful presidential bids.

Around twenty percent of the people who had voted for Nixon in the 1960 election switched their support to Johnson.[48] Of the 3,126 counties/districts/independent cities making returns, Johnson won in 2,275 (72.77%), while Goldwater carried 826 (26.42%). Unpledged electors carried six counties in Alabama (0.19%).

The Johnson landslide defeated many conservative Republican congressmen, giving him a majority that could overcome the conservative coalition.

This was the first election to have the participation of the District of Columbia, under the 23rd Amendment to the US Constitution from 1961. The Johnson campaign broke two American election records previously held by Franklin Roosevelt: the most Electoral College votes won by a major-party candidate running for the White House for the first time (with 486 to the 472 won by Roosevelt in 1932); and the largest share of the popular vote under the current Democratic/Republican competition (Roosevelt won 60.8% nationwide, Johnson 61.1%). This first-time electoral count was exceeded when Ronald Reagan won 489 votes in 1980.

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote[49] Electoral
vote[50]
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote[50]
Lyndon B. Johnson (incumbent) Democratic Texas 43,129,040 61.05% 486 Hubert Humphrey Minnesota 486
Barry Goldwater Republican Arizona 27,175,754 38.47% 52 William E. Miller New York 52
(unpledged electors) Democratic Alabama 210,732 0.30% 0 Alabama 0
Eric Hass Socialist Labor New York 45,189 0.06% 0 Henning A. Blomen Massachusetts 0
Clifton DeBerry Socialist Workers Illinois 32,706 0.05% 0 Ed Shaw Michigan 0
E. Harold Munn Prohibition Michigan 23,267 0.03% 0 Mark R. Shaw Massachusetts 0
John Kasper States' Rights New York 6,953 0.01% 0 J. B. Stoner Georgia 0
Joseph B. Lightburn Constitution West Virginia 5,061 0.01% 0 Theodore Billings Colorado 0
Other 12,837 0.02% Other
Total 70,641,539 100% 538 538
Needed to win 270 270
Popular vote[49]
Johnson
61.05%
Goldwater
38.47%
Others
0.48%
Electoral vote[50]
Johnson
90.33%
Goldwater
9.67%

Geography of results edit

Cartographic gallery edit

Results by state edit

Source: [51]

States/districts won by Johnson/Humphrey
States/districts won by Goldwater/Miller
Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic
Barry Goldwater
Republican
Unpledged electors
Unpledged Democratic
Other Margin State total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % #
Alabama 10 - - - 479,085 69.45 10 210,732 30.55 - - - - −268,353 −38.90 689,817 AL
Alaska 3 44,329 65.91 3 22,930 34.09 - - - - - - - 21,399 31.82 67,259 AK
Arizona 5 237,753 49.45 - 242,535 50.45 5 - - - 482 0.10 - −4,782 −1.00 480,770 AZ
Arkansas 6 314,197 56.06 6 243,264 43.41 - - - - - - - 70,933 12.66 560,426 AR
California 40 4,171,877 59.11 40 2,879,108 40.79 - - - - 489 0.01 - 1,292,769 18.32 7,057,586 CA
Colorado 6 476,024 61.27 6 296,767 38.19 - - - - 302 0.04 - 179,257 23.07 776,986 CO
Connecticut 8 826,269 67.81 8 390,996 32.09 - - - - - - - 435,273 35.72 1,218,578 CT
Delaware 3 122,704 60.95 3 78,078 38.78 - - - - 113 0.06 - 44,626 22.17 201,320 DE
D. C. 3 169,796 85.50 3 28,801 14.50 - - - - - - - 140,995 71.00 198,597 DC
Florida 14 948,540 51.15 14 905,941 48.85 - - - - - - - 42,599 2.30 1,854,481 FL
Georgia 12 522,557 45.87 - 616,584 54.12 12 - - - - - - −94,027 −8.25 1,139,336 GA
Hawaii 4 163,249 78.76 4 44,022 21.24 - - - - - - - 119,227 57.52 207,271 HI
Idaho 4 148,920 50.92 4 143,557 49.08 - - - - - - - 5,363 1.83 292,477 ID
Illinois 26 2,796,833 59.47 26 1,905,946 40.53 - - - - - - - 890,887 18.94 4,702,841 IL
Indiana 13 1,170,848 55.98 13 911,118 43.56 - - - - 1,374 0.07 - 259,730 12.42 2,091,606 IN
Iowa 9 733,030 61.88 9 449,148 37.92 - - - - 182 0.02 - 283,882 23.97 1,184,539 IA
Kansas 7 464,028 54.09 7 386,579 45.06 - - - - 1,901 0.22 - 77,449 9.03 857,901 KS
Kentucky 9 669,659 64.01 9 372,977 35.65 - - - - - - - 296,682 28.36 1,046,105 KY
Louisiana 10 387,068 43.19 - 509,225 56.81 10 - - - - - - −122,157 −13.63 896,293 LA
Maine 4 262,264 68.84 4 118,701 31.16 - - - - - - - 143,563 37.68 381,221 ME
Maryland 10 730,912 65.47 10 385,495 34.53 - - - - 1 0.00 - 345,417 30.94 1,116,457 MD
Massachusetts 14 1,786,422 76.19 14 549,727 23.44 - - - - 4,755 0.20 - 1,236,695 52.74 2,344,798 MA
Michigan 21 2,136,615 66.70 21 1,060,152 33.10 - - - - 1,704 0.05 - 1,076,463 33.61 3,203,102 MI
Minnesota 10 991,117 63.76 10 559,624 36.00 - - - - 2,544 0.16 - 431,493 27.76 1,554,462 MN
Mississippi 7 52,618 12.86 - 356,528 87.14 7 - - - - - - −303,910 −74.28 409,146 MS
Missouri 12 1,164,344 64.05 12 653,535 35.95 - - - - - - - 510,809 28.10 1,817,879 MO
Montana 4 164,246 58.95 4 113,032 40.57 - - - - - - - 51,214 18.38 278,628 MT
Nebraska 5 307,307 52.61 5 276,847 47.39 - - - - - - - 30,460 5.22 584,154 NE
Nevada 3 79,339 58.58 3 56,094 41.42 - - - - - - - 23,245 17.16 135,433 NV
New Hampshire 4 184,064 63.89 4 104,029 36.11 - - - - - - - 78,036 27.78 288,093 NH
New Jersey 17 1,867,671 65.61 17 963,843 33.86 - - - - 7,075 0.25 - 903,828 31.75 2,846,770 NJ
New Mexico 4 194,017 59.22 4 131,838 40.24 - - - - 1,217 0.37 - 62,179 18.98 327,615 NM
New York 43 4,913,156 68.56 43 2,243,559 31.31 - - - - 6,085 0.08 - 2,669,597 37.25 7,166,015 NY
North Carolina 13 800,139 56.15 13 624,844 43.85 - - - - - - - 175,295 12.30 1,424,983 NC
North Dakota 4 149,784 57.97 4 108,207 41.88 - - - - - - - 41,577 16.09 258,389 ND
Ohio 26 2,498,331 62.94 26 1,470,865 37.06 - - - - - - - 1,027,466 25.89 3,969,196 OH
Oklahoma 8 519,834 55.75 8 412,665 44.25 - - - - - - - 107,169 11.49 932,499 OK
Oregon 6 501,017 63.72 6 282,779 35.96 - - - - - - - 218,238 27.75 786,305 OR
Pennsylvania 29 3,130,954 64.92 29 1,673,657 34.70 - - - - 5,092 0.11 - 1,457,297 30.22 4,822,690 PA
Rhode Island 4 315,463 80.87 4 74,615 19.13 - - - - 2 0.00 - 240,848 61.74 390,091 RI
South Carolina 8 215,700 41.10 - 309,048 58.89 8 - - - - - - −93,348 −17.79 524,756 SC
South Dakota 4 163,010 55.61 4 130,108 44.39 - - - - - - - 32,902 11.22 293,118 SD
Tennessee 11 634,947 55.50 11 508,965 44.49 - - - - - - - 125,982 11.01 1,143,946 TN
Texas 25 1,663,185 63.32 25 958,566 36.49 - - - - - - - 704,619 26.82 2,626,811 TX
Utah 4 219,628 54.86 4 180,682 45.14 - - - - - - - 38,946 9.73 400,310 UT
Vermont 3 108,127 66.30 3 54,942 33.69 - - - - - - - 53,185 32.61 163,089 VT
Virginia 12 558,038 53.54 12 481,334 46.18 - - - - 2,895 0.28 - 76,704 7.36 1,042,267 VA
Washington 9 779,881 61.97 9 470,366 37.37 - - - - 7,772 0.62 - 309,515 24.59 1,258,556 WA
West Virginia 7 538,087 67.94 7 253,953 32.06 - - - - - - - 284,134 35.87 792,040 WV
Wisconsin 12 1,050,424 62.09 12 638,495 37.74 - - - - 1,204 0.07 - 411,929 24.35 1,691,815 WI
Wyoming 3 80,718 56.56 3 61,998 43.44 - - - - - - - 18,720 13.12 142,716 WY
TOTALS: 538 43,129,040 61.05 486 27,175,754 38.47 52 210,732 0.30 - - - - 15,951,287 22.58 70,641,539 US

Close states edit

Margin of victory less than 5% (23 electoral votes):

  1. Arizona, 1.00% (4,782 votes)
  2. Idaho, 1.83% (5,363 votes)
  3. Florida, 2.30% (42,599 votes)

Margin of victory over 5%, but less than 10% (40 electoral votes):

  1. Nebraska, 5.22% (30,460 votes)
  2. Virginia, 7.36% (76,704 votes)
  3. Georgia, 8.25% (94,027 votes)
  4. Kansas, 9.03% (77,449 votes)
  5. Utah, 9.73% (38,946 votes)

Tipping point:

  1. Washington, 24.59% (309,515 votes)

Statistics edit

[52]

Counties with highest percent of vote (Democratic)

  1. Duval County, Texas 92.55%
  2. Knott County, Kentucky 90.61%
  3. Webb County, Texas 90.08%
  4. Jim Hogg County, Texas 89.87%
  5. Menominee County, Wisconsin 89.12%

Counties with highest percent of vote (Republican)

  1. Holmes County, Mississippi 96.59%
  2. Noxubee County, Mississippi 96.59%
  3. Amite County, Mississippi 96.38%
  4. Leake County, Mississippi 96.23%
  5. Franklin County, Mississippi 96.05%

Counties with highest percent of vote (other)

  1. Macon County, Alabama 61.54%
  2. Limestone County, Alabama 56.01%
  3. Jackson County, Alabama 53.53%
  4. Lauderdale County, Alabama 52.45%
  5. Colbert County, Alabama 51.41%

Voter demographics edit

The 1964 presidential vote by demographic subgroup
Demographic subgroup Johnson Goldwater
Total vote 61 38
Gender
Men 60 40
Women 62 38
Age
18–29 years old 64 36
30–49 years old 61 39
50 and older 59 41
Race
White 59 41
Black 94 6
Religion
Protestants 55 45
Catholics 76 24
Party
Democrats 87 13
Republicans 20 80
Independents 56 44
Education
Less than high school 66 34
High school 62 38
College graduate or higher 52 48
Occupation
Professional and business 54 46
White-collar 57 43
Blue-collar 71 29
Region
Northeast 68 32
Midwest 61 39
South 52 48
West 60 40
Union households
Union 73 27

Source: [53]

Consequences edit

Although Goldwater was decisively defeated, some political pundits and historians believe he laid the foundation for the conservative revolution to follow. Among them is Richard Perlstein, historian of the American conservative movement, who wrote of Goldwater's defeat: "Here was one time, at least, when history was written by the losers."[54] Ronald Reagan's speech on Goldwater's behalf, grass-roots organization, and the conservative takeover (although temporary in the 1960s) of the Republican party would all help to bring about the "Reagan Revolution" of the 1980s.

Johnson went from his victory in the 1964 election to launch the Great Society program at home, signing the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and starting the War on Poverty. He also escalated the Vietnam War, which eroded his popularity. By 1968, Johnson's popularity had declined, and the Democrats became so split over his candidacy that he withdrew as a candidate. Moreover, his support of civil rights for blacks helped split white union members and Southerners away from Franklin D. Roosevelt's Democratic New Deal Coalition, which would later lead to the phenomenon of the "Reagan Democrat".[55] Of the 14 presidential elections that followed up to 2020, Democrats would win only six times, although in eight of those elections, the Democratic candidate received the highest number of popular votes.

The election also furthered the shift of the black voting electorate away from the Republican Party, a phenomenon which had begun with the New Deal.[citation needed] Since the 1964 election, Democratic presidential candidates have almost consistently won 80–95% of the black vote in each presidential election.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Two Democrats (Barack Obama in 2008 and Joe Biden in 2020) have since won an electoral vote from Nebraska's 2nd Congressional District, however Johnson remains the last Democrat to carry the state as a whole

References edit

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ a b White 1965, p. 19
  3. ^ Bigart, Homer (November 26, 1963). "GOP Leaders Ask Halt in Campaign". New York Times. p. 11.
  4. ^ White 1965, pp. 59–60
  5. ^ White 1965, p. 101
  6. ^ "Jan 11, 1964: WALLACE CONSIDERS PRIMARIES IN NORTH". New York Times. Retrieved January 25, 2018.
  7. ^ Unger and Unger; LBJ; a Life (1999) pp. 325–326; Dallek Flawed Giant, p. 164.
  8. ^ Evans and Novak (1966) pp. 451–456.
  9. ^ Robert A. Caro; "The Years of Lyndon Johnson: The Passage of Power" (2012), ch. 3 ("It's about Roosevelt and his father", Johnson said).
  10. ^ a b c d e f Frum, David (2000). How We Got Here: The '70s. New York: Basic Books. pp. 58–59. ISBN 0-465-04195-7.
  11. ^ Johnson, Robert David, All the Way with LBJ, p. 111. ISBN 9780521425957
  12. ^ "News Analysis; The Extremism Issue; Aides Say Goldwater Sought to Extol Patriotism and Defend His Party Stand". The New York Times. July 23, 1964. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on January 25, 2010.
  14. ^ a b Barnes, Bart (May 30, 1998). "Barry Goldwater, GOP Hero, Dies". The Washington Post. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
  15. ^ "The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Eastern Seabord".
  16. ^ "The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Social Security".
  17. ^ Black, Conrad (2007), p. 464.
  18. ^ Nation: The Social Security Argument, Time, October 23, 1964
  19. ^ Perlstein, Rick (2009). Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus. New York: Nation Books. p. 375. ISBN 978-1568584126.
  20. ^ Nick Gillespie (July 30, 2006). "The Hard Right". New York Times.
  21. ^ Sally Satel (June 30, 2004). "Essay; The Perils of Putting National Leaders on the Couch". New York Times.
  22. ^ "'64 Poll of Psychiatrists On Goldwater Defended". The New York Times. September 5, 1965.
  23. ^ "EXPERT CONDEMNS GOLDWATER POLL – Tells Libel Trial Magazine Survey Was 'Loaded'". The New York Times. May 16, 1968.
  24. ^ "Goldwater Awarded $75,000 in Damages In His Suit for Libel". The New York Times. May 25, 1968. p. 1.
  25. ^ "The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Ike at Gettysburg".
  26. ^ Karnow (1983), p. 371.
  27. ^ Karnow (1983), p. 366.
  28. ^ a b Karnow (1983), p. 367.
  29. ^ a b Karnow (1983), p. 370.
  30. ^ Moïse (1996), pp. 50, 78.
  31. ^ Karnow (1983), pp. 368–369.
  32. ^ Karnow (1983), pp. 368–374. Moïse (1996) noted that the Johnson administration did not intentionally fake the incident. However, it's clear that Johnson was under pressure to do something, the attacks that actually occurred earlier were not "unprovoked", as Johnson claimed, and once he had taken action, he could not easily admit that the evidence was over-stated.
  33. ^ Usdin, Steve (May 22, 2018). "When the CIA Infiltrated a Presidential Campaign" (Politico)
  34. ^ "The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Peace Little Girl (Daisy)".
  35. ^ Farber, David. The Age of Great Dreams: America in the 1960s. ISBN 1429931264
  36. ^ "The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Confessions of a Republican".
  37. ^ "10 worst political slogans of all time". The Daily Telegraph. March 23, 2016. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  38. ^ "Election and the Vietnam War". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  39. ^ Barth, Jay (May 12, 2016). "1964 redux: The stakes are too high for you to stay at home". Arkansas Times. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  40. ^ "The Living Room Candidate - Commercials - 1964 - Republican Convention". www.livingroomcandidate.org. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  41. ^ Wilkes, G. A. (2008), "all the way with LBJ", A Dictionary of Australian Colloquialisms, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780195563160.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-556316-0, retrieved May 18, 2023
  42. ^ "The Vice-Presidency: All the Way with LBJ". Time. April 14, 1961. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  43. ^ "[Delegates on the floor at the 1964 Democratic National Convention, Atlantic City, New Jersey; large banner reading "New York for LBJ all the way..."] / WKL". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  44. ^ "LBJ for the USA". Library of Congress.
  45. ^ Best, Gary Dean. Herbert Hoover, the Post-Presidential Years, 1933–1964: 1946–1964. pp. 415, 431–432 ISBN 0817977511
  46. ^ "Gallup Presidential Election Trial-Heat Trends, 1936–2008". Gallup, Inc.
  47. ^ Kornacki, Steve (February 3, 2011). "The 'Southern Strategy', fulfilled". Salon.com. April 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  48. ^ Murphy, Paul (1974). Political Parties In American History, Volume 3, 1890-present. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  49. ^ a b Leip, David. "1964 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
  50. ^ a b "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved August 7, 2005.
  51. ^ "1964 Presidential General Election Data – National". Retrieved March 18, 2013.
  52. ^ "1964 Presidential General Election Data – National". Retrieved March 18, 2013.
  53. ^ . Gallup. Archived from the original on July 26, 2011. Retrieved June 30, 2021.
  54. ^ Perlstein, Richard (2001). Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus. New York: Nation Books. pp. x. ISBN 978-1-56858-412-6.
  55. ^ Williams, Juan (June 10, 2004). "Reagan, the South and Civil Rights". NPR.org. Retrieved February 9, 2021.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Annunziata, Frank. "The Revolt Against the Welfare State: Goldwater Conservatism and the Election of 1964." Presidential Studies Quarterly 10.2 (1980): 254–265. online
  • Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa (1967). The Almanac of American Politics 1966: The Senators, the Representatives and the Governors: Their Records and Election Results, Their States and Districts.
  • Brennan, Mary C. (1995). Turning Right in the Sixties: The Conservative Capture of the G.O.P. University of North Carolina Press.
  • Burdick, Eugene (1964). The 480. – a political fiction novel around the Republican campaign.
  • Converse, Philip E., Aage R. Clausen, and Warren E. Miller. "Electoral myth and reality: the 1964 election." American Political Science Review 59.2 (1965): 321–336. online, widely cited based on voter surveys.
  • Dallek, Robert (2004). Lyndon B. Johnson: Portrait of a President. ISBN 978-0-19-515920-2.
  • Davies, Gareth, and Julian E. Zelizer, eds. America at the Ballot Box: Elections and Political History (2015) pp. 184–195, role of liberalism.
  • Donaldson, Gary (2003). Liberalism's Last Hurrah: The Presidential Campaign of 1964. M. E. Sharpe. ISBN 0-7656-1119-8.
  • Erikson, Robert S. "The influence of newspaper endorsements in presidential elections: The case of 1964." American Journal of Political Science (1976): 207–233. online
  • Evans, Rowland, and Novak, Robert (1966). Lyndon B. Johnson: The Exercise of Power.
  • Farrington, Joshua D. (2020). "Evicted from the Party: Black Republicans and the 1964 Election". Journal of Arizona History 61.1: 127–148.
  • Fraser, Steve; Gary Gerstle, eds. (1990). The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order, 1930–1980.
  • Goldberg, Robert Alan (1995). Barry Goldwater.
  • Hamby, Alonzo (1992). Liberalism and Its Challengers: From F.D.R. to Bush.
  • Hodgson, Godfrey (1996). The World Turned Right Side Up: A History of the Conservative Ascendancy in America. Houghton Mifflin Company. ISBN 9780395822944.
  • Jensen, Richard (1983). Grass Roots Politics: Parties, Issues, and Voters, 1854–1983.
  • Johnstone, Andrew, and Andrew Priest, eds. US Presidential Elections and Foreign Policy: Candidates, Campaigns, and Global Politics from FDR to Bill Clinton (2017) pp 154–176. online
  • Jurdem, Laurence R. "'The Media Were Not Completely Fair to You': Foreign Policy, the Press and the 1964 Goldwater Campaign". Journal of Arizona History 61.1 (2020): 161–180.
  • Kolkey, Jonathan Martin (1983). The New Right, 1960–1968: With Epilogue, 1969–1980.
  • Ladd, Everett Carll Jr.; Charles D. Hadley (1978). Transformations of the American Party System: Political Coalitions from the New Deal to the 1970s (2nd ed.).
  • Lesher, Stephan (1995). George Wallace.
  • McGirr, Lisa (2002). Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691059037.
  • Mann, Robert (2011). Daisy Petals and Mushroom Clouds: LBJ, Barry Goldwater and the Ad That Changed American Politics. Louisiana State University Press.
  • Matthews, Jeffrey J. (1997). "To Defeat a Maverick: The Goldwater Candidacy Revisited, 1963–1964". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 27 (4): 662. online
  • Middendorf, J. William (2006). A Glorious Disaster: Barry Goldwater’s Presidential Campaign and the Origins of the Conservative Movement. Basic Books.
  • Rae, Nicol C. (1994). Southern Democrats. Oxford University Press.
  • Rice, Ross R. "The 1964 Elections in the West." Western Political Quarterly 18.2-2 (1965): 431–438, with full articles on each Western state.
    • Anderson, Totton J., and Eugene C. Lee. "The 1964 election in California." Western Political Quarterly 18.2-2 (1965): 451–474.
  • Perlstein, Rick (2002). Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus.
  • Schlesinger Jr., Arthur Meier, ed. (2001). History of American Presidential Elections, 1789–2000.
  • Schuparra, Kurt. "Barry Goldwater and Southern California Conservatism: Ideology, Image and Myth in the 1964 California Republican Presidential Primary." Southern California Quarterly 74.3 (1992): 277–298. online
  • Shermer, Elizabeth Tandy, ed. Barry Goldwater and the remaking of the American political landscape (University of Arizona Press, 2013).
  • Sundquist, James L. (1983). Dynamics of the Party System: Alignment and Realignment of Political Parties in the United States.
  • White, Theodore (1965). The Making of the President: 1964. New York, Atheneum Publishers.
  • Young, Nancy Beck. Two Suns of the Southwest: Lyndon Johnson, Barry Goldwater, and the 1964 Battle between Liberalism and Conservatism (UP of Kansas, 2019). online

Primary sources edit

  • Gallup, George H., ed. (1972). The Gallup Poll: Public Opinion, 1935–1971. 3 vols. Random House.
  • Chester, Edward W. (1977). A guide to political platforms.
  • Porter, Kirk H. and Donald Bruce Johnson, eds. (1973). National party platforms, 1840–1972.

External links edit

  • Campaign commercials from the 1964 election
  • 1964 election results: State-by-state Popular vote July 6, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • 1964 popular vote by states (with bar graphs)
  • 1964 popular vote by counties
  • electoral history
  • Election of 1964 in Counting the Votes March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine

1964, united, states, presidential, election, 45th, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1964, incumbent, democratic, president, lyndon, johnson, defeated, senator, barry, goldwater, republican, nominee, landslide, johnson, fourth, mos. The 1964 United States presidential election was the 45th quadrennial presidential election It was held on Tuesday November 3 1964 Incumbent Democratic President Lyndon B Johnson defeated Senator Barry Goldwater the Republican nominee in a landslide Johnson was the fourth and most recent vice president to ascend to the presidency following the death of his predecessor and to win a full term in his own right With 61 1 of the popular vote Lyndon B Johnson won the largest share of the popular vote for the Democratic Party in history and the highest for any candidate since the advent of widespread popular elections in the 1820s 1964 United States presidential election 1960 November 3 1964 1968 538 members of the Electoral College270 electoral votes needed to winTurnout62 8 1 1 0 pp Nominee Lyndon B Johnson Barry GoldwaterParty Democratic RepublicanHome state Texas ArizonaRunning mate Hubert Humphrey William E MillerElectoral vote 486 52States carried 44 DC 6Popular vote 43 129 040 27 175 754Percentage 61 1 38 5 Presidential election results map Blue denotes states won by Johnson Humphrey and red denotes those won by Goldwater Miller Numbers indicate electoral votes cast by each state President before electionLyndon B JohnsonDemocratic Elected President Lyndon B JohnsonDemocraticJohnson took office on November 22 1963 and emphasized the continuation of his assassinated predecessor John F Kennedy He easily defeated a primary challenge by Governor George Wallace of Alabama to win the nomination to a full term At the 1964 Democratic National Convention Johnson selected Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota as his running mate In the Republican contest Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona a leader of his party s conservative faction defeated liberal Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York and Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania Johnson championed his passage of the Civil Rights Act and advocated a series of anti poverty programs collectively known as the Great Society Goldwater espoused a low tax small government philosophy Although he supported previous attempts at enacting civil rights legislation in 1957 and 1960 Goldwater opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 saying it violated individual liberty and states rights Democrats successfully portrayed Goldwater as a dangerous extremist most famously in the Daisy television advertisement The Republicans were divided between its moderate and conservative factions with Rockefeller and other moderate party leaders refusing to campaign for Goldwater Johnson led by wide margins in all polls during the campaign Johnson carried 44 states and the District of Columbia which voted for the first time in this election Goldwater won his home state and swept the five states of the Deep South due to the Democratic Party s strong support of civil rights and desegregation Several southern states had not voted for a Republican presidential candidate since the end of Reconstruction in 1877 This was the last election in which the Democratic Party won a majority of the white vote with 59 of white voters shunning Goldwater for Johnson This was the last election in which the Democratic nominee carried Idaho Utah Wyoming North Dakota South Dakota Nebraska a Kansas or Oklahoma and the only election ever in which the Democrat carried Alaska This marked the first presidential election in history in which a Democrat carried Vermont and conversely the first in which a Republican carried Georgia This was also the last election until 1992 in which the Democrat carried California Colorado Illinois Montana Nevada New Mexico New Jersey New Hampshire or Vermont as well as the last election until 2008 in which the Democrat carried Virginia or Indiana As such this was the most recent presidential election in which the entire Midwestern region voted Democratic As of 2023 this marks the last time that a Democratic presidential candidate has won more than 400 electoral votes Johnson s landslide victory coincided with the defeat of many conservative Republican congressmen The subsequent 89th Congress would pass major legislation such as the Social Security Amendments of 1965 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 The 1964 election marked the beginning of a major long term re alignment in American politics as Goldwater s unsuccessful bid significantly influenced the modern conservative movement The movement of conservatives to the Republican Party continued culminating in the 1980 presidential victory of Ronald Reagan Contents 1 Assassination of President John F Kennedy 2 Nominations 2 1 Democratic Party 2 1 1 Candidates 2 2 Republican Party 2 2 1 Candidates 2 2 2 Primaries 2 2 3 Convention 3 General election 3 1 Campaign 3 2 Ads and slogans 4 Results 4 1 Geography of results 4 1 1 Cartographic gallery 4 1 2 Results by state 4 1 3 Close states 4 1 4 Statistics 5 Voter demographics 6 Consequences 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksAssassination of President John F Kennedy edit nbsp President and Mrs Kennedy in the Dallas motorcadeMain article Assassination of John F Kennedy President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22 1963 in Dallas Texas Supporters were shocked and saddened by the loss of the charismatic President while opposition candidates were put in the awkward position of running against the policies of a slain political figure 2 During the following period of mourning Republican leaders called for a political moratorium so as not to appear disrespectful 3 4 As such little politicking was done by the candidates of either major party until January 1964 when the primary season officially began 5 At the time most political pundits saw Kennedy s assassination as leaving the nation politically unsettled 2 Nominations editDemocratic Party edit Main article 1964 Democratic Party presidential primaries nbsp Democratic Party United States 1964 Democratic Party ticketLyndon B Johnson Hubert Humphreyfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 36thPresident of the United States 1963 1969 U S Senatorfrom Minnesota 1949 1964 Campaign nbsp Candidates edit nbsp PresidentLyndon B Johnsonfrom Texas 1963 1969 nbsp GovernorGeorge Wallacefrom Alabama 1963 1967 1971 1979 1983 1987 The only candidate other than President Johnson to actively campaign was then Alabama Governor George Wallace who ran in a number of northern primaries though his candidacy was more to promote the philosophy of states rights among a northern audience while expecting some support from delegations in the South Wallace was certain that he was not in contention for the Democratic nomination 6 Johnson received 1 106 999 votes in the primaries At the national convention the integrated Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party MFDP claimed the seats for delegates for Mississippi not on the grounds of Party rules but because the official Mississippi delegation had been elected by a white primary system The national party s liberal leaders supported an even division of the seats between the two Mississippi delegations Johnson was concerned that while the regular Democrats of Mississippi would probably vote for Goldwater anyway rejecting them would lose him the South Eventually Hubert Humphrey Walter Reuther and the black civil rights leaders including Roy Wilkins Martin Luther King Jr and Bayard Rustin worked out a compromise The MFDP took two seats the regular Mississippi delegation was required to pledge to support the party ticket and no future Democratic convention would accept a delegation chosen by a discriminatory poll Joseph L Rauh Jr the MFDP s lawyer initially refused this deal but they eventually took their seats Many white delegates from Mississippi and Alabama refused to sign any pledge and left the convention and many young civil rights workers were offended by any compromise 7 Johnson biographers Rowland Evans and Robert Novak claim that the MFDP fell under the influence of black radicals and rejected their seats 8 Johnson lost Louisiana Alabama Mississippi Georgia and South Carolina Johnson also faced trouble from Robert F Kennedy President Kennedy s younger brother and the U S Attorney General Kennedy and Johnson s relationship was troubled from the time Robert Kennedy was a Senate staffer Then Majority Leader Johnson surmised that Kennedy s hostility was the direct result of the fact that Johnson frequently recounted a story that embarrassed Kennedy s father Joseph P Kennedy the ambassador to the United Kingdom According to his recounting Johnson and President Franklin D Roosevelt misled the ambassador upon a return visit to the United States to believe that Roosevelt wished to meet in Washington for friendly purposes in fact Roosevelt planned to and did fire the ambassador due to the ambassador s well publicized views 9 The Johnson Kennedy hostility was rendered mutual in the 1960 primaries and the 1960 Democratic National Convention when Robert Kennedy had tried to prevent Johnson from becoming his brother s running mate a move that deeply embittered both men In early 1964 despite his personal animosity for the president Kennedy had tried to force Johnson to accept him as his running mate Johnson eliminated this threat by announcing that none of his cabinet members would be considered for second place on the Democratic ticket Johnson also became concerned that Kennedy might use his scheduled speech at the 1964 Democratic Convention to create a groundswell of emotion among the delegates to make him Johnson s running mate he prevented this by deliberately scheduling Kennedy s speech on the last day of the convention after his running mate had already been chosen Shortly after the 1964 Democratic Convention Kennedy decided to leave Johnson s cabinet and run for the U S Senate in New York he won the general election in November Johnson chose United States Senator Hubert Humphrey from Minnesota a liberal and civil rights activist as his running mate Republican Party edit Main article 1964 Republican Party presidential primaries nbsp Republican Party United States 1964 Republican Party ticketBarry Goldwater William E Millerfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp U S Senatorfrom Arizona 1953 1965 1969 1987 U S Representativefrom New York 1951 1965 Campaign nbsp Candidates edit In Order of Delegates and Votes Won Barry Goldwater William Scranton Margaret Chase Smith Nelson Rockefeller Hiram Fong Henry Cabot Lodge Jr George W Romney Walter Judd nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp U S Senator from Arizona 1953 65 1969 87 Governor of Pennsylvania 1963 67 U S Senator from Maine 1949 73 Governor of New York 1959 73 U S Senator from Hawaii 1959 77 Ambassador to the United Nations 1953 60 Governor of Michigan 1963 69 Former Representative from Minnesota 1963 69 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 267 079 votes 1 220 PD 245 401 votes 50 PD 227 007 votes 22 PD 1 304 204 votes 6 PD 5 PD 386 661 votes 3 PD 1 955 votes 1 PD 1 PDHarold Stassen Jim Rhodes John W Byrnes nbsp nbsp nbsp Former Governor of Minnesota 1939 43 Governor of Ohio 1953 71 1975 83 Representative from Wisconsin 1945 73 114 083 votes 615 754 votes 299 612 votesPrimaries edit nbsp Republican primaries results by state No primary held John W Byrnes Barry Goldwater Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Jim Rhodes Nelson Rockefeller William Scranton Technically in South Dakota and Florida Goldwater finished in second to Unpledged Delegates but he finished before all other candidates The Republican Party GOP was badly divided in 1964 between its conservative and moderate liberal factions Former vice president Richard Nixon who had been beaten by Kennedy in the extremely close 1960 presidential election decided not to run Nixon a moderate with ties to both wings of the GOP had been able to unite the factions in 1960 in his absence the way was clear for the two factions to engage in a hard fought campaign for the nomination Barry Goldwater a Senator from Arizona was the champion of the conservatives The conservatives had historically been based in the American Midwest but beginning in the 1950s they had been gaining in power in the South and West and the core of Goldwater s support came from suburban conservative Republicans The conservatives favored a low tax small federal government which supported individual rights and business interests and opposed social welfare programs They also supported an internationalist and interventionist foreign policy The conservatives resented the dominance of the GOP s moderate wing which was based in the Northeastern United States Since 1940 the Eastern moderates had defeated conservative presidential candidates at the GOP s national conventions The conservatives believed the Eastern Republicans were little different from liberal Democrats in their philosophy and approach to government Goldwater s chief opponent for the Republican nomination was Nelson Rockefeller the Governor of New York and the long time leader of the GOP s liberal faction In 1961 a group of twenty two conservatives headed by Ohio Representative John M Ashbrook lawyer and National Review publisher William A Rusher and scholar F Clifton White met privately in Chicago to discuss the formation of a grass roots organization to secure the nomination of a conservative as the 1964 Republican candidate The main headquarters for the organization were established at Suite 3505 of the Chanin Building in New York City leading members to refer to themselves as the Suite 3505 Committee Following the 1962 mid term elections they formally backed Goldwater who notified them that he did not want to run for the presidency In April 1963 they formed the Draft Goldwater Committee chaired by Texas Republican Party Chairman Peter O Donnell The committee solidified growing conservative strength in the West and South and began working to gain control of state parties in the Midwest from liberal Republicans Throughout the rest of the year speculation about a potential Goldwater candidacy grew and grass roots activism and efforts among conservative Republicans expanded Initially Rockefeller was considered the front runner ahead of Goldwater However in 1963 two years after Rockefeller s divorce from his first wife he married Margaretta Happy Murphy who was nearly 18 years younger than he and had just divorced her husband and surrendered her four children to his custody 10 The fact that Murphy had suddenly divorced her husband before marrying Rockefeller led to rumors that Rockefeller had been having an extra marital affair with her This angered many social conservatives and female voters within the GOP many of whom called Rockefeller a wife stealer 10 After his remarriage Rockefeller s lead among Republicans lost 20 points overnight 10 Senator Prescott Bush of Connecticut the father of President George H W Bush and grandfather of President George W Bush was among Rockefeller s critics on this issue Have we come to the point in our life as a nation where the governor of a great state one who perhaps aspires to the nomination for president of the United States can desert a good wife mother of his grown children divorce her then persuade a young mother of four youngsters to abandon her husband and their four children and marry the governor 10 In the first primary in New Hampshire both Rockefeller and Goldwater were considered to be the favorites but the voters instead gave a surprising victory to the U S ambassador to South Vietnam Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Nixon s running mate in 1960 and a former Massachusetts senator Lodge was a write in candidate He went on to win the Massachusetts and New Jersey primaries before withdrawing his candidacy because he had finally decided he did not want the Republican nomination 11 Despite his defeat in New Hampshire Goldwater pressed on winning the Illinois Texas and Indiana primaries with little opposition and Nebraska s primary after a stiff challenge from a draft Nixon movement Goldwater also won a number of state caucuses and gathered even more delegates Meanwhile Nelson Rockefeller won the West Virginia and Oregon primaries against Goldwater and William Scranton won in his home state of Pennsylvania Both Rockefeller and Scranton also won several state caucuses mostly in the Northeast The final showdown between Goldwater and Rockefeller was in the California primary In spite of the previous accusations regarding his marriage Rockefeller led Goldwater in most opinion polls in California and he appeared headed for victory when his new wife gave birth to a son Nelson Rockefeller Jr three days before the primary 10 His son s birth brought the issue of adultery front and center and Rockefeller suddenly lost ground in the polls Combined with Goldwater conservatives expanded dedicated efforts and superior organizing 10 Goldwater won the primary by a narrow 51 48 margin thus eliminating Rockefeller as a serious contender and all but clinching the nomination With Rockefeller s elimination the party s moderates and liberals turned to William Scranton the Governor of Pennsylvania in the hopes that he could stop Goldwater However as the Republican Convention began Goldwater was seen as the heavy favorite to win the nomination This was notable as it signified a shift to a more conservative leaning Republican Party Total popular vote Barry Goldwater 2 267 079 38 33 Nelson Rockefeller 1 304 204 22 05 Jim Rhodes 615 754 10 41 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr 386 661 6 54 John W Byrnes 299 612 5 07 William Scranton 245 401 4 15 Margaret Chase Smith 227 007 3 84 Richard Nixon 197 212 3 33 Unpledged 173 652 2 94 Harold Stassen 114 083 1 93 Other 58 933 0 99 Lyndon B Johnson write in 23 406 0 40 George W Romney 1 955 0 03 Convention edit The 1964 Republican National Convention July 13 16 at Daly City California s Cow Palace arena was one of the most bitter clarification needed on record citation needed when The party s moderates and conservatives openly expressed their contempt for each other Rockefeller was loudly booed when he came to the podium for his speech in his speech he roundly criticized the party s conservatives which led many conservatives in the galleries to yell and scream at him A group of moderates tried to rally behind Scranton to stop Goldwater but Goldwater s forces easily brushed his challenge aside citation needed and Goldwater was nominated on the first ballot The presidential tally was as follows Barry Goldwater 883 William Scranton 214 Nelson Rockefeller 114 George W Romney 41 Margaret Chase Smith 27 Walter Judd 22 Hiram Fong 5 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr 2The vice presidential nomination went to little known Republican Party Chairman William E Miller a Representative from western New York Goldwater stated that he chose Miller simply because he drives President Johnson nuts This would be the only Republican ticket between 1948 and 1976 that did not include Nixon In accepting his nomination Goldwater uttered his most famous phrase a quote from Cicero suggested by speechwriter Harry Jaffa I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue 12 For many GOP moderates Goldwater s speech was seen as a deliberate insult citation needed and many of these moderates would defect to the Democrats in the fall election General election editCampaign edit nbsp First page of the Civil Rights Act of 1964Although Goldwater had been successful in rallying conservatives he was unable to broaden his base of support for the general election Shortly before the Republican Convention he had alienated moderate and liberal Republicans by his vote against the Civil Rights Act of 1964 13 failed verification original research which Johnson supported following Kennedy s death and signed into law While a staunch supporter of racial equality having voted in favor of the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights acts bills and the 24th Amendment to the Constitution Goldwater felt that desegregation was primarily a states rights issue rather than a national policy and believed the 1964 act to be unconstitutional Goldwater s vote against the legislation helped cause African Americans to overwhelmingly support Johnson 14 Goldwater had previously voted in favor of the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights acts but only after proposing restrictive amendments to them 14 Goldwater was famous for speaking off the cuff at times and many of his former statements were given wide publicity by the Democrats In the early 1960s Goldwater had called the Eisenhower administration a dime store New Deal and the former president never fully forgave him or offered him his full support in the election citation needed In December 1961 he told a news conference that sometimes I think this country would be better off if we could just saw off the Eastern Seaboard and let it float out to sea a remark which indicated his dislike of the liberal economic and social policies that were often associated with that part of the nation That comment came back to hurt him in the form of a Johnson television commercial 15 as did remarks about making Social Security voluntary something that even his running mate Miller felt would lead to the destruction of the system 16 and selling the Tennessee Valley Authority In his most famous verbal gaffe Goldwater once joked that the U S military should lob one a nuclear bomb into the men s room of the Kremlin in the Soviet Union Goldwater was also hurt by the reluctance of many prominent moderate Republicans to support him Governors Nelson Rockefeller of New York and George W Romney of Michigan refused to endorse Goldwater due to his stance on civil rights and his proposal to make Social Security voluntary and did not campaign for him On the other hand former Vice President Richard Nixon and Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania loyally supported the GOP ticket and campaigned for Goldwater although Nixon did not entirely agree with Goldwater s political stances and said that it would be a tragedy if Goldwater s platform were not challenged and repudiated by the Republicans Scranton also felt that Goldwater s proposal of voluntarizing Social Security was the worst kind of fiscal responsibility 17 The New York Herald Tribune a voice for eastern Republicans and a target for Goldwater activists during the primaries supported Johnson in the general election Some moderates even formed a Republicans for Johnson organization although most prominent GOP politicians avoided being associated with it 18 Shortly before the Republican convention CBS reporter Daniel Schorr wrote from Germany that It looks as though Senator Goldwater if nominated will be starting his campaign here in Bavaria center of Germany s right wing He noted that a prior Goldwater interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel was an appeal to right wing elements However there was no ulterior motive for the trip it was just a vacation 19 Fact magazine published an article polling psychiatrists around the country as to Goldwater s sanity Some 1 189 psychiatrists appeared to agree that Goldwater was emotionally unstable and unfit for office though none of the members had actually interviewed him The article received heavy publicity and resulted in a change to the ethics guidelines of the American Psychiatric Association now known as the Goldwater rule In a libel suit a federal court awarded Goldwater 1 in compensatory damages and 75 000 in punitive damages 20 21 22 23 24 Eisenhower s strong backing could have been an asset to the Goldwater campaign but instead its absence was clearly noticed When questioned about the presidential capabilities of the former president s younger brother university administrator Milton S Eisenhower in July 1964 Goldwater replied One Eisenhower in a generation is enough However Eisenhower did not openly repudiate Goldwater and made one television commercial for Goldwater s campaign 25 A prominent Hollywood celebrity who vigorously supported Goldwater was Ronald Reagan Reagan gave a well received televised speech supporting Goldwater it was so popular that Goldwater s advisors had it played on local television stations around the nation Many historians consider this speech A Time for Choosing to mark the beginning of Reagan s transformation from an actor to a political leader In 1966 Reagan would be elected Governor of California Meanwhile President Johnson was concerned he could lose the election by appearing soft on Communism 26 On July 10 the USS Maddox was ordered into the Gulf of Tonkin authorized to maintain contact with the U S military command in Saigon and arrange such communications as may be desired 27 On July 30 South Vietnamese commandos tried to attack the North Vietnamese radar station on the island of Hon Me 28 with the USS Maddox sufficiently close that the North Vietnamese believed it was there to provide cover for that commando raid 29 North Vietnam filed an official complaint with the International Control Commission accusing the United States of being behind the raid 28 On August 2 the Maddox reported having been attacked by three North Vietnamese Navy torpedo boats 30 Johnson called Soviet Premier Khrushchev saying the US did not want war and asking the Soviets to convince North Vietnam to not attack American warships 31 The next day August 3 South Vietnamese raided Cape Vinhson and Cua Ron 29 That night in the middle of a thunderstorm the Maddox intercepted radio messages that gave them the impression that Communist patrol boats were bracing for another assault They called for air support from the USS Ticonderoga The pilots didn t see anything but the Maddox and the nearby USS Turner Joy started shooting in all directions However after the incident all US personnel involved acknowledged they had neither seen nor heard Communist gunfire Nevertheless Johnson and an aide Kenneth O Donnell agreed that Johnson would have to respond firmly to defend himself against Goldwater and the Republican right wing Johnson denounced the attack as unprovoked and secured essentially a blank check to do anything he thought necessary in Vietnam and left Goldwater looking like an irresponsible hawk 32 Ads and slogans edit source source source source source source source source track track track track track track track track Full Daisy advertisementJohnson positioned himself as a moderate and succeeded in portraying Goldwater as an extremist CIA Director William Colby asserted that Tracy Barnes instructed the CIA to spy on the Goldwater campaign and the Republican National Committee to provide information to Johnson s campaign E Howard Hunt later implicated as a ringleader in the Watergate scandal disputed this instead claiming the operation had been ordered by the White House 33 Goldwater had a habit of making blunt statements about war nuclear weapons and economics that could be turned against him Most famously the Johnson campaign broadcast a television commercial on September 7 dubbed the Daisy Girl ad which featured a little girl picking petals from a daisy in a field counting the petals which then segues into a launch countdown and a nuclear explosion 34 The ads were in response to Goldwater s advocacy of tactical nuclear weapons use in Vietnam 35 Confessions of a Republican another Johnson ad features a monologue from a man who tells viewers that he had previously voted for Eisenhower and Nixon but now worries about the men with strange ideas weird groups and the head of the Ku Klux Klan who were supporting Goldwater he concludes that either they re not Republicans or I m not 36 Voters increasingly viewed Goldwater as a right wing fringe candidate His slogan In your heart you know he s right was successfully parodied by the Johnson campaign into In your guts you know he s nuts or In your heart you know he might as in he might push the nuclear button or even In your heart he s too far right 37 38 The Johnson campaign s greatest concern may have been voter complacency leading to low turnout in key states To counter this all of Johnson s broadcast ads concluded with the line Vote for President Johnson on November 3 The stakes are too high for you to stay home 39 40 The Democratic campaign used two other slogans All the way with LBJ 41 42 43 and LBJ for the USA 44 The election campaign was disrupted for a week by the death of former president Herbert Hoover on October 20 1964 because it was considered disrespectful to be campaigning during a time of mourning Hoover died of natural causes He had been U S president from 1929 to 1933 Both major candidates attended his funeral 45 Johnson led in all opinion polls by huge margins throughout the entire campaign 46 Results edit nbsp Election results by county Lyndon B Johnson Barry Goldwater Unpledged electorsThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The election was held on November 3 1964 Johnson beat Goldwater in the general election winning over 61 of the popular vote Johnson became the only Democrat between 1944 and 1976 to win a majority of the popular vote In the end Goldwater won only his native state of Arizona and five Deep South states Louisiana Mississippi Georgia Alabama and South Carolina which had been increasingly alienated by Democratic civil rights policies and where Jim Crow laws tended to be still active to varying degrees before the following year s Voting Rights Act outlawed them entirely The five Southern states that voted for Goldwater swung over dramatically to support him For instance in Mississippi where Democrat Franklin D Roosevelt had won 97 of the popular vote in 1936 Goldwater won 87 of the vote 47 Of these states Louisiana had been the only state where a Republican had won even once since Reconstruction nbsp Results by congressional district The 1964 election was a major transition point for the South and an important step in the process by which the Democrats former Solid South became a Republican bastion Nonetheless Johnson still managed to eke out a bare popular majority of 51 49 6 307 to 5 993 million in the eleven former Confederate states Conversely Johnson was the first Democrat ever to carry the state of Vermont in a presidential election and only the second Democrat after Woodrow Wilson in 1912 when the Republican Party was divided to carry Maine since the Republican Party was founded in 1854 Maine and Vermont had been the only states that FDR had failed to carry during any of his four successful presidential bids Around twenty percent of the people who had voted for Nixon in the 1960 election switched their support to Johnson 48 Of the 3 126 counties districts independent cities making returns Johnson won in 2 275 72 77 while Goldwater carried 826 26 42 Unpledged electors carried six counties in Alabama 0 19 The Johnson landslide defeated many conservative Republican congressmen giving him a majority that could overcome the conservative coalition This was the first election to have the participation of the District of Columbia under the 23rd Amendment to the US Constitution from 1961 The Johnson campaign broke two American election records previously held by Franklin Roosevelt the most Electoral College votes won by a major party candidate running for the White House for the first time with 486 to the 472 won by Roosevelt in 1932 and the largest share of the popular vote under the current Democratic Republican competition Roosevelt won 60 8 nationwide Johnson 61 1 This first time electoral count was exceeded when Ronald Reagan won 489 votes in 1980 Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote 49 Electoralvote 50 Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote 50 Lyndon B Johnson incumbent Democratic Texas 43 129 040 61 05 486 Hubert Humphrey Minnesota 486Barry Goldwater Republican Arizona 27 175 754 38 47 52 William E Miller New York 52 unpledged electors Democratic Alabama 210 732 0 30 0 Alabama 0Eric Hass Socialist Labor New York 45 189 0 06 0 Henning A Blomen Massachusetts 0Clifton DeBerry Socialist Workers Illinois 32 706 0 05 0 Ed Shaw Michigan 0E Harold Munn Prohibition Michigan 23 267 0 03 0 Mark R Shaw Massachusetts 0John Kasper States Rights New York 6 953 0 01 0 J B Stoner Georgia 0Joseph B Lightburn Constitution West Virginia 5 061 0 01 0 Theodore Billings Colorado 0Other 12 837 0 02 Other Total 70 641 539 100 538 538Needed to win 270 270Popular vote 49 Johnson 61 05 Goldwater 38 47 Others 0 48 Electoral vote 50 Johnson 90 33 Goldwater 9 67 Geography of results edit nbsp Results by state nbsp Results by county shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the vote nbsp Results by district 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 Unpledged electors 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 unpledged electors presidential election results by county nbsp Cartogram of Other presidential election results by county nbsp County swing from 1960 to 1964Results by state edit Source 51 States districts won by Johnson HumphreyStates districts won by Goldwater MillerLyndon B JohnsonDemocratic Barry GoldwaterRepublican Unpledged electorsUnpledged Democratic Other Margin State totalState electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes Alabama 10 479 085 69 45 10 210 732 30 55 268 353 38 90 689 817 ALAlaska 3 44 329 65 91 3 22 930 34 09 21 399 31 82 67 259 AKArizona 5 237 753 49 45 242 535 50 45 5 482 0 10 4 782 1 00 480 770 AZArkansas 6 314 197 56 06 6 243 264 43 41 70 933 12 66 560 426 ARCalifornia 40 4 171 877 59 11 40 2 879 108 40 79 489 0 01 1 292 769 18 32 7 057 586 CAColorado 6 476 024 61 27 6 296 767 38 19 302 0 04 179 257 23 07 776 986 COConnecticut 8 826 269 67 81 8 390 996 32 09 435 273 35 72 1 218 578 CTDelaware 3 122 704 60 95 3 78 078 38 78 113 0 06 44 626 22 17 201 320 DED C 3 169 796 85 50 3 28 801 14 50 140 995 71 00 198 597 DCFlorida 14 948 540 51 15 14 905 941 48 85 42 599 2 30 1 854 481 FLGeorgia 12 522 557 45 87 616 584 54 12 12 94 027 8 25 1 139 336 GAHawaii 4 163 249 78 76 4 44 022 21 24 119 227 57 52 207 271 HIIdaho 4 148 920 50 92 4 143 557 49 08 5 363 1 83 292 477 IDIllinois 26 2 796 833 59 47 26 1 905 946 40 53 890 887 18 94 4 702 841 ILIndiana 13 1 170 848 55 98 13 911 118 43 56 1 374 0 07 259 730 12 42 2 091 606 INIowa 9 733 030 61 88 9 449 148 37 92 182 0 02 283 882 23 97 1 184 539 IAKansas 7 464 028 54 09 7 386 579 45 06 1 901 0 22 77 449 9 03 857 901 KSKentucky 9 669 659 64 01 9 372 977 35 65 296 682 28 36 1 046 105 KYLouisiana 10 387 068 43 19 509 225 56 81 10 122 157 13 63 896 293 LAMaine 4 262 264 68 84 4 118 701 31 16 143 563 37 68 381 221 MEMaryland 10 730 912 65 47 10 385 495 34 53 1 0 00 345 417 30 94 1 116 457 MDMassachusetts 14 1 786 422 76 19 14 549 727 23 44 4 755 0 20 1 236 695 52 74 2 344 798 MAMichigan 21 2 136 615 66 70 21 1 060 152 33 10 1 704 0 05 1 076 463 33 61 3 203 102 MIMinnesota 10 991 117 63 76 10 559 624 36 00 2 544 0 16 431 493 27 76 1 554 462 MNMississippi 7 52 618 12 86 356 528 87 14 7 303 910 74 28 409 146 MSMissouri 12 1 164 344 64 05 12 653 535 35 95 510 809 28 10 1 817 879 MOMontana 4 164 246 58 95 4 113 032 40 57 51 214 18 38 278 628 MTNebraska 5 307 307 52 61 5 276 847 47 39 30 460 5 22 584 154 NENevada 3 79 339 58 58 3 56 094 41 42 23 245 17 16 135 433 NVNew Hampshire 4 184 064 63 89 4 104 029 36 11 78 036 27 78 288 093 NHNew Jersey 17 1 867 671 65 61 17 963 843 33 86 7 075 0 25 903 828 31 75 2 846 770 NJNew Mexico 4 194 017 59 22 4 131 838 40 24 1 217 0 37 62 179 18 98 327 615 NMNew York 43 4 913 156 68 56 43 2 243 559 31 31 6 085 0 08 2 669 597 37 25 7 166 015 NYNorth Carolina 13 800 139 56 15 13 624 844 43 85 175 295 12 30 1 424 983 NCNorth Dakota 4 149 784 57 97 4 108 207 41 88 41 577 16 09 258 389 NDOhio 26 2 498 331 62 94 26 1 470 865 37 06 1 027 466 25 89 3 969 196 OHOklahoma 8 519 834 55 75 8 412 665 44 25 107 169 11 49 932 499 OKOregon 6 501 017 63 72 6 282 779 35 96 218 238 27 75 786 305 ORPennsylvania 29 3 130 954 64 92 29 1 673 657 34 70 5 092 0 11 1 457 297 30 22 4 822 690 PARhode Island 4 315 463 80 87 4 74 615 19 13 2 0 00 240 848 61 74 390 091 RISouth Carolina 8 215 700 41 10 309 048 58 89 8 93 348 17 79 524 756 SCSouth Dakota 4 163 010 55 61 4 130 108 44 39 32 902 11 22 293 118 SDTennessee 11 634 947 55 50 11 508 965 44 49 125 982 11 01 1 143 946 TNTexas 25 1 663 185 63 32 25 958 566 36 49 704 619 26 82 2 626 811 TXUtah 4 219 628 54 86 4 180 682 45 14 38 946 9 73 400 310 UTVermont 3 108 127 66 30 3 54 942 33 69 53 185 32 61 163 089 VTVirginia 12 558 038 53 54 12 481 334 46 18 2 895 0 28 76 704 7 36 1 042 267 VAWashington 9 779 881 61 97 9 470 366 37 37 7 772 0 62 309 515 24 59 1 258 556 WAWest Virginia 7 538 087 67 94 7 253 953 32 06 284 134 35 87 792 040 WVWisconsin 12 1 050 424 62 09 12 638 495 37 74 1 204 0 07 411 929 24 35 1 691 815 WIWyoming 3 80 718 56 56 3 61 998 43 44 18 720 13 12 142 716 WYTOTALS 538 43 129 040 61 05 486 27 175 754 38 47 52 210 732 0 30 15 951 287 22 58 70 641 539 US Close states edit Margin of victory less than 5 23 electoral votes Arizona 1 00 4 782 votes Idaho 1 83 5 363 votes Florida 2 30 42 599 votes Margin of victory over 5 but less than 10 40 electoral votes Nebraska 5 22 30 460 votes Virginia 7 36 76 704 votes Georgia 8 25 94 027 votes Kansas 9 03 77 449 votes Utah 9 73 38 946 votes Tipping point Washington 24 59 309 515 votes Statistics edit 52 Counties with highest percent of vote Democratic Duval County Texas 92 55 Knott County Kentucky 90 61 Webb County Texas 90 08 Jim Hogg County Texas 89 87 Menominee County Wisconsin 89 12 Counties with highest percent of vote Republican Holmes County Mississippi 96 59 Noxubee County Mississippi 96 59 Amite County Mississippi 96 38 Leake County Mississippi 96 23 Franklin County Mississippi 96 05 Counties with highest percent of vote other Macon County Alabama 61 54 Limestone County Alabama 56 01 Jackson County Alabama 53 53 Lauderdale County Alabama 52 45 Colbert County Alabama 51 41 Voter demographics editThe 1964 presidential vote by demographic subgroupDemographic subgroup Johnson GoldwaterTotal vote 61 38GenderMen 60 40Women 62 38Age18 29 years old 64 3630 49 years old 61 3950 and older 59 41RaceWhite 59 41Black 94 6ReligionProtestants 55 45Catholics 76 24PartyDemocrats 87 13Republicans 20 80Independents 56 44EducationLess than high school 66 34High school 62 38College graduate or higher 52 48OccupationProfessional and business 54 46White collar 57 43Blue collar 71 29RegionNortheast 68 32Midwest 61 39South 52 48West 60 40Union householdsUnion 73 27Source 53 Consequences editAlthough Goldwater was decisively defeated some political pundits and historians believe he laid the foundation for the conservative revolution to follow Among them is Richard Perlstein historian of the American conservative movement who wrote of Goldwater s defeat Here was one time at least when history was written by the losers 54 Ronald Reagan s speech on Goldwater s behalf grass roots organization and the conservative takeover although temporary in the 1960s of the Republican party would all help to bring about the Reagan Revolution of the 1980s Johnson went from his victory in the 1964 election to launch the Great Society program at home signing the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and starting the War on Poverty He also escalated the Vietnam War which eroded his popularity By 1968 Johnson s popularity had declined and the Democrats became so split over his candidacy that he withdrew as a candidate Moreover his support of civil rights for blacks helped split white union members and Southerners away from Franklin D Roosevelt s Democratic New Deal Coalition which would later lead to the phenomenon of the Reagan Democrat 55 Of the 14 presidential elections that followed up to 2020 Democrats would win only six times although in eight of those elections the Democratic candidate received the highest number of popular votes The election also furthered the shift of the black voting electorate away from the Republican Party a phenomenon which had begun with the New Deal citation needed Since the 1964 election Democratic presidential candidates have almost consistently won 80 95 of the black vote in each presidential election See also editConservatism in the United States History of the United States 1964 1980 History of the United States Democratic Party History of the United States Republican Party Second inauguration of Lyndon B Johnson 1964 United States gubernatorial elections 1964 United States House of Representatives elections 1964 United States Senate elections Natural born citizen of the United States regarding Goldwater s constitutional eligibility to be president Scientists and Engineers for Johnson HumphreyNotes edit Two Democrats Barack Obama in 2008 and Joe Biden in 2020 have since won an electoral vote from Nebraska s 2nd Congressional District however Johnson remains the last Democrat to carry the state as a wholeReferences edit National General Election VEP Turnout Rates 1789 Present United States Election Project CQ Press a b White 1965 p 19 Bigart Homer November 26 1963 GOP Leaders Ask Halt in Campaign New York Times p 11 White 1965 pp 59 60 White 1965 p 101 Jan 11 1964 WALLACE CONSIDERS PRIMARIES IN NORTH New York Times Retrieved January 25 2018 Unger and Unger LBJ a Life 1999 pp 325 326 Dallek Flawed Giant p 164 Evans and Novak 1966 pp 451 456 Robert A Caro The Years of Lyndon Johnson The Passage of Power 2012 ch 3 It s about Roosevelt and his father Johnson said a b c d e f Frum David 2000 How We Got Here The 70s New York Basic Books pp 58 59 ISBN 0 465 04195 7 Johnson Robert David All the Way with LBJ p 111 ISBN 9780521425957 News Analysis The Extremism Issue Aides Say Goldwater Sought to Extol Patriotism and Defend His Party Stand The New York Times July 23 1964 Retrieved February 3 2021 Civil Rights Act of 1964 CRA Title VII Equal Employment Opportunities 42 US Code Chapter 21 Archived from the original on January 25 2010 a b Barnes Bart May 30 1998 Barry Goldwater GOP Hero Dies The Washington Post Retrieved November 6 2016 The Living Room Candidate Commercials 1964 Eastern Seabord The Living Room Candidate Commercials 1964 Social Security Black Conrad 2007 p 464 Nation The Social Security Argument Time October 23 1964 Perlstein Rick 2009 Before the Storm Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus New York Nation Books p 375 ISBN 978 1568584126 Nick Gillespie July 30 2006 The Hard Right New York Times Sally Satel June 30 2004 Essay The Perils of Putting National Leaders on the Couch New York Times 64 Poll of Psychiatrists On Goldwater Defended The New York Times September 5 1965 EXPERT CONDEMNS GOLDWATER POLL Tells Libel Trial Magazine Survey Was Loaded The New York Times May 16 1968 Goldwater Awarded 75 000 in Damages In His Suit for Libel The New York Times May 25 1968 p 1 The Living Room Candidate Commercials 1964 Ike at Gettysburg Karnow 1983 p 371 Karnow 1983 p 366 a b Karnow 1983 p 367 a b Karnow 1983 p 370 Moise 1996 pp 50 78 Karnow 1983 pp 368 369 Karnow 1983 pp 368 374 Moise 1996 noted that the Johnson administration did not intentionally fake the incident However it s clear that Johnson was under pressure to do something the attacks that actually occurred earlier were not unprovoked as Johnson claimed and once he had taken action he could not easily admit that the evidence was over stated Usdin Steve May 22 2018 When the CIA Infiltrated a Presidential Campaign Politico The Living Room Candidate Commercials 1964 Peace Little Girl Daisy Farber David The Age of Great Dreams America in the 1960s ISBN 1429931264 The Living Room Candidate Commercials 1964 Confessions of a Republican 10 worst political slogans of all time The Daily Telegraph March 23 2016 Retrieved February 3 2021 Election and the Vietnam War Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved February 3 2021 Barth Jay May 12 2016 1964 redux The stakes are too high for you to stay at home Arkansas Times Retrieved May 18 2023 The Living Room Candidate Commercials 1964 Republican Convention www livingroomcandidate org Retrieved May 18 2023 Wilkes G A 2008 all the way with LBJ A Dictionary of Australian Colloquialisms Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195563160 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 556316 0 retrieved May 18 2023 The Vice Presidency All the Way with LBJ Time April 14 1961 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved May 18 2023 Delegates on the floor at the 1964 Democratic National Convention Atlantic City New Jersey large banner reading New York for LBJ all the way WKL Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved May 18 2023 LBJ for the USA Library of Congress Best Gary Dean Herbert Hoover the Post Presidential Years 1933 1964 1946 1964 pp 415 431 432 ISBN 0817977511 Gallup Presidential Election Trial Heat Trends 1936 2008 Gallup Inc Kornacki Steve February 3 2011 The Southern Strategy fulfilled Salon com Archived April 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine Murphy Paul 1974 Political Parties In American History Volume 3 1890 present G P Putnam s Sons a b Leip David 1964 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved May 8 2013 a b Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved August 7 2005 1964 Presidential General Election Data National Retrieved March 18 2013 1964 Presidential General Election Data National Retrieved March 18 2013 Election Polls Vote by Groups 1960 1964 Gallup Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Retrieved June 30 2021 Perlstein Richard 2001 Before the Storm Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus New York Nation Books pp x ISBN 978 1 56858 412 6 Williams Juan June 10 2004 Reagan the South and Civil Rights NPR org Retrieved February 9 2021 Sources editStanley Karnow 1983 Vietnam A History Viking Press ISBN 0 14 026547 3 OL 292181M Wikidata Q108903453 Edwin E Moise 1996 Tonkin Gulf and the Escalation of the Vietnam War University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2300 2 OL 23262546M Wikidata Q108905649 Further reading editFurther information Barry Goldwater References Annunziata Frank The Revolt Against the Welfare State Goldwater Conservatism and the Election of 1964 Presidential Studies Quarterly 10 2 1980 254 265 online Barone Michael Grant Ujifusa 1967 The Almanac of American Politics 1966 The Senators the Representatives and the Governors Their Records and Election Results Their States and Districts Brennan Mary C 1995 Turning Right in the Sixties The Conservative Capture of the G O P University of North Carolina Press Burdick Eugene 1964 The 480 a political fiction novel around the Republican campaign Converse Philip E Aage R Clausen and Warren E Miller Electoral myth and reality the 1964 election American Political Science Review 59 2 1965 321 336 online widely cited based on voter surveys Dallek Robert 2004 Lyndon B Johnson Portrait of a President ISBN 978 0 19 515920 2 Davies Gareth and Julian E Zelizer eds America at the Ballot Box Elections and Political History 2015 pp 184 195 role of liberalism Donaldson Gary 2003 Liberalism s Last Hurrah The Presidential Campaign of 1964 M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 1119 8 Erikson Robert S The influence of newspaper endorsements in presidential elections The case of 1964 American Journal of Political Science 1976 207 233 online Evans Rowland and Novak Robert 1966 Lyndon B Johnson The Exercise of Power Farrington Joshua D 2020 Evicted from the Party Black Republicans and the 1964 Election Journal of Arizona History 61 1 127 148 Fraser Steve Gary Gerstle eds 1990 The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order 1930 1980 Goldberg Robert Alan 1995 Barry Goldwater Hamby Alonzo 1992 Liberalism and Its Challengers From F D R to Bush Hodgson Godfrey 1996 The World Turned Right Side Up A History of the Conservative Ascendancy in America Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 9780395822944 Jensen Richard 1983 Grass Roots Politics Parties Issues and Voters 1854 1983 Johnstone Andrew and Andrew Priest eds US Presidential Elections and Foreign Policy Candidates Campaigns and Global Politics from FDR to Bill Clinton 2017 pp 154 176 online Jurdem Laurence R The Media Were Not Completely Fair to You Foreign Policy the Press and the 1964 Goldwater Campaign Journal of Arizona History 61 1 2020 161 180 Kolkey Jonathan Martin 1983 The New Right 1960 1968 With Epilogue 1969 1980 Ladd Everett Carll Jr Charles D Hadley 1978 Transformations of the American Party System Political Coalitions from the New Deal to the 1970s 2nd ed Lesher Stephan 1995 George Wallace McGirr Lisa 2002 Suburban Warriors The Origins of the New American Right Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691059037 Mann Robert 2011 Daisy Petals and Mushroom Clouds LBJ Barry Goldwater and the Ad That Changed American Politics Louisiana State University Press Matthews Jeffrey J 1997 To Defeat a Maverick The Goldwater Candidacy Revisited 1963 1964 Presidential Studies Quarterly 27 4 662 online Middendorf J William 2006 A Glorious Disaster Barry Goldwater s Presidential Campaign and the Origins of the Conservative Movement Basic Books Rae Nicol C 1994 Southern Democrats Oxford University Press Rice Ross R The 1964 Elections in the West Western Political Quarterly 18 2 2 1965 431 438 with full articles on each Western state Anderson Totton J and Eugene C Lee The 1964 election in California Western Political Quarterly 18 2 2 1965 451 474 Perlstein Rick 2002 Before the Storm Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus Schlesinger Jr Arthur Meier ed 2001 History of American Presidential Elections 1789 2000 Schuparra Kurt Barry Goldwater and Southern California Conservatism Ideology Image and Myth in the 1964 California Republican Presidential Primary Southern California Quarterly 74 3 1992 277 298 online Shermer Elizabeth Tandy ed Barry Goldwater and the remaking of the American political landscape University of Arizona Press 2013 Sundquist James L 1983 Dynamics of the Party System Alignment and Realignment of Political Parties in the United States White Theodore 1965 The Making of the President 1964 New York Atheneum Publishers Young Nancy Beck Two Suns of the Southwest Lyndon Johnson Barry Goldwater and the 1964 Battle between Liberalism and Conservatism UP of Kansas 2019 onlinePrimary sources edit Gallup George H ed 1972 The Gallup Poll Public Opinion 1935 1971 3 vols Random House Chester Edward W 1977 A guide to political platforms Porter Kirk H and Donald Bruce Johnson eds 1973 National party platforms 1840 1972 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States presidential election 1964 Campaign commercials from the 1964 election 1964 election results State by state Popular vote Archived July 6 2008 at the Wayback Machine 1964 popular vote by states with bar graphs 1964 popular vote by counties electoral history Election of 1964 in Counting the Votes Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1964 United States presidential election amp oldid 1201562209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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