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1912 United States presidential election

The 1912 United States presidential election was the 32nd quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 5, 1912. Democratic Governor Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey unseated incumbent Republican President William Howard Taft while defeating former President Theodore Roosevelt (who ran under the banner of the new Progressive/"Bull Moose" Party) and Socialist Party nominee Eugene V. Debs.[1]

1912 United States presidential election

← 1908 November 5, 1912 1916 →

531 members of the Electoral College
266 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout58.8% 6.6 pp
 
Nominee Woodrow Wilson Theodore Roosevelt
Party Democratic Progressive
Home state New Jersey New York
Running mate Thomas R. Marshall Hiram Johnson
Electoral vote 435 88
States carried 40 6
Popular vote 6,296,284 4,122,721
Percentage 41.8% 27.4%

 
Nominee William Howard Taft Eugene V. Debs
Party Republican Socialist
Home state Ohio Indiana
Running mate Nicholas M. Butler
(replacing James S. Sherman)
Emil Seidel
Electoral vote 8 0
States carried 2 0
Popular vote 3,486,242 901,551
Percentage 23.2% 6.0%

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Presidential election results map. Blue denotes those won by Wilson/Marshall, light green denotes those won by Roosevelt/Johnson, red denotes states won by Taft/Butler. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

William Howard Taft
Republican

Elected President

Woodrow Wilson
Democratic

Roosevelt served as president from 1901 to 1909 as a Republican, and Taft succeeded him with his support. Taft's conservatism angered Roosevelt, so he challenged Taft for the party nomination at the 1912 Republican National Convention. When Taft and his conservative allies narrowly prevailed, Roosevelt rallied his progressive supporters and launched a third-party bid. At the Democratic Convention, Wilson won the presidential nomination on the 46th ballot, defeating Speaker of the House Champ Clark and several other candidates with the support of William Jennings Bryan and other progressive Democrats. The Socialist Party renominated its perennial standard-bearer, Eugene V. Debs.

The general election was bitterly contested by Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft and Debs. Roosevelt's "New Nationalism" platform called for social insurance programs, reduction to an eight-hour workday, and robust federal regulation of the economy. Wilson's "New Freedom" platform called for tariff reduction, banking reform, and new antitrust regulation. Incumbent Taft conducted a subdued campaign based on his platform of "progressive conservatism". Debs, who was attempting to gain widespread support for his socialist policies, claimed that Wilson, Roosevelt and Taft were all financed by different factions within the capitalist trusts, and that Roosevelt in particular was a demagogue using socialistic language in order to divert socialist policies up safe channels for the capitalist establishment.

The Republican split enabled Wilson to win 40 states and a landslide victory in the electoral college with just 41.8% of the popular vote, the lowest vote share for a victorious presidential candidate since 1860. Wilson was the first Democrat to win a presidential election since 1892 as well as the first presidential candidate to receive over 400 electoral votes in a presidential election. Roosevelt finished second with 88 electoral votes and 27% of the popular vote. Taft carried 23% of the national vote and won two states, Vermont and Utah. Debs, the fourth-place finisher, won no electoral votes but received 6% of the popular vote, which remains the highest percentage of the vote ever won by a socialist candidate in the history of US presidential elections. This is the most recent presidential election since 1876 in which the Democratic ticket has consisted of sitting governors.

Background edit

Republican President Theodore Roosevelt had declined to run for re-election in 1908 in fulfillment of a pledge to the American people not to seek a third term.[a] Roosevelt had tapped Secretary of War William Howard Taft to become his successor, and Taft defeated William Jennings Bryan in the 1908 general election.

Republican Party split edit

 
A Punch cartoon by Leonard Raven-Hill, depicting the perceived aggression between Taft and Roosevelt.

During Taft's administration, a rift developed between Roosevelt and Taft, and they became the leaders of the Republican Party's two wings: progressives led by Roosevelt and conservatives led by Taft.[2] Progressives favored labor restrictions protecting women and children, promoted ecological conservation, and were more sympathetic toward labor unions. They also favored the popular election of federal and state judges over appointment by the president or governors. Conservatives supported high tariffs to encourage domestic production, but favored business leaders over labor unions and were generally opposed to the popular election of judges.

Taft's Policies edit

Cracks in the party began to show when Taft supported the Payne–Aldrich Tariff Act in 1909.[3] The Act favored the industrial Northeast and angered the Northwest and South, where demand was strong for tariff reductions.[4] Early in his term, President Taft had promised to stand for a lower tariff bill, but protectionism had been a major policy of the Republican Party since its founding.[5]

Taft also fought against Roosevelt's antitrust policy.[6] Roosevelt distinguished "good trusts" from "bad trusts", for which he had been lambasted.[7] Taft argued that all monopolies must be broken up. Taft also fired popular conservationist Gifford Pinchot as head of the Bureau of Forestry in 1910.[8] By 1910, the split within the party was deep, and Roosevelt and Taft turned against one another despite their personal friendship. In that summer Roosevelt began a national speaking tour, during which he outlined his progressive philosophy and the New Nationalist platform, which he introduced in a speech in Osawatomie, Kansas, on August 31.[9]

Court Power and Judicial Recall edit

Another source of tension involved the authority of the nation's courts, especially the Supreme Court. As early as 1910, Roosevelt had begun criticizing certain court decisions, such as Lochner v. New York (1905), and those jurists whom he dubbed "fossilized judges." He believed that the Supreme Court was interpreting the due process clause of the 14th Amendment and the doctrine of "freedom of contract" to forestall necessary reform legislation, such as the limiting of work hours. He, as well as more populist progressives like William Jennings Bryan in the Democratic Party, came out in favor of an amendment to allow the recall of judges and, possibly, judicial decisions. This outraged Taft (a former judge and future Supreme Court Chief Justice) and other constitutional conservatives, like Elihu Root and Alton B. Parker. Taft considered Roosevelt a danger to constitutional government and resolved to resist his eventual challenge for the Republican nomination.[10]

Roosevelt Emboldened edit

In the 1910 midterm elections, the Republicans lost 57 seats in the House of Representatives as the Democrats gained a majority for the first time since 1894. These results were a large defeat for the conservative wing of the party.[11] James E. Campbell writes that one cause may have been a large number of progressive voters choosing third-party candidates over conservative Republicans.[12] Roosevelt continued to reject calls to run for president into 1911. In a January letter to newspaper editor William Allen White, he wrote, "I do not think there is one chance in a thousand that it will ever be wise to have me nominated."[13]

However, speculation continued, further harming Roosevelt and Taft's relationship. After months of continually increasing support, Roosevelt changed his position, writing to journalist Henry Beach Needham in January 1912 that if the nomination "comes to me as a genuine public movement of course I will accept."[14]

Nominations edit

Republican Party nomination edit

 
Republican Party (United States)
1912 Republican Party ticket
William Howard Taft James S. Sherman
for President for Vice President
 
 
27th
President of the United States
(1909–1913)
27th
Vice President of the United States
(1909–1912)
Campaign
566 Delegates
791,425
votes

Other major candidates edit

Candidates in this section are sorted by number of delegates won in the nomination race
Theodore Roosevelt Robert La Follette Albert Cummins
 
 
 
Fmr. President of the United States
from New York
(1901–1909)
U.S. Senator
from Wisconsin
(1906–1925)
U.S. Senator
from Iowa
(1908–1926)
Campaign Campaign Campaign
LN: June 22, 1912
466 Delegates
1,183,238
votes
LN: June 22, 1912
36 Delegates
336,373
votes
LN: June 22, 1912
10 Delegates
0
votes

Delegate selection edit

For the first time, many convention delegates were elected in presidential preference primaries. Progressive Republicans advocated primary elections as a way of breaking the control of political parties by bosses. Altogether, twelve states held Republican primaries.

Senator Robert "Fighting Bob" La Follette won two of the first four primaries (North Dakota and his home state of Wisconsin), but Taft won a major victory in Roosevelt's home state of New York and continued to rack up delegates in more conservative, traditional state conventions.

Beginning with a runaway victory in Illinois on April 9, Roosevelt won nine of the last ten presidential primaries (including Taft's home state of Ohio), losing only Massachusetts.[15]

Taft also had support from the bulk of the Southern Republican organizations. Delegates from the former Confederate states supported Taft by a 5 to 1 margin. These states had voted solidly Democratic in every presidential election since 1880, and Roosevelt objected that they were given one-quarter of the delegates when they would contribute nothing to a Republican victory.

Convention edit

388 delegates were selected through the primaries and Roosevelt won 281 delegates, Taft received 71 delegates, and La Follette received 36 delegates. However, Taft had a 566–466 margin, placing him over the 540 needed for nomination, with the delegations selected at state conventions. Roosevelt accused the Taft faction of having over 200 fraudulently selected delegates. However, the Republican National Committee ruled in favor of Taft for 233 of the delegate cases while 6 were in favor of Roosevelt. The committee reinvestigated the 92 of the contested delegates and ruled in favor of Taft for all of them.[16][17]

Roosevelt supporters criticized the large amount of delegates coming from areas the Republicans would not win, with over 200 delegates coming from areas that had not been won by a Republican since the Compromise of 1877, or the four delegates that came from the territories which didn't vote in the general election. However, Roosevelt had rejected an attempt to abolish delegations from the south at the 1908 Republican National Convention due to him needing them for Taft's nomination.[16]

Herbert S. Hadley served as Roosevelt's floor manager at the convention. Hadley made a motion for 74 of Taft's delegates to be replaced by 72 delegates after the reading of the convention call, but his motion was ruled out of order. Elihu Root, a supporter of Taft, was selected to chair the convention after winning 558 votes against McGovern's 501 votes. Root was accused of having won through the rotten boroughs of the southern delegations as every northern state, except for four, voted for McGovern.[16] In his closing speech, Root reiterated the party's support of "constitutional checks and limitations" by quoting figures like Alexander Hamilton, John Marshall, and Abraham Lincoln, effectively rebuking Roosevelt's support of the judicial recall and identifying the GOP with constitutional conservatism.[18]

Roosevelt broke with tradition and attended the convention, where he was welcomed with great support from voters.[19] Despite Roosevelt's presence in Chicago and his attempts to disqualify Taft supporters, the incumbent ticket of Taft and James S. Sherman was renominated on the first ballot.[20] Sherman was the first sitting vice president re-nominated since John C. Calhoun in 1828. After losing the vote, Roosevelt announced the formation of a new party dedicated "to the service of all the people."[21] This would later come to be known as the Progressive Party. Roosevelt announced that his party would hold its convention in Chicago and that he would accept their nomination if offered.[21] Meanwhile, Taft decided not to campaign before the election beyond his acceptance speech on August 1.[22] Warren G. Harding presented Taft's name for the nomination. Taft won the nomination while 344 of Roosevelt's delegates abstained from the vote. Henry Justin Allen read a speech from Roosevelt in which he criticized the process and stated that delegates had been stolen from his in order to secure Taft's nomination.[16]

Presidential Ballot[23][24][25]
William Howard Taft 561
Theodore Roosevelt 107
Robert M. La Follette 41
Albert B. Cummins 17
Charles Evans Hughes 2
Present, not voting 344
Absent 6

Democratic Party nomination edit

 
Democratic Party (United States)
1912 Democratic Party ticket
Woodrow Wilson Thomas R. Marshall
for President for Vice President
 
 
34th
Governor of New Jersey
(1911–1913)
27th
Governor of Indiana
(1909–1913)
Campaign
BC 122 Delegates
527,296
votes

Other major candidates edit

Candidates in this section are sorted by number of delegates won in the nomination race
Champ Clark Oscar Underwood Judson Harmon Eugene Foss Thomas Marshall
 
 
 
 
 
Speaker of the House
from Missouri
(1911–1919)
U.S. Congressman
from Alabama
(1897–1915)
Governor
of Ohio
(1909–1913)
Governor
of Massachusetts
(1911–1914)
Governor
of Indiana
(1909–1913)
Campaign Campaign Campaign Campaign
LN: July 2, 1912
423 Delegates
427,938
votes
LN: July 2, 1912
84 Delegates
114,947
votes
LN: July 2, 1912
48 Delegates
128,633
votes
LN: July 2, 1912
36 Delegates
0
votes
LN: July 2, 1912
30 Delegates
0
votes
Simeon Baldwin John Burke
 
 
Governor
of Connecticut
(1911–1915)
Governor
of North Dakota
(1907–1913)
Campaign Campaign
LN: July 2, 1912
14 Delegates
0
votes
LN: July 2, 1912
10 Delegates
9,357
votes

In early 1912, it was widely believed that three-time Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan would make a fourth attempt to earn the party's nomination, and would likely not have difficulty in earning it. However, Bryan announced several months before the convention that he was not interested in another run for the White House. Though still seen by many as the Democrats' ideological leader, power shifts within the party in the wake of their success at the 1910 mid-term elections meant that Bryan could no longer be guaranteed the two-thirds majority needed to earn the nomination.

Bryan privately conceded that his three presidential runs having all ended in decisive losses, firstly to William McKinley, and then to Taft, would seriously handicap his credibility as a candidate, even if the 1904 election, the only one of the previous four in which Bryan was not the Democratic candidate, had resulted in an even more lop-sided defeat for the party. However, Bryan still had enough followers in the party that he was in a strong position to be the kingmaker at the convention.

The Democratic Convention was held in Baltimore from June 25 to July 2. Initially, the front-runner was Speaker of the House Champ Clark of Missouri. Though Clark received the most votes on early ballots, he was unable to get the two-thirds majority required to win.

Clark's chances were hurt when Tammany Hall, the powerful New York City Democratic political machine, threw its support behind him. The Tammany endorsement caused Bryan, three-time Democratic presidential candidate and leader of the party's progressives, to turn against Clark, whom he decried as the candidate of Wall Street, and shift his support to reformist Governor of New Jersey Woodrow Wilson. Wilson had consistently finished second in balloting, and nearly gave up hope and almost freed his delegates to vote for another candidate. Instead, Bryan's defection from Clark to Wilson led many other delegates to do the same. Wilson gradually gained strength while Clark's support dwindled, and Wilson finally received the nomination on the 46th ballot.

Thomas R. Marshall, the Governor of Indiana who had swung Indiana's votes to Wilson, was named Wilson's running mate.

Vice Presidential Ballot
1st 2nd Unanimous
Thomas R. Marshall 389 644.5 1,088
John Burke 304.67 386.33
George E. Chamberlain 157 12.5
Elmore W. Hurst 78 0
James H. Preston 58 0
Martin J. Wade 26 0
William F. McCombs 18 0
John E. Osborne 8 0
William Sulzer 3 0
Blank 46.33 44.67

Progressive Party nomination edit

 
Progressive Party (United States, 1912)
1912 Progressive Party ticket
Theodore Roosevelt Hiram Johnson
for President for Vice President
 
 
26th
President of the United States
(1901–1909)
23rd
Governor of California
(1911–1917)
 
The Progressive convention at the Chicago Coliseum, 1912

Taft had won the Republican nomination while 344 of Roosevelt's delegates abstained from the vote. Later that day supporters of Roosevelt met in the Chicago Orchestra Hall and nominated him as an independent candidate for president which Roosevelt accepted although he requested a formal convention. Roosevelt initially considered not running as a third-party candidate until George Walbridge Perkins and Frank Munsey offered their financial support. Roosevelt and his supporters formed the Progressive Party at a convention, temporarily chaired by Senator Albert J. Beveridge, on August 5, and Hiram Johnson was selected as his vice-presidential running mate. Ben B. Lindsey and John M. Parker had been considered for the presidential nomination, but Parker and Lindsey instead both nominated Johnson for the position.[16]

The Progressives promised to increase federal regulation and protect the welfare of ordinary people. At the convention, Perkins blocked an antitrust plank, shocking reformers who thought of Roosevelt as a true trust-buster.[citation needed] The delegates to the convention sang the hymn "Onward, Christian Soldiers" as their anthem. In his acceptance speech, Roosevelt compared the coming presidential campaign to the Battle of Armageddon and stated that the Progressives were going to "battle for the Lord."[citation needed]

Socialist Party nomination edit

 
Socialist Party of America
Eugene V. Debs Emil Seidel
for President for Vice President
 
 
Indiana State Senator
(1885–1889)
36th
Mayor of Milwaukee
(1910–1912)

Socialist candidates:

 
Eugene V. Debs's popular vote results were the highest for the Socialist party.

Members of the Socialist Party of America had won in multiple elections between the 1908 and 1912 presidential elections with Emil Seidel being elected as the mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and Victor L. Berger was elected to the United States House of Representatives. The party claimed that it had 435 members elected to office by 1911, and over one thousand by 1912.[26]

Dan Hogan put Debs name up for the presidential nomination. Debs won the presidential nomination, although he had supported giving the nomination to the Appeal to Reason's editor Fred Warren, with 165 votes while Seidel received 56 votes and Charles Edward Russell received 54 votes. Seidel was given the vice-presidential nomination against Russell and Hogan.[27][28][29]

After the presidential ballot Seidel and Russell proposed a motion to make Debs' nomination unanimous and it was accepted. Hogan and Slayton proposed to make the nomination of Seidel unanimous after the vice-presidential selection and it was accepted. Otto Branstetter, Berger, and Carl D. Thompson, who were serving as delegates, voted for Seidel during the presidential balloting. Morris Hillquit, Meyer London, and John Spargo, who were serving as delegates, supported Russell during the presidential balloting. Hogan, a delegate from Arkansas, had supported Debs during the presidential balloting.[30]

J. Mahlon Barnes, who had managed Debs' campaign in the 1908 election, also managed the campaign in 1912. The Socialists predicted that they would receive over two million votes and have twelve members elected to Congress, but Debs only received 897,011 votes and Berger lost reelection. Debs received his largest number of votes from Ohio while his best percentage was in Nevada. The largest percentage gain since the 1908 presidential election was in West Virginia where their vote total increased by over 300%. George Brinton McClellan Harvey stated that had Roosevelt not run then Debs would have gained an additional half a million votes.[26] The number of Socialists in the state legislatures increased from twenty to twenty-one.[31]

Presidential ballot 1st ballot 2nd ballot Vice-presidential ballot 1st ballot 2nd ballot
Eugene V. Debs 165 Unanimous Emil Seidel 159 Unanimous
Emil Seidel 56 Dan Hogan 73
Charles Edward Russell 54 John W. Slayton 24
Reference [30] [30] [30] [30] [30]

General election edit

Roosevelt conducted a vigorous national campaign for the Progressive Party, denouncing the way the Republican nomination had been "stolen". He bundled together his reforms under the rubric of "The New Nationalism" and stumped the country for a strong federal role in regulating the economy and chastising bad corporations.[citation needed] Roosevelt rallied progressives with speeches denouncing the political establishment. He promised "an expert tariff commission, wholly removed from the possibility of political pressure or of improper business influence."[32]

Wilson supported a policy called "The New Freedom". This policy was based mostly on individualism instead of a strong government.[citation needed]

 
A Republican editorial cartoon depicts Roosevelt mixing "radical" ingredients in his speeches.

Wilson opposed Roosevelt's proposal to establish a powerful state bureaucracy charged with regulating large corporations, with Wilson instead favoring the break-up of large corporations in order to create a level economic playing field. Though Wilson's rhetoric paid homage to the traditional Democratic Party skepticisms of government and "collectivism", after his election win Wilson would embrace some of the progressive reforms which Roosevelt had campaigned on.

 
A Republican campaign postcard charges a Wilson administration would force pensioners back to work.

Taft campaigned quietly and spoke of the need for judges to be more powerful than elected officials. The departure of the progressives left the Republican Party firmly controlled by the conservative wing. Much of the Republican effort was designed to discredit Roosevelt as a dangerous radical, but this had little effect.[citation needed] Many of the nation's pro-Republican newspapers depicted Roosevelt as an egotist running only to spoil Taft's chances and feed his vanity.[citation needed]

The Socialists had little funding compared to the Republican, Democratic and Progressive campaigns. Debs' campaign spent only $66,000, mostly on 3.5 million leaflets and travel to locally organized rallies. Debs' biggest event was a speech to 15,000 supporters in New York City. The crowd sang "La Marseillaise" and "The Internationale." Debs's running mate Emil Seidel boasted:

Only a year ago workingmen were throwing decayed vegetables and rotten eggs at us but now all is changed... Eggs are too high. There is a great giant growing up in this country that will someday take over the affairs of this nation. He is a little giant now but he is growing fast. The name of this little giant is socialism.

Debs claimed that there was no hope under the present decaying capitalist system, and that the worker who votes the Republican or Democratic ticket does worse than throw away his vote, as he is a deserter of his class and becomes his own worst enemy. Debs insisted that Democrats, Progressives, and Republicans alike were financed by different factions within the capitalist trusts, and that only the Socialists represented labor. Debs condemned "Injunction Bill Taft" and condemned Roosevelt for stealing his socialist clothes with the intent to make socialist policies "safer" for the establishment.

At a campaign speech in Philadelphia on September 28, 1912, Debs said of Roosevelt:

Theodore Roosevelt now alludes to me as "Brother Debs". I do not acknowledge the new relation. I still wish to be the undesirable citizen in his eyes. If he knew me then, I know him now. I know what he stands for and what his methods are. I know he is the enemy of the workers. I know he is now trying to deceive that class to further his own selfish ambition — to get back into the White House and if possible remain there for life.[33]

Attempted assassination of Theodore Roosevelt edit

At a campaign stop in Milwaukee on October 14, John Schrank, a saloonkeeper from New York, shot Roosevelt in the chest. The bullet penetrated his steel eyeglass case and a 50-page single-folded copy of his speech Progressive Cause Greater Than Any Individual and became lodged in his chest. Schrank was immediately disarmed and captured.[34] Schrank had been stalking Roosevelt. He was suffering from delusion and said the ghost of President McKinley ordered him to kill Roosevelt to prevent a third term.[35]

Roosevelt shouted for Schrank to remain unharmed and assured the crowd he was all right, then ordered police to take charge of Schrank and ensure no violence was done to him.[36] Roosevelt, an experienced hunter and anatomist, correctly concluded that since he was not coughing blood, the bullet had not reached his lung. He declined suggestions to go to the hospital and instead delivered his scheduled speech with blood seeping into his shirt.[37] His opening comments to the gathered crowd were, "Ladies and gentlemen, I don't know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot, but it takes more than that to kill a bull moose." He spoke for 90 minutes before completing his speech and accepting medical attention.[38][39]

Afterward, probes and an x-ray showed that the bullet had lodged in Roosevelt's chest muscle, but did not penetrate the pleura. Doctors concluded that it would be less dangerous to leave it in place than to attempt to remove it, and Roosevelt carried the bullet with him for the rest of his life.[40][41]

Taft was not campaigning and focused on his presidential duties. Wilson briefly suspended his campaigning. By October 17, Wilson was back on the campaign trail but avoided any criticism of Roosevelt or his party.[42] Roosevelt spent two weeks recuperating before returning to the campaign trail with a major speech on October 30, designed to reassure his supporters he was strong enough for the presidency.[43]

Death of Vice President Sherman edit

On October 30, 1912, Vice President James S. Sherman died of nephritis, leaving Taft without a running mate less than a week before the election. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, was quickly chosen to replace Sherman on the Republican ticket.[44]

Results edit

On November 5, Wilson captured the presidency handily by carrying a record 40 states. As of 2024, this is the only presidential election since 1860 in which 4 candidates received more than 5% of the popular vote and a third-party candidate outperformed a major party candidate in the general election. Wilson won the presidency with a lower percentage of the popular vote than any candidate since Abraham Lincoln in 1860. Taft's result remains the worst performance for any incumbent president, both in terms of electoral votes (8) and share of popular votes (23.17%). His 8 electoral votes remain the fewest by a Republican and by any major-party candidate, matched by Alf Landon's 1936 campaign. His 23.17% of the popular vote is the lowest ever for a Republican or any major party nominee.

This was the first time since 1852 that Iowa, Maine, New Hampshire, Ohio, and Rhode Island voted for a Democrat, and the first time in history that Massachusetts voted Democratic. Democrats would not win Maine again until 1964, Connecticut and Delaware until 1936, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, West Virginia, and Wisconsin until 1932, and Massachusetts and Rhode Island until 1928. Additionally, it was the last time until 1932 that the Republicans failed to win Michigan, Minnesota and South Dakota. This is one of two times since 1852 that Maine and Vermont did not support the same party (the other being in 1968). Theodore Roosevelt's 88 electoral votes and 27.4% of the popular vote are the highest won by a third party in a presidential election.[45]

Wilson's raw vote total and percentage was less than William Jennings Bryan's total in any of his three campaigns.[46] In only two regions, New England and the Pacific, was Wilson's vote greater than the greatest Bryan vote.[47] The 1912 election was the first to include all 48 of the current contiguous United States.

Only 12 of the 48 states saw a candidate win with a majority of the popular vote. Wilson won a majority in the 11 former Confederate states. Only South Dakota, where Taft did not appear on the ballot, gave Roosevelt a majority. Taft won only two states, Vermont and Utah, each with a plurality.[46] This is the only time in American history that three people who at some point served as president ran in the same election.

Wilson finished 1st in 40 states. He finished 2nd behind Roosevelt in 5 states, and 2nd behind Taft only in Utah. He finished 3rd in 2 states, in Michigan where Roosevelt finished 1st and Taft finished 2nd, and in Vermont where Taft finished 1st and Roosevelt finished 2nd.

Roosevelt finished 1st in 6 states. He finished 2nd in 24 states, behind Wilson in 23, and behind Taft in Vermont. He finished 3rd in 17 states. In 15 of those, Wilson finished 1st and Taft finished 2nd. In the other two, Taft finished 1st and Wilson finished 2nd in Utah, while Wilson finished 1st and Debs finished 2nd in Florida. Roosevelt was not on the ballot in Oklahoma.

Taft finished 1st in Vermont and Utah. He finished 2nd in 18 states, behind Wilson in 17 of those. The one exception was Michigan where Taft finished 2nd behind Roosevelt. He finished 3rd in 21 states. In 18 of those, Wilson finished 1st and Roosevelt finished 2nd. In the other 3, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, and Washington, Roosevelt finished 1st and Wilson finished 2nd. Taft also finished 4th in 5 states. In 4 of those, the top 3 in order were Wilson-Roosevelt-Debs. In Florida, Wilson finished 1st, Debs finished 2nd, and Roosevelt finished 3rd. While not on the ballot in California, Taft received 3,914 write-in votes in the state, placing him 5th, behind Roosevelt, Wilson, Debs, and Chafin. Taft was not on the ballot at all in South Dakota, not even as a write-in option.

Debs finished 2nd in Florida behind Wilson. He finished 3rd in 7 states. In Nevada, Arizona, Louisiana and Mississippi, Wilson finished 1st, Roosevelt finished 2nd, Debs finished 3rd and Taft finished 4th. The other 3 states where Debs finished 3rd were Oklahoma, where Roosevelt was not on the ballot; South Dakota, where Taft was not on the ballot; and California, where Taft was not on the ballot, but received write-in votes, causing Taft to finish 5th in California. Debs finished 4th in 38 states. Debs was beaten by Chafin in two states, Vermont and Delaware, with Debs finishing 5th in both states.

Chafin finished last in 18 states. The states where Chafin avoided finishing last were 19 of the 20 states where Reimer was on the ballot – Reimer finished last in all 20 states that he contested – as well as Vermont and Delaware, where Chafin managed to force Debs into last place. The other state where Chafin avoided last place was California, where Taft was only a write-in candidate and finished last. Reimer was not on the ballot in 28 states, while Chafin was not on the ballot in 8 states. Only in Utah was Reimer on the ballot but Chafin was not.

By county edit

In a plurality of 1,396 counties, no candidate obtained a majority.[48] Wilson won 1,969 counties but held a majority in only 1,237, less than Bryan had had in any of his campaigns.[47]

"Other(s)", mostly Roosevelt, won a plurality in 772 counties and a majority in 305 counties. Most of them in Pennsylvania (48), Illinois (33), Michigan (68), Minnesota (75), Iowa (49), South Dakota (54), Nebraska (32), Kansas (51), Washington (38), and California (44).

Debs carried four counties: Lake and Beltrami in Minnesota, Burke in North Dakota, and Crawford in Kansas. These are the only counties ever to vote for the Socialist presidential nominee.

Taft won a plurality in only 232 counties and a majority in only 35. In addition to South Dakota and California, where there was no Taft ticket, Taft carried no counties in Maine, New Jersey, Minnesota, Nevada, Arizona, and seven "Solid South" states.[47]

Nine counties did not record any votes due to either black disenfranchisement or being inhabited only by Native Americans, who would not gain full citizenship for twelve more years. As of 2024, 1912 remains the last election in which the key Indiana counties of Hamilton and Hendricks, along with Walworth County, Wisconsin, Pulaski and Laurel Counties in Kentucky and Hawkins County, Tennessee have given a plurality to the Democratic candidate.[45]

 

Electoral results
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral
vote
Running mate
Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote
Woodrow Wilson Democratic New Jersey 6,296,284 41.84% 435 Thomas R. Marshall Indiana 435
Theodore Roosevelt Progressive New York 4,122,721 27.40% 88 Hiram Johnson California 88
William Howard Taft (incumbent) Republican Ohio 3,486,242 23.17% 8 Nicholas Murray Butler New York 8
Eugene V. Debs Socialist Indiana 901,551 5.99% 0 Emil Seidel Wisconsin 0
Eugene W. Chafin Prohibition Arizona 208,156 1.38% 0 Aaron S. Watkins Ohio 0
Arthur E. Reimer Socialist Labor Massachusetts 29,324 0.19% 0 August Gillhaus New York 0
Other 4,556 0.03% Other
Total 15,048,834 100% 531 531
Needed to win 266 266
Popular vote
Wilson
41.84%
Roosevelt
27.40%
Taft
23.17%
Debs
5.99%
Others
1.60%
Electoral vote
Wilson
81.92%
Roosevelt
16.57%
Taft
1.51%
Source (Popular Vote): Leip, David. "1912 Presidential Election Results". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved July 28, 2005.

Source (Electoral Vote): "Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved July 31, 2005.

Results by state edit

States/districts won by Wilson/Marshall
States/districts won by Roosevelt/Johnson
States/districts won by Taft/Butler
Woodrow Wilson
Democratic
Theodore Roosevelt
Progressive
William H. Taft
Republican
Eugene V. Debs
Socialist
Eugene Chafin
Prohibition
Arthur Reimer
Socialist Labor
Margin State Total
State electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % electoral
votes
# % #
Alabama 12 82,438 69.89 12 22,680 19.23 - 9,807 8.31 - 3,029 2.57 - - - - - - - 59,758 50.66 117,959 AL
Arizona 3 10,324 43.52 3 6,949 29.29 - 3,021 12.74 - 3,163 13.33 - 265 1.12 - - - - 3,375 14.23 23,722 AZ
Arkansas 9 68,814 55.01 9 21,644 17.30 - 25,585 20.45 - 8,153 6.52 - 908 0.73 - - - - 43,229 34.55 125,104 AR
California 13 283,436 41.81 2 283,610 41.83 11 3,914 0.58 - 79,201 11.68 - 23,366 3.45 - - - - -174 -0.03 673,527 CA
Colorado 6 114,232 42.80 6 72,306 27.09 - 58,386 21.88 - 16,418 6.15 - 5,063 1.90 - 475 0.18 - 41,926 15.71 266,880 CO
Connecticut 7 74,561 39.16 7 34,129 17.92 - 68,324 35.88 - 10,056 5.28 - 2,068 1.09 - 1,260 0.66 - 6,237 3.28 190,398 CT
Delaware 3 22,631 46.48 3 8,886 18.25 - 15,998 32.85 - 556 1.14 - 623 1.28 - - - - 6,633 13.62 48,694 DE
Florida 6 35,343 69.52 6 4,555 8.96 - 4,279 8.42 - 4,806 9.45 - 1,854 3.65 - - - - 30,537 60.07 50,837 FL
Georgia 14 93,087 76.63 14 21,985 18.10 - 5,191 4.27 - 1,058 0.87 - 149 0.12 - - - - 71,102 58.53 121,470 GA
Idaho 4 33,921 32.08 4 25,527 24.14 - 32,810 31.02 - 11,960 11.31 - 1,536 1.45 - - - - 1,111 1.05 105,754 ID
Illinois 29 405,048 35.34 29 386,478 33.72 - 253,593 22.13 - 81,278 7.09 - 15,710 1.37 - 4,066 0.35 - 18,570 1.62 1,146,173 IL
Indiana 15 281,890 43.07 15 162,007 24.75 - 151,267 23.11 - 36,931 5.64 - 19,249 2.94 - 3,130 0.48 - 119,883 18.32 654,474 IN
Iowa 13 185,325 37.64 13 161,819 32.87 - 119,805 24.33 - 16,967 3.45 - 8,440 1.71 - - - - 23,506 4.77 492,356 IA
Kansas 10 143,663 39.30 10 120,210 32.88 - 74,845 20.47 - 26,779 7.33 - - - - - - - 23,453 6.42 365,497 KS
Kentucky 13 219,484 48.48 13 101,766 22.48 - 115,510 25.52 - 11,646 2.57 - 3,253 0.72 - 1,055 0.23 - 103,974 22.97 452,714 KY
Louisiana 10 60,871 76.81 10 9,283 11.71 - 3,833 4.84 - 5,261 6.64 - - - - - - - 51,588 65.10 79,248 LA
Maine 6 51,113 39.43 6 48,495 37.41 - 26,545 20.48 - 2,541 1.96 - 946 0.73 - - - - 2,618 2.02 129,640 ME
Maryland 8 112,674 48.57 8 57,789 24.91 - 54,956 23.69 - 3,996 1.72 - 2,244 0.97 - 322 0.14 - 54,885 23.66 231,981 MD
Massachusetts 18 173,408 35.53 18 142,228 29.14 - 155,948 31.95 - 12,616 2.58 - 2,754 0.56 - 1,102 0.23 - 17,460 3.58 488,056 MA
Michigan 15 150,751 27.36 - 214,584 38.95 15 152,244 27.63 - 23,211 4.21 - 8,934 1.62 - 1,252 0.23 - -62,340 -11.31 550,976 MI
Minnesota 12 106,426 31.84 - 125,856 37.66 12 64,334 19.25 - 27,505 8.23 - 7,886 2.36 - 2,212 0.66 - -19,430 -5.81 334,219 MN
Mississippi 10 57,324 88.90 10 3,549 5.50 - 1,560 2.42 - 2,050 3.18 - - - - - - - 53,775 83.39 64,483 MS
Missouri 18 330,746 47.35 18 124,375 17.80 - 207,821 29.75 - 28,466 4.07 - 5,380 0.77 - 1,778 0.25 - 122,925 17.60 698,566 MO
Montana 4 27,941 35.00 4 22,456 28.13 - 18,512 23.19 - 10,885 13.64 - 32 0.04 - - - - 5,485 6.87 79,826 MT
Nebraska 8 109,008 43.69 8 72,681 29.13 - 54,226 21.74 - 10,185 4.08 - 3,383 1.36 - - - - 36,327 14.56 249,483 NE
Nevada 3 7,986 39.70 3 5,620 27.94 - 3,196 15.89 - 3,313 16.47 - - - - - - - 2,366 11.76 20,115 NV
New Hampshire 4 34,724 39.48 4 17,794 20.23 - 32,927 37.43 - 1,981 2.25 - 535 0.61 - - - - 1,797 2.04 87,961 NH
New Jersey 14 178,289 41.20 14 145,410 33.60 - 88,835 20.53 - 15,948 3.69 - 2,936 0.68 - 1,321 0.31 - 32,879 7.60 432,739 NJ
New Mexico 3 20,437 41.39 3 8,347 16.90 - 17,733 35.91 - 2,859 5.79 - - - - - - - 2,704 5.48 49,376 NM
New York 45 655,573 41.27 45 390,093 24.56 - 455,487 28.68 - 63,434 3.99 - 19,455 1.22 - 4,273 0.27 - 200,086 12.60 1,588,315 NY
North Carolina 12 144,407 59.24 12 69,135 28.36 - 29,129 11.95 - 987 0.40 - 118 0.05 - - - - 75,272 30.88 243,776 NC
North Dakota 5 29,555 34.14 5 25,726 29.71 - 23,090 26.67 - 6,966 8.05 - 1,243 1.44 - - - - 3,829 4.42 86,580 ND
Ohio 24 424,834 40.96 24 229,807 22.16 - 278,168 26.82 - 90,144 8.69 - 11,511 1.11 - 2,630 0.25 - 146,666 14.14 1,037,094 OH
Oklahoma 10 119,156 46.95 10 - - - 90,786 35.77 - 41,674 16.42 - 2,185 0.86 - - - - 28,370 11.18 253,801 OK
Oregon 5 47,064 34.34 5 37,600 27.44 - 34,673 25.30 - 13,343 9.74 - 4,360 3.18 - - - - 9,464 6.91 137,040 OR
Pennsylvania 38 395,637 32.49 - 444,894 36.53 38 273,360 22.45 - 83,614 6.87 - 19,525 1.60 - 706 0.06 - -49,257 -4.04 1,217,736 PA
Rhode Island 5 30,412 39.04 5 16,878 21.67 - 27,703 35.56 - 2,049 2.63 - 616 0.79 - 236 0.30 - 2,709 3.48 77,894 RI
South Carolina 9 48,357 95.94 9 1,293 2.57 - 536 1.06 - 164 0.33 - - - - - - - 47,064 93.37 50,350 SC
South Dakota 5 48,942 42.07 - 58,811 50.56 5 - - - 4,662 4.01 - 3,910 3.36 - - - - -9,869 -8.48 116,325 SD
Tennessee 12 133,021 52.80 12 54,041 21.45 - 60,475 24.00 - 3,564 1.41 - 832 0.33 - - - - 72,546 28.80 251,933 TN
Texas 20 221,589 72.73 20 28,853 8.86 - 26,755 9.45 - 25,743 8.25 - 1,738 0.57 - 442 0.14 - 192,736 63.17 305,120 TX
Utah 4 36,579 32.55 - 24,174 21.51 - 42,100 37.46 4 9,023 8.03 - - - - 510 0.45 - -5,521 -4.91 112,386 UT
Vermont 4 15,354 24.43 - 22,132 35.22 - 23,332 37.13 4 928 1.48 - 1,095 1.74 - - - - -1,200 -1.91 62,841 VT
Virginia 12 90,332 65.95 12 21,776 15.90 - 23,288 17.00 - 820 0.60 - 709 0.52 - 50 0.04 - 67,044 48.95 136,975 VA
Washington 7 86,840 26.90 - 113,698 35.22 7 70,445 21.82 - 40,134 12.43 - 9,810 3.04 - 1,872 0.58 - -26,858 -8.32 322,799 WA
West Virginia 8 113,197 42.11 8 79,112 29.43 - 56,754 21.11 - 15,248 5.67 - 4,517 1.68 - - - - 34,085 12.68 268,828 WV
Wisconsin 13 164,230 41.06 13 62,448 15.61 - 130,596 32.65 - 33,476 8.37 - 8,584 2.15 - 632 0.16 - 33,634 8.41 399,966 WI
Wyoming 3 15,310 36.20 3 9,232 21.83 - 14,560 34.42 - 2,760 6.53 - 434 1.03 - - - - 750 1.77 42,296 WY
TOTALS: 531 6,296,284 41.84 435 4,122,721 27.40 88 3,486,242 23.17 8 901,551 5.99 - 208,156 1.38 - 29,324 0.19 - 2,173,563 14.44 15,044,278 US

States that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit

States that flipped from Republican to Progressive edit

Close states edit

Margin of victory less than 1% (13 electoral votes):

  1. California, 0.03% (174 votes)

Margin of victory less than 5% (142 electoral votes):

  1. Idaho, 1.05% (1,111 votes)
  2. Illinois, 1.62% (18,570 votes)
  3. Wyoming, 1.77% (750 votes)
  4. Vermont, 1.91% (1,200 votes)
  5. Maine, 2.02% (2,618 votes)
  6. New Hampshire, 2.04% (1,797 votes)
  7. Connecticut, 3.28% (6,237 votes)
  8. Rhode Island, 3.48% (2,709 votes)
  9. Massachusetts, 3.58% (17,460 votes)
  10. Pennsylvania, 4.04% (49,257 votes)
  11. North Dakota, 4.42% (3,829 votes)
  12. Iowa, 4.77% (23,506 votes)
  13. Utah, 4.91% (5,521 votes)

Margin of victory between 5% and 10% (73 electoral votes):

  1. New Mexico, 5.48% (2,704 votes)
  2. Minnesota, 5.81% (19,430 votes)
  3. Kansas, 6.42% (23,453 votes)
  4. Montana, 6.87% (5,485 votes)
  5. Oregon, 6.91% (9,464 votes)
  6. New Jersey, 7.60% (32,879 votes)
  7. Washington, 8.32% (26,858 votes)
  8. Wisconsin, 8.41% (33,634 votes)
  9. South Dakota, 8.48% (9,869 votes)

Tipping point state:

  1. New York, 12.6% (200,086 votes) (for a Wilson victory)
  2. Ohio, 18.9% (146,666 votes) (for a Roosevelt victory)
  3. New Hampshire, 37.2% (32,743 votes) (for a Debs victory)

Counties with Highest Percent of Vote (Democratic)

  1. Greenville County, South Carolina 100%
  2. Marlboro County, South Carolina 100%
  3. Hampton County, South Carolina 100%
  4. Jasper County, South Carolina 100%
  5. Reagan County, Texas 100%

Counties with Highest Percent of Vote (Progressive)

  1. Scott County, Tennessee 75.15%
  2. Campbell County, South Dakota 74.93%
  3. Avery County, North Carolina 72.69%
  4. Hutchinson County, South Dakota 67.84%
  5. Hamlin County, South Dakota 66.79%

Counties with Highest Percent of Vote (Republican)

  1. Zapata County, Texas 80.89%
  2. Valencia County, New Mexico 77.25%
  3. Kane County, Utah 75.40%
  4. Clinton County, Kentucky 64.79%
  5. Huerfano County, Colorado 63.36%

Counties with the Highest Percent of Vote (Socialist; incomplete)

  1. Lake County, Minnesota 36.81%
  2. Crawford County, Kansas 35.28%
  3. Marshall County, Oklahoma 34.94%
  4. McCurtain County, Oklahoma 31.83%
  5. Okfuskee County, Oklahoma 30.90%

Maps edit

Results in major cities edit

 
Roosevelt, hurting from his defeats, reviews his wounded lieutenants Munsey, Perkins and Dixon. From The Evening Star (Washington DC) Dec 10, 1912

Results of various cities within the top 100 municipalities by the 1910 United States census.

City ST Wilson Taft Roosevelt Debs Others Totals
San Francisco CA 48,953 65 38,610 12,354 1,166 101,148
Oakland CA 11,210 0 14,221 1,549 525 27,505
Denver CO 26,690 8,155 25,154 2,750 764 63,513
Bridgeport CT 5,870 4,625 3,654 1,511 284 15,944
Hartford CT 7,481 6,396 2,467 849 258 17,451
New Haven CT 8,946 7,291 3,252 1,696 442 21,627
Waterbury CT 4,440 3,261 1,675 787 212 10,375
Des Moines IA 6,005 3,669 6,432
Chicago IL 124,297 71,030 150,290 53,743 2,806 402,166
Ft. Wayne IN 4,892 1,896 2,793
Indianapolis IN 18,306 8,722 9,693
New Orleans LA 26,433 904 5,692
Boston MA 43,065 21,427 21,533 1,818 428 88,271
Cambridge MA 6,667 3,362 3,403 192 68 13,692
Fall River MA 5,160 4,224 3,453 219 256 13,312
Lowell MA 5,459 3,034 3,783 170 82 12,528
Lynn MA 4,595 4,144 4,764 583 178 14,264
New Bedford MA 3,290 4,177 1,905 626 98 10,096
Somerville MA 4,062 3,757 4,072 176 78 12,145
Springfield MA 4,375 5,167 3,161 555 58 13,316
Worcester MA 6,049 10,532 4,818 230 140 21,769
Baltimore MD 48,030 15,597 33,679 1,763 253 99,322
Portland ME 4,242 2,776 3,305 197 58 10,578
Kansas City MO 26,954 4,646 20,894 1,470 465 54,429
St. Louis MO 58,845 46,509 24,746 9,159 1,068 140,327
Manchester NH 4,502 4,022 2,165 520 35 11,244
Bayonne NJ 3,717 1,184 2,552
Camden NJ 6,895 5,517 4,707
Elizabeth NJ 5,139 1,900 3,953
Jersey City NJ 21,069 4,070 11,986
Newark NJ 14,031 10,780 19,721
Paterson NJ 7,437 3,007 7,223
Trenton NJ 5,146 3,898 4,753
Buffalo NY 26,192 14,433 20,769
New York City NY 312,426 126,582 188,896 33,239 2,730 663,873
Rochester NY 13,430 12,230 11,102 2,593 636 39,991
Yonkers NY 5,533 4,056 4,536 354 49 14,528
Cincinnati OH 31,221 30,588 9,970 6,520 401 78,700
Allentown PA 4,627 1,224 3,475 686 59 10,071
Erie PA 3,407 2,378 1,898 1,464 140 9,287
Philadelphia PA 66,308 91,944 82,963 9,784 691 251,690
Pittsburgh PA 17,352 14,658 25,394 8,498 534 66,436
Reading PA 6,130 1,657 6,719 2,800 83 17,389
Scranton PA 6,193 1,817 7,971 564 214 16,759
Wilkes-Barre PA 2,905 1,178 3,951 219 47 8,300
Salt Lake City UT 7,488 8,964 6,587 2,498
Norfolk VA 3,539 195 451 33 10 4,228
Richmond VA 5,636 405 483 91 12 6,627
Milwaukee WI 24,501 15,092 5,127 17,708 511 62,939

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Though he had become President upon the assassination of William McKinley in 1901, only six months of McKinley's term had elapsed. Thus, Roosevelt had served nearly a full eight years, effectively two full terms. Although the Twenty-Second Amendment to the Constitution did not become effective until 1951, it would have barred Roosevelt from seeking another term, since he had served more than two years to which some other person (McKinley) had been elected.

References edit

  1. ^ Morris, Edmund. Colonel Roosevelt. New York: Random House Trade Paperbacks. pp. 215, 646.
  2. ^ Gould, Lewis L. (October 16, 2014). "5. The Taft-Roosevelt Split, 1905–1912". The Republicans: A History of the Grand Old Party (online ed.). New York: Oxford Academic (published 2014). pp. 116–142. doi:10.1093/acprof:osobl/9780199936625.003.0006.
  3. ^ Coletta, Presidency of William Howard Taft ch 3
  4. ^ G. M. Fisk, "The Payne-Aldrich Tariff". Political Science Quarterly (1910). 25(1), 35–39. doi:10.2307/2141008.
  5. ^ Stanley D. Solvick, "William Howard Taft and the Payne-Aldrich Tariff." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 50.3 (1963): 424–442. JSTOR 1902605.
  6. ^ Anderson (1973), p. 79
  7. ^ "TR Center – The President's dream of a successful hunt". www.theodorerooseveltcenter.org.
  8. ^ Schweikart and Allen, p. 491.
  9. ^ O'Mara, Margaret. Pivotal Tuesdays. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 32.
  10. ^ Istre, Logan S. (2021). "Bench over Ballot: The Fight for Judicial Supremacy and the New Constitutional Politics, 1910–1916". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 20 (1): 2–23. doi:10.1017/S1537781420000079. ISSN 1537-7814.
  11. ^ Schantz, Harvey L. American Presidential Elections. Albany: State University of New York Press. p. 169.
  12. ^ Campbell, James E. The Presidential Pulse of Congressional Elections. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 261.
  13. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore (January 24, 1911). "Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to William Allen White". Letter to William Allen White. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  14. ^ O'Mara, Margaret. Pivotal Tuesdays. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 35–37.
  15. ^ . Smithsonianmag.com. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  16. ^ a b c d e Nash, Howard P. Jr. (1959). Third Parties in American Politics. PublicAffairs.
  17. ^ "Taft 566 – Roosevelt 466. – Present Line-Up of Instructed and Pledged Delegates With All the Contests Decided" (PDF). The New York Times. June 16, 1912. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
  18. ^ Istre, Logan Stagg (2021). "Bench over Ballot: The Fight for Judicial Supremacy and the New Constitutional Politics, 1910–1916". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 20 (1): 13. doi:10.1017/s1537781420000079. ISSN 1537-7814.
  19. ^ O'Mara, Margaret. Pivotal Tuesdays. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 44.
  20. ^ "Taft Nominee; Sherman His Running Mate". Chicago Tribune. June 23, 1912. Retrieved October 12, 2020.(subscription required)
  21. ^ a b O'Laughlin, John (June 23, 1912). "Roosevelt Is Named Leader Of New Party". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 12, 2020.(subscription required)
  22. ^ Henry F. Pringle, The Life and Times of William Howard Taft (1939) 2:818, 832, 834,
  23. ^ "Taft Is Nominated On First Ballot". Santa Cruz News. Santa Cruz, CA. June 22, 1912. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
  24. ^ "Taft Wins With 561". The Courier. Harrisburg, PA. June 23, 1912. Retrieved January 7, 2018.
  25. ^ Pietrusza, David (2007). 1920: The Year of the Six Presidents. New York: Carroll & Graf. ISBN 978-0-7867-1622-7.
  26. ^ a b Morgan, H. Wayne (1962). Eugene V. Debs: Socialist for President. Syracuse University Press.
  27. ^ Haynes, Fred (1924). Social Politics in the United States. The Riverside Press Cambridge. p. 200.
  28. ^ Currie, Harold W. (1976). Eugene V. Debs. Twayne Publishers.
  29. ^ Coleman, McAlister (1930). Eugene V. Debs: A Man Unafraid. Greenberg Publisher.
  30. ^ a b c d e f Spargo, John (1912). Proceedings of the National Convention of the Socialist Party. Socialist Party of America.
  31. ^ Murphy, Paul (1974). Political Parties In American History, Volume 3, 1890-present. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  32. ^ Theodore Roosevelt Association. "The New Nationalism." The New Nationalism – Theodore Roosevelt Association. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Apr. 2017.
  33. ^ "The Red Sea of Socialism: Campaign Speech at Convention Hall, Philadelphia (September 28, 1912)" (PDF). marxists.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022.
  34. ^ Gerard Helferich, Theodore Roosevelt and the Assassin: Madness, Vengeance, and the Campaign of 1912 (2013)
  35. ^ Lewis Gould, Four Hats in the Ring: The 1912 Election and the Birth of Modern American Politics (2008) p. 171.
  36. ^ Remey, Oliver E.; Cochems, Henry F.; Bloodgood, Wheeler P. (1912). The Attempted Assassination of Ex-President Theodore Roosevelt. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: The Progressive Publishing Company. p. 192.
  37. ^ "Medical History of American Presidents". Doctor Zebra. Retrieved September 14, 2010.
  38. ^ , Detroit Free Press, History buff, archived from the original on April 19, 2015, retrieved January 23, 2018.
  39. ^ "It Takes More Than That to Kill a Bull Moose: The Leader and The Cause". Theodore Roosevelt Association. Retrieved October 14, 2015.
  40. ^ "Roosevelt Timeline". Theodore Roosevelt. Retrieved September 14, 2010.
  41. ^ Timeline of Theodore Roosevelt's Life by the Theodore Roosevelt Association at http://www.theodoreroosevelt.org
  42. ^ "Wilson Starts on a Tour: Will Not Touch on Third Party's Programme in Speeches." New York Times Oct 17. 1912, p. 10.
  43. ^ Morris, Edmund. Colonel Roosevelt. New York: Random House Trade Paperbacks. pp. 250–251.
  44. ^ Gould, Lewis L. (2008). Four hats in the ring : the 1912 election and the birth of modern American politics. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-7006-1564-3. OCLC 180756978.
  45. ^ a b Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  46. ^ a b The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, p. 14
  47. ^ a b c The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, p. 15
  48. ^ The Presidential Vote, 1896–1932, Edgar E. Robinson, p. 17

Further reading edit

External videos
  Booknotes interview with James Chace on 1912: Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft, and Debs, August 29, 2004, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Chace on 1912, May 12, 2004, C-SPAN
  • Anders, O. Fritiof. "The Swedish-American Press in the Election of 1912" Swedish Pioneer Historical Quarterly (1963) 14#3 pp. 103–126
  • Broderick, Francis L. Progressivism at risk: Electing a president in 1912 (Praeger, 1989).
  • Chace, James (2004). 1912: Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft, and Debs – The Election That Changed the Country. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-0394-1.
  • Cooper, John Milton Jr. (1983). The Warrior and the Priest: Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt. Cambridge: Belknap Press. ISBN 0-674-94751-7.
  • Cowan, Geoffrey. Let the People Rule: Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary (2016).
  • Delahaye, Claire. "The New Nationalism and Progressive Issues: The Break with Taft and the 1912 Campaign," in Serge Ricard, ed., A Companion to Theodore Roosevelt (2011) pp. 452–67. online December 14, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • DeWitt, Benjamin P. The Progressive Movement: A Non-Partisan, Comprehensive Discussion of Current Tendencies in American Politics. (1915).
  • Flehinger, Brett. The 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism: A Brief History with Documents (Bedford/St. Martin's, 2003).
  • Gable, John A. The Bullmoose Years: Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party. (Kennikat Press, 1978).
  • Gould, Lewis L. Four Hats in the Ring: The 1912 Election and the Birth of Modern American Politics (2009). JSTOR j.ctv2rsfczd.
  • Gould, Lewis L. "Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and the Disputed Delegates in 1912: Texas as a Test Case." Southwestern Historical Quarterly 80.1 (1976): 33–56 JSTOR 30238426.
  • Hahn, Harlan. "The Republican Party Convention of 1912 and the Role of Herbert S. Hadley in National Politics." Missouri Historical Review 59.4 (1965): 407–423. Taft was willing to compromise with Missouri Governor Herbert S. Hadley as presidential nominee; TR said no.
  • Istre, Logan S. "Bench over Ballot: The Fight for Judicial Supremacy and the New Constitutional Politics, 1910–1916." The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 20, no. 1 (2021): 2-23. doi:10.1017/S1537781420000079.
  • Kipnis, Ira (1952). The American Socialist Movement, 1897–1912. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Kraig, Robert Alexander. "The 1912 Election and the Rhetorical Foundations of the Liberal State." Rhetoric and Public Affairs (2000): 363–395. JSTOR 41940243.
  • Link, Arthur S. (1956). Wilson: Volume 1, The Road to the White House.
  • Milkis, Sidney M., and Daniel J. Tichenor. "'Direct Democracy' and Social Justice: The Progressive Party Campaign of 1912." Studies in American Political Development 8#2 (1994): 282–340. doi:10.1017/S0898588X00001267.
  • Milkis, Sidney M. Theodore Roosevelt, the Progressive Party, and the Transformation of American Democracy. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2009.
  • Morgan, H. Wayne (1962). Eugene V. Debs: Socialist for President. Syracuse University Press.
  • Mowry, George E. (1946). Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Movement. Madison: Wisconsin University Press. online
  • Mowry, George E. "The Election of 1912" in Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., and Fred L Israel, eds., History of American Presidential Elections: 1789–1968 (1971) 3: 2135–2427. online
  • Mowry, George E. The Era of Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of Modern America. (Harper and Row, 1962) online.
  • Ness, Immanuel, and James Ciment, eds. The Encyclopedia of Third Parties in America (3 vol. 2000).
  • O'Mara, Margaret. Pivotal Tuesdays: Four Elections That Shaped the Twentieth Century (2015), compares 1912, 1932, 1968, 1992 in terms of social, economic, and political history
  • Painter, Carl, "The Progressive Party In Indiana," Indiana Magazine of History, 16#3 (1920), pp. 173–283. JSTOR 27785944.
  • Pinchot, Amos. History of the Progressive Party, 1912–1916. Introduction by Helene Maxwell Hooker. (New York University Press, 1958).
  • Sarasohn, David. The Party of Reform: Democrats in the Progressive Era (UP of Mississippi, 1989), pp. 119–154.
  • Schambra, William. "The Election of 1912 and the Origins of Constitutional Conservatism." in Toward an American Conservatism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013). 95–119.
  • Selmi, Patrick. "Jane Addams and the Progressive Party Campaign for President in 1912." Journal of Progressive Human Services 22.2 (2011): 160–190. doi:10.1080/10428232.2010.540705.
  • Startt, James D. "Wilson's Election Campaign of 1912 and the Press." in Woodrow Wilson and the Press: Prelude to the Presidency (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004) pp. 197–228.
  • Unger, Nancy C. Fighting Bob La Follette: The Righteous Reformer (U of North Carolina Press, 2003) pp. 200–220.
  • Unger, Nancy C. "The 'Political Suicide' of Robert M. La Follette: Public Disaster, Private Catharsis" Psychohistory Review 21#2 (1993) pp. 187–220 online on his disastrous speech of February 2, 1912.
  • Warner, Robert M. "Chase S. Osborn and the Presidential Campaign of 1912." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 46.1 (1959): 19–45. JSTOR 1892386.
  • Wilensky, Norman N. (1965). Conservatives in the Progressive Era: The Taft Republicans of 1912. Gainesville: University of Florida Press.

Primary sources edit

  • Bryan, William Jennings. A Tale of Two Conventions: Being an Account of the Republican and Democratic National Conventions of June, 1912, with an Outline of the Progressive National Convention of August in the Same Year (Funk & Wagnalls Company, 1912). online
  • Chester, Edward W. A guide to political platforms (1977) online
  • Pinchot, Amos. What's the Matter with America: The Meaning of the Progressive Movement and the Rise of the New Party (Amos Pinchot, 1912).
  • Republican campaign text-book 1912 (1912) online
  • Roosevelt, Theodore. Theodore Roosevelt's Confession of Faith Before the Progressive National Convention, August 6, 1912 (Progressive Party, 1912) online.
  • Roosevelt, Theodore. Bull Moose on the Stump: The 1912 Campaign Speeches of Theodore Roosevelt Ed. by Lewis L. Gould. (UP of Kansas, 2008).
  • Wilson, Woodrow (1956). John Wells Davidson (ed.). A Crossroads of Freedom, the 1912 Campaign Speeches. online
  • Porter, Kirk H. and Donald Bruce Johnson, eds. National party platforms, 1840–1964 (1965) online 1840–1956

External links edit

  • Presidential Election of 1912: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • editorial cartoons February 15, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • Sound recording of TR speech
  • The Election of 1912 September 20, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  • Theodore Roosevelt Speech Edison Recordings Campaign – 1912, audio recording
  • William Taft Edison Recordings Campaign – 1912, audio recording
  • Woodrow Wilson Edison Campaign Recordings – 1912 audio recording

1912, united, states, presidential, election, 32nd, quadrennial, presidential, election, held, tuesday, november, 1912, democratic, governor, woodrow, wilson, jersey, unseated, incumbent, republican, president, william, howard, taft, while, defeating, former, . The 1912 United States presidential election was the 32nd quadrennial presidential election held on Tuesday November 5 1912 Democratic Governor Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey unseated incumbent Republican President William Howard Taft while defeating former President Theodore Roosevelt who ran under the banner of the new Progressive Bull Moose Party and Socialist Party nominee Eugene V Debs 1 1912 United States presidential election 1908 November 5 1912 1916 531 members of the Electoral College266 electoral votes needed to winTurnout58 8 6 6 pp Nominee Woodrow Wilson Theodore RooseveltParty Democratic ProgressiveHome state New Jersey New YorkRunning mate Thomas R Marshall Hiram JohnsonElectoral vote 435 88States carried 40 6Popular vote 6 296 284 4 122 721Percentage 41 8 27 4 Nominee William Howard Taft Eugene V DebsParty Republican SocialistHome state Ohio IndianaRunning mate Nicholas M Butler replacing James S Sherman Emil SeidelElectoral vote 8 0States carried 2 0Popular vote 3 486 242 901 551Percentage 23 2 6 0 Presidential election results map Blue denotes those won by Wilson Marshall light green denotes those won by Roosevelt Johnson red denotes states won by Taft Butler Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state President before electionWilliam Howard TaftRepublican Elected President Woodrow WilsonDemocraticRoosevelt served as president from 1901 to 1909 as a Republican and Taft succeeded him with his support Taft s conservatism angered Roosevelt so he challenged Taft for the party nomination at the 1912 Republican National Convention When Taft and his conservative allies narrowly prevailed Roosevelt rallied his progressive supporters and launched a third party bid At the Democratic Convention Wilson won the presidential nomination on the 46th ballot defeating Speaker of the House Champ Clark and several other candidates with the support of William Jennings Bryan and other progressive Democrats The Socialist Party renominated its perennial standard bearer Eugene V Debs The general election was bitterly contested by Wilson Roosevelt Taft and Debs Roosevelt s New Nationalism platform called for social insurance programs reduction to an eight hour workday and robust federal regulation of the economy Wilson s New Freedom platform called for tariff reduction banking reform and new antitrust regulation Incumbent Taft conducted a subdued campaign based on his platform of progressive conservatism Debs who was attempting to gain widespread support for his socialist policies claimed that Wilson Roosevelt and Taft were all financed by different factions within the capitalist trusts and that Roosevelt in particular was a demagogue using socialistic language in order to divert socialist policies up safe channels for the capitalist establishment The Republican split enabled Wilson to win 40 states and a landslide victory in the electoral college with just 41 8 of the popular vote the lowest vote share for a victorious presidential candidate since 1860 Wilson was the first Democrat to win a presidential election since 1892 as well as the first presidential candidate to receive over 400 electoral votes in a presidential election Roosevelt finished second with 88 electoral votes and 27 of the popular vote Taft carried 23 of the national vote and won two states Vermont and Utah Debs the fourth place finisher won no electoral votes but received 6 of the popular vote which remains the highest percentage of the vote ever won by a socialist candidate in the history of US presidential elections This is the most recent presidential election since 1876 in which the Democratic ticket has consisted of sitting governors Contents 1 Background 1 1 Republican Party split 1 1 1 Taft s Policies 1 1 2 Court Power and Judicial Recall 1 1 3 Roosevelt Emboldened 2 Nominations 2 1 Republican Party nomination 2 1 1 Other major candidates 2 1 2 Delegate selection 2 1 3 Convention 2 2 Democratic Party nomination 2 2 1 Other major candidates 2 3 Progressive Party nomination 2 4 Socialist Party nomination 3 General election 3 1 Attempted assassination of Theodore Roosevelt 3 2 Death of Vice President Sherman 4 Results 4 1 By county 4 2 Results by state 4 3 States that flipped from Republican to Democratic 4 4 States that flipped from Republican to Progressive 4 5 Close states 4 6 Maps 5 Results in major cities 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksBackground editRepublican President Theodore Roosevelt had declined to run for re election in 1908 in fulfillment of a pledge to the American people not to seek a third term a Roosevelt had tapped Secretary of War William Howard Taft to become his successor and Taft defeated William Jennings Bryan in the 1908 general election Republican Party split edit nbsp A Punch cartoon by Leonard Raven Hill depicting the perceived aggression between Taft and Roosevelt During Taft s administration a rift developed between Roosevelt and Taft and they became the leaders of the Republican Party s two wings progressives led by Roosevelt and conservatives led by Taft 2 Progressives favored labor restrictions protecting women and children promoted ecological conservation and were more sympathetic toward labor unions They also favored the popular election of federal and state judges over appointment by the president or governors Conservatives supported high tariffs to encourage domestic production but favored business leaders over labor unions and were generally opposed to the popular election of judges Taft s Policies edit Cracks in the party began to show when Taft supported the Payne Aldrich Tariff Act in 1909 3 The Act favored the industrial Northeast and angered the Northwest and South where demand was strong for tariff reductions 4 Early in his term President Taft had promised to stand for a lower tariff bill but protectionism had been a major policy of the Republican Party since its founding 5 Taft also fought against Roosevelt s antitrust policy 6 Roosevelt distinguished good trusts from bad trusts for which he had been lambasted 7 Taft argued that all monopolies must be broken up Taft also fired popular conservationist Gifford Pinchot as head of the Bureau of Forestry in 1910 8 By 1910 the split within the party was deep and Roosevelt and Taft turned against one another despite their personal friendship In that summer Roosevelt began a national speaking tour during which he outlined his progressive philosophy and the New Nationalist platform which he introduced in a speech in Osawatomie Kansas on August 31 9 Court Power and Judicial Recall edit Another source of tension involved the authority of the nation s courts especially the Supreme Court As early as 1910 Roosevelt had begun criticizing certain court decisions such as Lochner v New York 1905 and those jurists whom he dubbed fossilized judges He believed that the Supreme Court was interpreting the due process clause of the 14th Amendment and the doctrine of freedom of contract to forestall necessary reform legislation such as the limiting of work hours He as well as more populist progressives like William Jennings Bryan in the Democratic Party came out in favor of an amendment to allow the recall of judges and possibly judicial decisions This outraged Taft a former judge and future Supreme Court Chief Justice and other constitutional conservatives like Elihu Root and Alton B Parker Taft considered Roosevelt a danger to constitutional government and resolved to resist his eventual challenge for the Republican nomination 10 Roosevelt Emboldened edit In the 1910 midterm elections the Republicans lost 57 seats in the House of Representatives as the Democrats gained a majority for the first time since 1894 These results were a large defeat for the conservative wing of the party 11 James E Campbell writes that one cause may have been a large number of progressive voters choosing third party candidates over conservative Republicans 12 Roosevelt continued to reject calls to run for president into 1911 In a January letter to newspaper editor William Allen White he wrote I do not think there is one chance in a thousand that it will ever be wise to have me nominated 13 However speculation continued further harming Roosevelt and Taft s relationship After months of continually increasing support Roosevelt changed his position writing to journalist Henry Beach Needham in January 1912 that if the nomination comes to me as a genuine public movement of course I will accept 14 Nominations editRepublican Party nomination edit nbsp Republican Party United States 1912 Republican Party ticketWilliam Howard Taft James S Shermanfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 27thPresident of the United States 1909 1913 27thVice President of the United States 1909 1912 Campaign566 Delegates791 425 votesOther major candidates edit Candidates in this section are sorted by number of delegates won in the nomination raceTheodore Roosevelt Robert La Follette Albert Cummins nbsp nbsp nbsp Fmr President of the United Statesfrom New York 1901 1909 U S Senatorfrom Wisconsin 1906 1925 U S Senatorfrom Iowa 1908 1926 Campaign Campaign CampaignLN June 22 1912466 Delegates1 183 238 votes LN June 22 191236 Delegates336 373 votes LN June 22 191210 Delegates0 votesDelegate selection edit Main article 1912 Republican Party presidential primaries For the first time many convention delegates were elected in presidential preference primaries Progressive Republicans advocated primary elections as a way of breaking the control of political parties by bosses Altogether twelve states held Republican primaries Senator Robert Fighting Bob La Follette won two of the first four primaries North Dakota and his home state of Wisconsin but Taft won a major victory in Roosevelt s home state of New York and continued to rack up delegates in more conservative traditional state conventions Beginning with a runaway victory in Illinois on April 9 Roosevelt won nine of the last ten presidential primaries including Taft s home state of Ohio losing only Massachusetts 15 Taft also had support from the bulk of the Southern Republican organizations Delegates from the former Confederate states supported Taft by a 5 to 1 margin These states had voted solidly Democratic in every presidential election since 1880 and Roosevelt objected that they were given one quarter of the delegates when they would contribute nothing to a Republican victory Convention edit Main article 1912 Republican National Convention 388 delegates were selected through the primaries and Roosevelt won 281 delegates Taft received 71 delegates and La Follette received 36 delegates However Taft had a 566 466 margin placing him over the 540 needed for nomination with the delegations selected at state conventions Roosevelt accused the Taft faction of having over 200 fraudulently selected delegates However the Republican National Committee ruled in favor of Taft for 233 of the delegate cases while 6 were in favor of Roosevelt The committee reinvestigated the 92 of the contested delegates and ruled in favor of Taft for all of them 16 17 Roosevelt supporters criticized the large amount of delegates coming from areas the Republicans would not win with over 200 delegates coming from areas that had not been won by a Republican since the Compromise of 1877 or the four delegates that came from the territories which didn t vote in the general election However Roosevelt had rejected an attempt to abolish delegations from the south at the 1908 Republican National Convention due to him needing them for Taft s nomination 16 Herbert S Hadley served as Roosevelt s floor manager at the convention Hadley made a motion for 74 of Taft s delegates to be replaced by 72 delegates after the reading of the convention call but his motion was ruled out of order Elihu Root a supporter of Taft was selected to chair the convention after winning 558 votes against McGovern s 501 votes Root was accused of having won through the rotten boroughs of the southern delegations as every northern state except for four voted for McGovern 16 In his closing speech Root reiterated the party s support of constitutional checks and limitations by quoting figures like Alexander Hamilton John Marshall and Abraham Lincoln effectively rebuking Roosevelt s support of the judicial recall and identifying the GOP with constitutional conservatism 18 Roosevelt broke with tradition and attended the convention where he was welcomed with great support from voters 19 Despite Roosevelt s presence in Chicago and his attempts to disqualify Taft supporters the incumbent ticket of Taft and James S Sherman was renominated on the first ballot 20 Sherman was the first sitting vice president re nominated since John C Calhoun in 1828 After losing the vote Roosevelt announced the formation of a new party dedicated to the service of all the people 21 This would later come to be known as the Progressive Party Roosevelt announced that his party would hold its convention in Chicago and that he would accept their nomination if offered 21 Meanwhile Taft decided not to campaign before the election beyond his acceptance speech on August 1 22 Warren G Harding presented Taft s name for the nomination Taft won the nomination while 344 of Roosevelt s delegates abstained from the vote Henry Justin Allen read a speech from Roosevelt in which he criticized the process and stated that delegates had been stolen from his in order to secure Taft s nomination 16 Presidential Ballot 23 24 25 William Howard Taft 561Theodore Roosevelt 107Robert M La Follette 41Albert B Cummins 17Charles Evans Hughes 2Present not voting 344Absent 6Vice Presidential BallotJames S Sherman 596William Borah 21Charles Edward Merriam 20Herbert S Hadley 14Albert J Beveridge 2Democratic Party nomination edit Main article 1912 Democratic National Convention nbsp Democratic Party United States 1912 Democratic Party ticketWoodrow Wilson Thomas R Marshallfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 34thGovernor of New Jersey 1911 1913 27thGovernor of Indiana 1909 1913 CampaignBC 122 Delegates527 296 votesOther major candidates edit Candidates in this section are sorted by number of delegates won in the nomination raceChamp Clark Oscar Underwood Judson Harmon Eugene Foss Thomas Marshall nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Speaker of the Housefrom Missouri 1911 1919 U S Congressmanfrom Alabama 1897 1915 Governorof Ohio 1909 1913 Governorof Massachusetts 1911 1914 Governorof Indiana 1909 1913 Campaign Campaign Campaign CampaignLN July 2 1912423 Delegates427 938 votes LN July 2 191284 Delegates114 947 votes LN July 2 191248 Delegates128 633 votes LN July 2 191236 Delegates0 votes LN July 2 191230 Delegates0 votesSimeon Baldwin John Burke nbsp nbsp Governorof Connecticut 1911 1915 Governorof North Dakota 1907 1913 Campaign CampaignLN July 2 191214 Delegates0 votes LN July 2 191210 Delegates9 357 votesIn early 1912 it was widely believed that three time Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan would make a fourth attempt to earn the party s nomination and would likely not have difficulty in earning it However Bryan announced several months before the convention that he was not interested in another run for the White House Though still seen by many as the Democrats ideological leader power shifts within the party in the wake of their success at the 1910 mid term elections meant that Bryan could no longer be guaranteed the two thirds majority needed to earn the nomination Bryan privately conceded that his three presidential runs having all ended in decisive losses firstly to William McKinley and then to Taft would seriously handicap his credibility as a candidate even if the 1904 election the only one of the previous four in which Bryan was not the Democratic candidate had resulted in an even more lop sided defeat for the party However Bryan still had enough followers in the party that he was in a strong position to be the kingmaker at the convention The Democratic Convention was held in Baltimore from June 25 to July 2 Initially the front runner was Speaker of the House Champ Clark of Missouri Though Clark received the most votes on early ballots he was unable to get the two thirds majority required to win Clark s chances were hurt when Tammany Hall the powerful New York City Democratic political machine threw its support behind him The Tammany endorsement caused Bryan three time Democratic presidential candidate and leader of the party s progressives to turn against Clark whom he decried as the candidate of Wall Street and shift his support to reformist Governor of New Jersey Woodrow Wilson Wilson had consistently finished second in balloting and nearly gave up hope and almost freed his delegates to vote for another candidate Instead Bryan s defection from Clark to Wilson led many other delegates to do the same Wilson gradually gained strength while Clark s support dwindled and Wilson finally received the nomination on the 46th ballot Thomas R Marshall the Governor of Indiana who had swung Indiana s votes to Wilson was named Wilson s running mate 1 24 Presidential Ballot1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd 23rd 24thWilson 324 339 75 345 349 5 351 354 352 5 351 5 352 5 350 5 354 5 354 356 361 362 5 362 5 362 5 361 358 388 5 395 5 396 5 399 402 5Clark 440 5 446 5 441 443 443 445 449 5 448 5 452 556 554 547 5 554 5 553 552 551 545 535 532 512 508 500 5 497 5 496Harmon 148 141 140 5 136 5 141 5 135 129 5 130 127 31 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 0 0 0Underwood 117 5 111 25 114 5 112 119 5 121 123 5 123 122 5 117 5 118 5 123 115 5 111 110 5 112 5 112 5 125 130 121 5 118 5 115 114 5 115 5Foss 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 5 43 45 43T Marshall 31 31 31 31 31 31 31 31 31 31 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30 30Baldwin 22 14 14 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0W J Bryan 1 2 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 7 1 1 1 1 1Kern 0 0 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 2 2 2 4 5 3 5 1 1 1 1 0 0James 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0Sulzer 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Gaynor 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0Lewis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Blank 2 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 5 0 0 0 0 3 5 3 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 25 46 Presidential Ballot25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th 31st 32nd 33rd 34th 35th 36th 37th 38th 39th 40th 41st 42nd 43rd 44th 45th 46th UnanimousWilson 405 407 5 406 5 437 5 436 460 475 5 477 5 477 5 479 5 494 5 496 5 496 5 498 5 501 5 501 5 499 5 494 602 629 633 990 1 088Clark 469 463 5 469 468 5 468 5 455 446 5 446 5 447 5 447 5 433 5 434 5 432 5 425 422 423 424 430 329 306 306 84Harmon 29 29 29 29 29 19 17 14 29 29 29 29 29 29 29 28 27 27 28 27 25 12Underwood 108 112 5 112 112 5 112 121 5 116 5 119 5 103 5 101 5 101 5 98 5 100 5 106 106 106 106 104 98 5 99 97 0Foss 43 43 38 38 38 30 30 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 28 27 27 27 0T Marshall 30 30 30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Baldwin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0W J Bryan 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 1 0 0 0Kern 0 0 0 1 4 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0James 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0Sulzer 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0Gaynor 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0Lewis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0Blank 0 1 5 2 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 0 5 1 5 0 0 2Vice Presidential Ballot1st 2nd UnanimousThomas R Marshall 389 644 5 1 088John Burke 304 67 386 33George E Chamberlain 157 12 5Elmore W Hurst 78 0James H Preston 58 0Martin J Wade 26 0William F McCombs 18 0John E Osborne 8 0William Sulzer 3 0Blank 46 33 44 67Progressive Party nomination edit Main article 1912 Progressive National Convention nbsp Progressive Party United States 1912 1912 Progressive Party ticketTheodore Roosevelt Hiram Johnsonfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp 26thPresident of the United States 1901 1909 23rdGovernor of California 1911 1917 nbsp The Progressive convention at the Chicago Coliseum 1912Taft had won the Republican nomination while 344 of Roosevelt s delegates abstained from the vote Later that day supporters of Roosevelt met in the Chicago Orchestra Hall and nominated him as an independent candidate for president which Roosevelt accepted although he requested a formal convention Roosevelt initially considered not running as a third party candidate until George Walbridge Perkins and Frank Munsey offered their financial support Roosevelt and his supporters formed the Progressive Party at a convention temporarily chaired by Senator Albert J Beveridge on August 5 and Hiram Johnson was selected as his vice presidential running mate Ben B Lindsey and John M Parker had been considered for the presidential nomination but Parker and Lindsey instead both nominated Johnson for the position 16 The Progressives promised to increase federal regulation and protect the welfare of ordinary people At the convention Perkins blocked an antitrust plank shocking reformers who thought of Roosevelt as a true trust buster citation needed The delegates to the convention sang the hymn Onward Christian Soldiers as their anthem In his acceptance speech Roosevelt compared the coming presidential campaign to the Battle of Armageddon and stated that the Progressives were going to battle for the Lord citation needed Socialist Party nomination edit nbsp Socialist Party of AmericaEugene V Debs Emil Seidelfor President for Vice President nbsp nbsp Indiana State Senator 1885 1889 36thMayor of Milwaukee 1910 1912 Socialist candidates Eugene V Debs former State Senator from Indiana Emil Seidel Mayor of Milwaukee Wisconsin Charles Edward Russell journalist from Iowa nbsp Eugene V Debs s popular vote results were the highest for the Socialist party Members of the Socialist Party of America had won in multiple elections between the 1908 and 1912 presidential elections with Emil Seidel being elected as the mayor of Milwaukee Wisconsin and Victor L Berger was elected to the United States House of Representatives The party claimed that it had 435 members elected to office by 1911 and over one thousand by 1912 26 Dan Hogan put Debs name up for the presidential nomination Debs won the presidential nomination although he had supported giving the nomination to the Appeal to Reason s editor Fred Warren with 165 votes while Seidel received 56 votes and Charles Edward Russell received 54 votes Seidel was given the vice presidential nomination against Russell and Hogan 27 28 29 After the presidential ballot Seidel and Russell proposed a motion to make Debs nomination unanimous and it was accepted Hogan and Slayton proposed to make the nomination of Seidel unanimous after the vice presidential selection and it was accepted Otto Branstetter Berger and Carl D Thompson who were serving as delegates voted for Seidel during the presidential balloting Morris Hillquit Meyer London and John Spargo who were serving as delegates supported Russell during the presidential balloting Hogan a delegate from Arkansas had supported Debs during the presidential balloting 30 J Mahlon Barnes who had managed Debs campaign in the 1908 election also managed the campaign in 1912 The Socialists predicted that they would receive over two million votes and have twelve members elected to Congress but Debs only received 897 011 votes and Berger lost reelection Debs received his largest number of votes from Ohio while his best percentage was in Nevada The largest percentage gain since the 1908 presidential election was in West Virginia where their vote total increased by over 300 George Brinton McClellan Harvey stated that had Roosevelt not run then Debs would have gained an additional half a million votes 26 The number of Socialists in the state legislatures increased from twenty to twenty one 31 Presidential ballot 1st ballot 2nd ballot Vice presidential ballot 1st ballot 2nd ballotEugene V Debs 165 Unanimous Emil Seidel 159 UnanimousEmil Seidel 56 Dan Hogan 73Charles Edward Russell 54 John W Slayton 24Reference 30 30 30 30 30 General election editRoosevelt conducted a vigorous national campaign for the Progressive Party denouncing the way the Republican nomination had been stolen He bundled together his reforms under the rubric of The New Nationalism and stumped the country for a strong federal role in regulating the economy and chastising bad corporations citation needed Roosevelt rallied progressives with speeches denouncing the political establishment He promised an expert tariff commission wholly removed from the possibility of political pressure or of improper business influence 32 Wilson supported a policy called The New Freedom This policy was based mostly on individualism instead of a strong government citation needed nbsp A Republican editorial cartoon depicts Roosevelt mixing radical ingredients in his speeches Wilson opposed Roosevelt s proposal to establish a powerful state bureaucracy charged with regulating large corporations with Wilson instead favoring the break up of large corporations in order to create a level economic playing field Though Wilson s rhetoric paid homage to the traditional Democratic Party skepticisms of government and collectivism after his election win Wilson would embrace some of the progressive reforms which Roosevelt had campaigned on nbsp A Republican campaign postcard charges a Wilson administration would force pensioners back to work Taft campaigned quietly and spoke of the need for judges to be more powerful than elected officials The departure of the progressives left the Republican Party firmly controlled by the conservative wing Much of the Republican effort was designed to discredit Roosevelt as a dangerous radical but this had little effect citation needed Many of the nation s pro Republican newspapers depicted Roosevelt as an egotist running only to spoil Taft s chances and feed his vanity citation needed The Socialists had little funding compared to the Republican Democratic and Progressive campaigns Debs campaign spent only 66 000 mostly on 3 5 million leaflets and travel to locally organized rallies Debs biggest event was a speech to 15 000 supporters in New York City The crowd sang La Marseillaise and The Internationale Debs s running mate Emil Seidel boasted Only a year ago workingmen were throwing decayed vegetables and rotten eggs at us but now all is changed Eggs are too high There is a great giant growing up in this country that will someday take over the affairs of this nation He is a little giant now but he is growing fast The name of this little giant is socialism Debs claimed that there was no hope under the present decaying capitalist system and that the worker who votes the Republican or Democratic ticket does worse than throw away his vote as he is a deserter of his class and becomes his own worst enemy Debs insisted that Democrats Progressives and Republicans alike were financed by different factions within the capitalist trusts and that only the Socialists represented labor Debs condemned Injunction Bill Taft and condemned Roosevelt for stealing his socialist clothes with the intent to make socialist policies safer for the establishment At a campaign speech in Philadelphia on September 28 1912 Debs said of Roosevelt Theodore Roosevelt now alludes to me as Brother Debs I do not acknowledge the new relation I still wish to be the undesirable citizen in his eyes If he knew me then I know him now I know what he stands for and what his methods are I know he is the enemy of the workers I know he is now trying to deceive that class to further his own selfish ambition to get back into the White House and if possible remain there for life 33 Attempted assassination of Theodore Roosevelt edit At a campaign stop in Milwaukee on October 14 John Schrank a saloonkeeper from New York shot Roosevelt in the chest The bullet penetrated his steel eyeglass case and a 50 page single folded copy of his speech Progressive Cause Greater Than Any Individual and became lodged in his chest Schrank was immediately disarmed and captured 34 Schrank had been stalking Roosevelt He was suffering from delusion and said the ghost of President McKinley ordered him to kill Roosevelt to prevent a third term 35 Roosevelt shouted for Schrank to remain unharmed and assured the crowd he was all right then ordered police to take charge of Schrank and ensure no violence was done to him 36 Roosevelt an experienced hunter and anatomist correctly concluded that since he was not coughing blood the bullet had not reached his lung He declined suggestions to go to the hospital and instead delivered his scheduled speech with blood seeping into his shirt 37 His opening comments to the gathered crowd were Ladies and gentlemen I don t know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot but it takes more than that to kill a bull moose He spoke for 90 minutes before completing his speech and accepting medical attention 38 39 Afterward probes and an x ray showed that the bullet had lodged in Roosevelt s chest muscle but did not penetrate the pleura Doctors concluded that it would be less dangerous to leave it in place than to attempt to remove it and Roosevelt carried the bullet with him for the rest of his life 40 41 Taft was not campaigning and focused on his presidential duties Wilson briefly suspended his campaigning By October 17 Wilson was back on the campaign trail but avoided any criticism of Roosevelt or his party 42 Roosevelt spent two weeks recuperating before returning to the campaign trail with a major speech on October 30 designed to reassure his supporters he was strong enough for the presidency 43 Death of Vice President Sherman edit On October 30 1912 Vice President James S Sherman died of nephritis leaving Taft without a running mate less than a week before the election Nicholas Murray Butler president of Columbia University was quickly chosen to replace Sherman on the Republican ticket 44 Results editOn November 5 Wilson captured the presidency handily by carrying a record 40 states As of 2024 this is the only presidential election since 1860 in which 4 candidates received more than 5 of the popular vote and a third party candidate outperformed a major party candidate in the general election Wilson won the presidency with a lower percentage of the popular vote than any candidate since Abraham Lincoln in 1860 Taft s result remains the worst performance for any incumbent president both in terms of electoral votes 8 and share of popular votes 23 17 His 8 electoral votes remain the fewest by a Republican and by any major party candidate matched by Alf Landon s 1936 campaign His 23 17 of the popular vote is the lowest ever for a Republican or any major party nominee This was the first time since 1852 that Iowa Maine New Hampshire Ohio and Rhode Island voted for a Democrat and the first time in history that Massachusetts voted Democratic Democrats would not win Maine again until 1964 Connecticut and Delaware until 1936 Illinois Indiana Iowa New Jersey New York Oregon West Virginia and Wisconsin until 1932 and Massachusetts and Rhode Island until 1928 Additionally it was the last time until 1932 that the Republicans failed to win Michigan Minnesota and South Dakota This is one of two times since 1852 that Maine and Vermont did not support the same party the other being in 1968 Theodore Roosevelt s 88 electoral votes and 27 4 of the popular vote are the highest won by a third party in a presidential election 45 Wilson s raw vote total and percentage was less than William Jennings Bryan s total in any of his three campaigns 46 In only two regions New England and the Pacific was Wilson s vote greater than the greatest Bryan vote 47 The 1912 election was the first to include all 48 of the current contiguous United States Only 12 of the 48 states saw a candidate win with a majority of the popular vote Wilson won a majority in the 11 former Confederate states Only South Dakota where Taft did not appear on the ballot gave Roosevelt a majority Taft won only two states Vermont and Utah each with a plurality 46 This is the only time in American history that three people who at some point served as president ran in the same election Wilson finished 1st in 40 states He finished 2nd behind Roosevelt in 5 states and 2nd behind Taft only in Utah He finished 3rd in 2 states in Michigan where Roosevelt finished 1st and Taft finished 2nd and in Vermont where Taft finished 1st and Roosevelt finished 2nd Roosevelt finished 1st in 6 states He finished 2nd in 24 states behind Wilson in 23 and behind Taft in Vermont He finished 3rd in 17 states In 15 of those Wilson finished 1st and Taft finished 2nd In the other two Taft finished 1st and Wilson finished 2nd in Utah while Wilson finished 1st and Debs finished 2nd in Florida Roosevelt was not on the ballot in Oklahoma Taft finished 1st in Vermont and Utah He finished 2nd in 18 states behind Wilson in 17 of those The one exception was Michigan where Taft finished 2nd behind Roosevelt He finished 3rd in 21 states In 18 of those Wilson finished 1st and Roosevelt finished 2nd In the other 3 Minnesota Pennsylvania and Washington Roosevelt finished 1st and Wilson finished 2nd Taft also finished 4th in 5 states In 4 of those the top 3 in order were Wilson Roosevelt Debs In Florida Wilson finished 1st Debs finished 2nd and Roosevelt finished 3rd While not on the ballot in California Taft received 3 914 write in votes in the state placing him 5th behind Roosevelt Wilson Debs and Chafin Taft was not on the ballot at all in South Dakota not even as a write in option Debs finished 2nd in Florida behind Wilson He finished 3rd in 7 states In Nevada Arizona Louisiana and Mississippi Wilson finished 1st Roosevelt finished 2nd Debs finished 3rd and Taft finished 4th The other 3 states where Debs finished 3rd were Oklahoma where Roosevelt was not on the ballot South Dakota where Taft was not on the ballot and California where Taft was not on the ballot but received write in votes causing Taft to finish 5th in California Debs finished 4th in 38 states Debs was beaten by Chafin in two states Vermont and Delaware with Debs finishing 5th in both states Chafin finished last in 18 states The states where Chafin avoided finishing last were 19 of the 20 states where Reimer was on the ballot Reimer finished last in all 20 states that he contested as well as Vermont and Delaware where Chafin managed to force Debs into last place The other state where Chafin avoided last place was California where Taft was only a write in candidate and finished last Reimer was not on the ballot in 28 states while Chafin was not on the ballot in 8 states Only in Utah was Reimer on the ballot but Chafin was not By county edit In a plurality of 1 396 counties no candidate obtained a majority 48 Wilson won 1 969 counties but held a majority in only 1 237 less than Bryan had had in any of his campaigns 47 Other s mostly Roosevelt won a plurality in 772 counties and a majority in 305 counties Most of them in Pennsylvania 48 Illinois 33 Michigan 68 Minnesota 75 Iowa 49 South Dakota 54 Nebraska 32 Kansas 51 Washington 38 and California 44 Debs carried four counties Lake and Beltrami in Minnesota Burke in North Dakota and Crawford in Kansas These are the only counties ever to vote for the Socialist presidential nominee Taft won a plurality in only 232 counties and a majority in only 35 In addition to South Dakota and California where there was no Taft ticket Taft carried no counties in Maine New Jersey Minnesota Nevada Arizona and seven Solid South states 47 Nine counties did not record any votes due to either black disenfranchisement or being inhabited only by Native Americans who would not gain full citizenship for twelve more years As of 2024 1912 remains the last election in which the key Indiana counties of Hamilton and Hendricks along with Walworth County Wisconsin Pulaski and Laurel Counties in Kentucky and Hawkins County Tennessee have given a plurality to the Democratic candidate 45 nbsp Electoral results Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoralvote Running mateCount Percentage Vice presidential candidate Home state Electoral voteWoodrow Wilson Democratic New Jersey 6 296 284 41 84 435 Thomas R Marshall Indiana 435Theodore Roosevelt Progressive New York 4 122 721 27 40 88 Hiram Johnson California 88William Howard Taft incumbent Republican Ohio 3 486 242 23 17 8 Nicholas Murray Butler New York 8Eugene V Debs Socialist Indiana 901 551 5 99 0 Emil Seidel Wisconsin 0Eugene W Chafin Prohibition Arizona 208 156 1 38 0 Aaron S Watkins Ohio 0Arthur E Reimer Socialist Labor Massachusetts 29 324 0 19 0 August Gillhaus New York 0Other 4 556 0 03 Other Total 15 048 834 100 531 531Needed to win 266 266Popular voteWilson 41 84 Roosevelt 27 40 Taft 23 17 Debs 5 99 Others 1 60 Electoral voteWilson 81 92 Roosevelt 16 57 Taft 1 51 Source Popular Vote Leip David 1912 Presidential Election Results Dave Leip s Atlas of U S Presidential Elections Retrieved July 28 2005 Source Electoral Vote Electoral College Box Scores 1789 1996 National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved July 31 2005 Results by state edit States districts won by Wilson MarshallStates districts won by Roosevelt JohnsonStates districts won by Taft ButlerWoodrow WilsonDemocratic Theodore RooseveltProgressive William H TaftRepublican Eugene V DebsSocialist Eugene ChafinProhibition Arthur ReimerSocialist Labor Margin State TotalState electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes electoralvotes Alabama 12 82 438 69 89 12 22 680 19 23 9 807 8 31 3 029 2 57 59 758 50 66 117 959 ALArizona 3 10 324 43 52 3 6 949 29 29 3 021 12 74 3 163 13 33 265 1 12 3 375 14 23 23 722 AZArkansas 9 68 814 55 01 9 21 644 17 30 25 585 20 45 8 153 6 52 908 0 73 43 229 34 55 125 104 ARCalifornia 13 283 436 41 81 2 283 610 41 83 11 3 914 0 58 79 201 11 68 23 366 3 45 174 0 03 673 527 CAColorado 6 114 232 42 80 6 72 306 27 09 58 386 21 88 16 418 6 15 5 063 1 90 475 0 18 41 926 15 71 266 880 COConnecticut 7 74 561 39 16 7 34 129 17 92 68 324 35 88 10 056 5 28 2 068 1 09 1 260 0 66 6 237 3 28 190 398 CTDelaware 3 22 631 46 48 3 8 886 18 25 15 998 32 85 556 1 14 623 1 28 6 633 13 62 48 694 DEFlorida 6 35 343 69 52 6 4 555 8 96 4 279 8 42 4 806 9 45 1 854 3 65 30 537 60 07 50 837 FLGeorgia 14 93 087 76 63 14 21 985 18 10 5 191 4 27 1 058 0 87 149 0 12 71 102 58 53 121 470 GAIdaho 4 33 921 32 08 4 25 527 24 14 32 810 31 02 11 960 11 31 1 536 1 45 1 111 1 05 105 754 IDIllinois 29 405 048 35 34 29 386 478 33 72 253 593 22 13 81 278 7 09 15 710 1 37 4 066 0 35 18 570 1 62 1 146 173 ILIndiana 15 281 890 43 07 15 162 007 24 75 151 267 23 11 36 931 5 64 19 249 2 94 3 130 0 48 119 883 18 32 654 474 INIowa 13 185 325 37 64 13 161 819 32 87 119 805 24 33 16 967 3 45 8 440 1 71 23 506 4 77 492 356 IAKansas 10 143 663 39 30 10 120 210 32 88 74 845 20 47 26 779 7 33 23 453 6 42 365 497 KSKentucky 13 219 484 48 48 13 101 766 22 48 115 510 25 52 11 646 2 57 3 253 0 72 1 055 0 23 103 974 22 97 452 714 KYLouisiana 10 60 871 76 81 10 9 283 11 71 3 833 4 84 5 261 6 64 51 588 65 10 79 248 LAMaine 6 51 113 39 43 6 48 495 37 41 26 545 20 48 2 541 1 96 946 0 73 2 618 2 02 129 640 MEMaryland 8 112 674 48 57 8 57 789 24 91 54 956 23 69 3 996 1 72 2 244 0 97 322 0 14 54 885 23 66 231 981 MDMassachusetts 18 173 408 35 53 18 142 228 29 14 155 948 31 95 12 616 2 58 2 754 0 56 1 102 0 23 17 460 3 58 488 056 MAMichigan 15 150 751 27 36 214 584 38 95 15 152 244 27 63 23 211 4 21 8 934 1 62 1 252 0 23 62 340 11 31 550 976 MIMinnesota 12 106 426 31 84 125 856 37 66 12 64 334 19 25 27 505 8 23 7 886 2 36 2 212 0 66 19 430 5 81 334 219 MNMississippi 10 57 324 88 90 10 3 549 5 50 1 560 2 42 2 050 3 18 53 775 83 39 64 483 MSMissouri 18 330 746 47 35 18 124 375 17 80 207 821 29 75 28 466 4 07 5 380 0 77 1 778 0 25 122 925 17 60 698 566 MOMontana 4 27 941 35 00 4 22 456 28 13 18 512 23 19 10 885 13 64 32 0 04 5 485 6 87 79 826 MTNebraska 8 109 008 43 69 8 72 681 29 13 54 226 21 74 10 185 4 08 3 383 1 36 36 327 14 56 249 483 NENevada 3 7 986 39 70 3 5 620 27 94 3 196 15 89 3 313 16 47 2 366 11 76 20 115 NVNew Hampshire 4 34 724 39 48 4 17 794 20 23 32 927 37 43 1 981 2 25 535 0 61 1 797 2 04 87 961 NHNew Jersey 14 178 289 41 20 14 145 410 33 60 88 835 20 53 15 948 3 69 2 936 0 68 1 321 0 31 32 879 7 60 432 739 NJNew Mexico 3 20 437 41 39 3 8 347 16 90 17 733 35 91 2 859 5 79 2 704 5 48 49 376 NMNew York 45 655 573 41 27 45 390 093 24 56 455 487 28 68 63 434 3 99 19 455 1 22 4 273 0 27 200 086 12 60 1 588 315 NYNorth Carolina 12 144 407 59 24 12 69 135 28 36 29 129 11 95 987 0 40 118 0 05 75 272 30 88 243 776 NCNorth Dakota 5 29 555 34 14 5 25 726 29 71 23 090 26 67 6 966 8 05 1 243 1 44 3 829 4 42 86 580 NDOhio 24 424 834 40 96 24 229 807 22 16 278 168 26 82 90 144 8 69 11 511 1 11 2 630 0 25 146 666 14 14 1 037 094 OHOklahoma 10 119 156 46 95 10 90 786 35 77 41 674 16 42 2 185 0 86 28 370 11 18 253 801 OKOregon 5 47 064 34 34 5 37 600 27 44 34 673 25 30 13 343 9 74 4 360 3 18 9 464 6 91 137 040 ORPennsylvania 38 395 637 32 49 444 894 36 53 38 273 360 22 45 83 614 6 87 19 525 1 60 706 0 06 49 257 4 04 1 217 736 PARhode Island 5 30 412 39 04 5 16 878 21 67 27 703 35 56 2 049 2 63 616 0 79 236 0 30 2 709 3 48 77 894 RISouth Carolina 9 48 357 95 94 9 1 293 2 57 536 1 06 164 0 33 47 064 93 37 50 350 SCSouth Dakota 5 48 942 42 07 58 811 50 56 5 4 662 4 01 3 910 3 36 9 869 8 48 116 325 SDTennessee 12 133 021 52 80 12 54 041 21 45 60 475 24 00 3 564 1 41 832 0 33 72 546 28 80 251 933 TNTexas 20 221 589 72 73 20 28 853 8 86 26 755 9 45 25 743 8 25 1 738 0 57 442 0 14 192 736 63 17 305 120 TXUtah 4 36 579 32 55 24 174 21 51 42 100 37 46 4 9 023 8 03 510 0 45 5 521 4 91 112 386 UTVermont 4 15 354 24 43 22 132 35 22 23 332 37 13 4 928 1 48 1 095 1 74 1 200 1 91 62 841 VTVirginia 12 90 332 65 95 12 21 776 15 90 23 288 17 00 820 0 60 709 0 52 50 0 04 67 044 48 95 136 975 VAWashington 7 86 840 26 90 113 698 35 22 7 70 445 21 82 40 134 12 43 9 810 3 04 1 872 0 58 26 858 8 32 322 799 WAWest Virginia 8 113 197 42 11 8 79 112 29 43 56 754 21 11 15 248 5 67 4 517 1 68 34 085 12 68 268 828 WVWisconsin 13 164 230 41 06 13 62 448 15 61 130 596 32 65 33 476 8 37 8 584 2 15 632 0 16 33 634 8 41 399 966 WIWyoming 3 15 310 36 20 3 9 232 21 83 14 560 34 42 2 760 6 53 434 1 03 750 1 77 42 296 WYTOTALS 531 6 296 284 41 84 435 4 122 721 27 40 88 3 486 242 23 17 8 901 551 5 99 208 156 1 38 29 324 0 19 2 173 563 14 44 15 044 278 USStates that flipped from Republican to Democratic edit Connecticut Delaware Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Maine Maryland Massachusetts Montana New Jersey New York New Hampshire North Dakota Ohio Oregon Rhode Island Wisconsin West Virginia WyomingStates that flipped from Republican to Progressive edit California Michigan Minnesota Pennsylvania South Dakota WashingtonClose states edit Margin of victory less than 1 13 electoral votes California 0 03 174 votes Margin of victory less than 5 142 electoral votes Idaho 1 05 1 111 votes Illinois 1 62 18 570 votes Wyoming 1 77 750 votes Vermont 1 91 1 200 votes Maine 2 02 2 618 votes New Hampshire 2 04 1 797 votes Connecticut 3 28 6 237 votes Rhode Island 3 48 2 709 votes Massachusetts 3 58 17 460 votes Pennsylvania 4 04 49 257 votes North Dakota 4 42 3 829 votes Iowa 4 77 23 506 votes Utah 4 91 5 521 votes Margin of victory between 5 and 10 73 electoral votes New Mexico 5 48 2 704 votes Minnesota 5 81 19 430 votes Kansas 6 42 23 453 votes Montana 6 87 5 485 votes Oregon 6 91 9 464 votes New Jersey 7 60 32 879 votes Washington 8 32 26 858 votes Wisconsin 8 41 33 634 votes South Dakota 8 48 9 869 votes Tipping point state New York 12 6 200 086 votes for a Wilson victory Ohio 18 9 146 666 votes for a Roosevelt victory New Hampshire 37 2 32 743 votes for a Debs victory Counties with Highest Percent of Vote Democratic Greenville County South Carolina 100 Marlboro County South Carolina 100 Hampton County South Carolina 100 Jasper County South Carolina 100 Reagan County Texas 100 Counties with Highest Percent of Vote Progressive Scott County Tennessee 75 15 Campbell County South Dakota 74 93 Avery County North Carolina 72 69 Hutchinson County South Dakota 67 84 Hamlin County South Dakota 66 79 Counties with Highest Percent of Vote Republican Zapata County Texas 80 89 Valencia County New Mexico 77 25 Kane County Utah 75 40 Clinton County Kentucky 64 79 Huerfano County Colorado 63 36 Counties with the Highest Percent of Vote Socialist incomplete Lake County Minnesota 36 81 Crawford County Kansas 35 28 Marshall County Oklahoma 34 94 McCurtain County Oklahoma 31 83 Okfuskee County Oklahoma 30 90 Maps edit nbsp Results by state nbsp Map of presidential election results by county nbsp Results by county shaded according to winning candidate s percentage of the vote nbsp Results by county shaded according to percentage of the vote for Wilson nbsp Results by county shaded according to percentage of the vote for Taft nbsp Results by county shaded according to percentage of the vote for Debs nbsp Results by county shaded according to percentage of the vote for all others including Debs nbsp A continuous cartogram of the 1912 United States presidential election nbsp Cartogram shaded according to percentage of the vote for Wilson nbsp Cartogram shaded according to percentage of the vote for Taft nbsp Cartogram shaded according to percentage of the vote for all othersResults in major cities editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Roosevelt hurting from his defeats reviews his wounded lieutenants Munsey Perkins and Dixon From The Evening Star Washington DC Dec 10 1912Results of various cities within the top 100 municipalities by the 1910 United States census City ST Wilson Taft Roosevelt Debs Others TotalsSan Francisco CA 48 953 65 38 610 12 354 1 166 101 148Oakland CA 11 210 0 14 221 1 549 525 27 505Denver CO 26 690 8 155 25 154 2 750 764 63 513Bridgeport CT 5 870 4 625 3 654 1 511 284 15 944Hartford CT 7 481 6 396 2 467 849 258 17 451New Haven CT 8 946 7 291 3 252 1 696 442 21 627Waterbury CT 4 440 3 261 1 675 787 212 10 375Des Moines IA 6 005 3 669 6 432Chicago IL 124 297 71 030 150 290 53 743 2 806 402 166Ft Wayne IN 4 892 1 896 2 793Indianapolis IN 18 306 8 722 9 693New Orleans LA 26 433 904 5 692Boston MA 43 065 21 427 21 533 1 818 428 88 271Cambridge MA 6 667 3 362 3 403 192 68 13 692Fall River MA 5 160 4 224 3 453 219 256 13 312Lowell MA 5 459 3 034 3 783 170 82 12 528Lynn MA 4 595 4 144 4 764 583 178 14 264New Bedford MA 3 290 4 177 1 905 626 98 10 096Somerville MA 4 062 3 757 4 072 176 78 12 145Springfield MA 4 375 5 167 3 161 555 58 13 316Worcester MA 6 049 10 532 4 818 230 140 21 769Baltimore MD 48 030 15 597 33 679 1 763 253 99 322Portland ME 4 242 2 776 3 305 197 58 10 578Kansas City MO 26 954 4 646 20 894 1 470 465 54 429St Louis MO 58 845 46 509 24 746 9 159 1 068 140 327Manchester NH 4 502 4 022 2 165 520 35 11 244Bayonne NJ 3 717 1 184 2 552Camden NJ 6 895 5 517 4 707Elizabeth NJ 5 139 1 900 3 953Jersey City NJ 21 069 4 070 11 986Newark NJ 14 031 10 780 19 721Paterson NJ 7 437 3 007 7 223Trenton NJ 5 146 3 898 4 753Buffalo NY 26 192 14 433 20 769New York City NY 312 426 126 582 188 896 33 239 2 730 663 873Rochester NY 13 430 12 230 11 102 2 593 636 39 991Yonkers NY 5 533 4 056 4 536 354 49 14 528Cincinnati OH 31 221 30 588 9 970 6 520 401 78 700Allentown PA 4 627 1 224 3 475 686 59 10 071Erie PA 3 407 2 378 1 898 1 464 140 9 287Philadelphia PA 66 308 91 944 82 963 9 784 691 251 690Pittsburgh PA 17 352 14 658 25 394 8 498 534 66 436Reading PA 6 130 1 657 6 719 2 800 83 17 389Scranton PA 6 193 1 817 7 971 564 214 16 759Wilkes Barre PA 2 905 1 178 3 951 219 47 8 300Salt Lake City UT 7 488 8 964 6 587 2 498Norfolk VA 3 539 195 451 33 10 4 228Richmond VA 5 636 405 483 91 12 6 627Milwaukee WI 24 501 15 092 5 127 17 708 511 62 939See also edit1912 United States House of Representatives elections 1912 13 United States Senate elections History of the United States 1865 1918 Progressive Era Progressive Party United States 1912 Notes edit Though he had become President upon the assassination of William McKinley in 1901 only six months of McKinley s term had elapsed Thus Roosevelt had served nearly a full eight years effectively two full terms Although the Twenty Second Amendment to the Constitution did not become effective until 1951 it would have barred Roosevelt from seeking another term since he had served more than two years to which some other person McKinley had been elected References edit Morris Edmund Colonel Roosevelt New York Random House Trade Paperbacks pp 215 646 Gould Lewis L October 16 2014 5 The Taft Roosevelt Split 1905 1912 The Republicans A History of the Grand Old Party online ed New York Oxford Academic published 2014 pp 116 142 doi 10 1093 acprof osobl 9780199936625 003 0006 Coletta Presidency of William Howard Taft ch 3 G M Fisk The Payne Aldrich Tariff Political Science Quarterly 1910 25 1 35 39 doi 10 2307 2141008 Stanley D Solvick William Howard Taft and the Payne Aldrich Tariff Mississippi Valley Historical Review 50 3 1963 424 442 JSTOR 1902605 Anderson 1973 p 79 TR Center The President s dream of a successful hunt www theodorerooseveltcenter org Schweikart and Allen p 491 O Mara Margaret Pivotal Tuesdays Philadelphia PA University of Pennsylvania Press p 32 Istre Logan S 2021 Bench over Ballot The Fight for Judicial Supremacy and the New Constitutional Politics 1910 1916 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 20 1 2 23 doi 10 1017 S1537781420000079 ISSN 1537 7814 Schantz Harvey L American Presidential Elections Albany State University of New York Press p 169 Campbell James E The Presidential Pulse of Congressional Elections Lexington University Press of Kentucky p 261 Roosevelt Theodore January 24 1911 Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to William Allen White Letter to William Allen White Retrieved October 12 2020 O Mara Margaret Pivotal Tuesdays Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 35 37 History Travel Arts Science People Places Smithsonian Smithsonianmag com Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved August 18 2016 a b c d e Nash Howard P Jr 1959 Third Parties in American Politics PublicAffairs Taft 566 Roosevelt 466 Present Line Up of Instructed and Pledged Delegates With All the Contests Decided PDF The New York Times June 16 1912 Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Retrieved February 24 2016 Istre Logan Stagg 2021 Bench over Ballot The Fight for Judicial Supremacy and the New Constitutional Politics 1910 1916 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 20 1 13 doi 10 1017 s1537781420000079 ISSN 1537 7814 O Mara Margaret Pivotal Tuesdays Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 44 Taft Nominee Sherman His Running Mate Chicago Tribune June 23 1912 Retrieved October 12 2020 subscription required a b O Laughlin John June 23 1912 Roosevelt Is Named Leader Of New Party Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 12 2020 subscription required Henry F Pringle The Life and Times of William Howard Taft 1939 2 818 832 834 Taft Is Nominated On First Ballot Santa Cruz News Santa Cruz CA June 22 1912 Retrieved January 7 2018 Taft Wins With 561 The Courier Harrisburg PA June 23 1912 Retrieved January 7 2018 Pietrusza David 2007 1920 The Year of the Six Presidents New York Carroll amp Graf ISBN 978 0 7867 1622 7 a b Morgan H Wayne 1962 Eugene V Debs Socialist for President Syracuse University Press Haynes Fred 1924 Social Politics in the United States The Riverside Press Cambridge p 200 Currie Harold W 1976 Eugene V Debs Twayne Publishers Coleman McAlister 1930 Eugene V Debs A Man Unafraid Greenberg Publisher a b c d e f Spargo John 1912 Proceedings of the National Convention of the Socialist Party Socialist Party of America Murphy Paul 1974 Political Parties In American History Volume 3 1890 present G P Putnam s Sons Theodore Roosevelt Association The New Nationalism The New Nationalism Theodore Roosevelt Association N p n d Web 17 Apr 2017 The Red Sea of Socialism Campaign Speech at Convention Hall Philadelphia September 28 1912 PDF marxists org Archived PDF from the original on October 9 2022 Gerard Helferich Theodore Roosevelt and the Assassin Madness Vengeance and the Campaign of 1912 2013 Lewis Gould Four Hats in the Ring The 1912 Election and the Birth of Modern American Politics 2008 p 171 Remey Oliver E Cochems Henry F Bloodgood Wheeler P 1912 The Attempted Assassination of Ex President Theodore Roosevelt Milwaukee Wisconsin The Progressive Publishing Company p 192 Medical History of American Presidents Doctor Zebra Retrieved September 14 2010 Excerpt Detroit Free Press History buff archived from the original on April 19 2015 retrieved January 23 2018 It Takes More Than That to Kill a Bull Moose The Leader and The Cause Theodore Roosevelt Association Retrieved October 14 2015 Roosevelt Timeline Theodore Roosevelt Retrieved September 14 2010 Timeline of Theodore Roosevelt s Life by the Theodore Roosevelt Association at http www theodoreroosevelt org Wilson Starts on a Tour Will Not Touch on Third Party s Programme in Speeches New York Times Oct 17 1912 p 10 Morris Edmund Colonel Roosevelt New York Random House Trade Paperbacks pp 250 251 Gould Lewis L 2008 Four hats in the ring the 1912 election and the birth of modern American politics Lawrence Kan University Press of Kansas p 157 ISBN 978 0 7006 1564 3 OCLC 180756978 a b Sullivan Robert David How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century America Magazine in The National Catholic Review June 29 2016 a b The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson p 14 a b c The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson p 15 The Presidential Vote 1896 1932 Edgar E Robinson p 17Further reading editExternal videos nbsp Booknotes interview with James Chace on 1912 Wilson Roosevelt Taft and Debs August 29 2004 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Chace on 1912 May 12 2004 C SPANAnders O Fritiof The Swedish American Press in the Election of 1912 Swedish Pioneer Historical Quarterly 1963 14 3 pp 103 126 Broderick Francis L Progressivism at risk Electing a president in 1912 Praeger 1989 Chace James 2004 1912 Wilson Roosevelt Taft and Debs The Election That Changed the Country New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 7432 0394 1 Cooper John Milton Jr 1983 The Warrior and the Priest Woodrow Wilson and Theodore Roosevelt Cambridge Belknap Press ISBN 0 674 94751 7 Cowan Geoffrey Let the People Rule Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of the Presidential Primary 2016 Delahaye Claire The New Nationalism and Progressive Issues The Break with Taft and the 1912 Campaign in Serge Ricard ed A Companion to Theodore Roosevelt 2011 pp 452 67 online Archived December 14 2020 at the Wayback Machine DeWitt Benjamin P The Progressive Movement A Non Partisan Comprehensive Discussion of Current Tendencies in American Politics 1915 Flehinger Brett The 1912 Election and the Power of Progressivism A Brief History with Documents Bedford St Martin s 2003 Gable John A The Bullmoose Years Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party Kennikat Press 1978 Gould Lewis L Four Hats in the Ring The 1912 Election and the Birth of Modern American Politics 2009 JSTOR j ctv2rsfczd Gould Lewis L Theodore Roosevelt William Howard Taft and the Disputed Delegates in 1912 Texas as a Test Case Southwestern Historical Quarterly 80 1 1976 33 56 JSTOR 30238426 Hahn Harlan The Republican Party Convention of 1912 and the Role of Herbert S Hadley in National Politics Missouri Historical Review 59 4 1965 407 423 Taft was willing to compromise with Missouri Governor Herbert S Hadley as presidential nominee TR said no Istre Logan S Bench over Ballot The Fight for Judicial Supremacy and the New Constitutional Politics 1910 1916 The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 20 no 1 2021 2 23 doi 10 1017 S1537781420000079 Kipnis Ira 1952 The American Socialist Movement 1897 1912 New York Columbia University Press Kraig Robert Alexander The 1912 Election and the Rhetorical Foundations of the Liberal State Rhetoric and Public Affairs 2000 363 395 JSTOR 41940243 Link Arthur S 1956 Wilson Volume 1 The Road to the White House Milkis Sidney M and Daniel J Tichenor Direct Democracy and Social Justice The Progressive Party Campaign of 1912 Studies in American Political Development 8 2 1994 282 340 doi 10 1017 S0898588X00001267 Milkis Sidney M Theodore Roosevelt the Progressive Party and the Transformation of American Democracy Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas 2009 Morgan H Wayne 1962 Eugene V Debs Socialist for President Syracuse University Press Mowry George E 1946 Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Movement Madison Wisconsin University Press online Mowry George E The Election of 1912 in Arthur M Schlesinger Jr and Fred L Israel eds History of American Presidential Elections 1789 1968 1971 3 2135 2427 online Mowry George E The Era of Theodore Roosevelt and the Birth of Modern America Harper and Row 1962 online Ness Immanuel and James Ciment eds The Encyclopedia of Third Parties in America 3 vol 2000 O Mara Margaret Pivotal Tuesdays Four Elections That Shaped the Twentieth Century 2015 compares 1912 1932 1968 1992 in terms of social economic and political history Painter Carl The Progressive Party In Indiana Indiana Magazine of History 16 3 1920 pp 173 283 JSTOR 27785944 Pinchot Amos History of the Progressive Party 1912 1916 Introduction by Helene Maxwell Hooker New York University Press 1958 Sarasohn David The Party of Reform Democrats in the Progressive Era UP of Mississippi 1989 pp 119 154 Schambra William The Election of 1912 and the Origins of Constitutional Conservatism in Toward an American Conservatism Palgrave Macmillan 2013 95 119 Selmi Patrick Jane Addams and the Progressive Party Campaign for President in 1912 Journal of Progressive Human Services 22 2 2011 160 190 doi 10 1080 10428232 2010 540705 Startt James D Wilson s Election Campaign of 1912 and the Press in Woodrow Wilson and the Press Prelude to the Presidency Palgrave Macmillan 2004 pp 197 228 Unger Nancy C Fighting Bob La Follette The Righteous Reformer U of North Carolina Press 2003 pp 200 220 Unger Nancy C The Political Suicide of Robert M La Follette Public Disaster Private Catharsis Psychohistory Review 21 2 1993 pp 187 220 online on his disastrous speech of February 2 1912 Warner Robert M Chase S Osborn and the Presidential Campaign of 1912 Mississippi Valley Historical Review 46 1 1959 19 45 JSTOR 1892386 Wilensky Norman N 1965 Conservatives in the Progressive Era The Taft Republicans of 1912 Gainesville University of Florida Press Primary sources edit Bryan William Jennings A Tale of Two Conventions Being an Account of the Republican and Democratic National Conventions of June 1912 with an Outline of the Progressive National Convention of August in the Same Year Funk amp Wagnalls Company 1912 online Chester Edward W A guide to political platforms 1977 online Pinchot Amos What s the Matter with America The Meaning of the Progressive Movement and the Rise of the New Party Amos Pinchot 1912 Republican campaign text book 1912 1912 online Roosevelt Theodore Theodore Roosevelt s Confession of Faith Before the Progressive National Convention August 6 1912 Progressive Party 1912 online Roosevelt Theodore Bull Moose on the Stump The 1912 Campaign Speeches of Theodore Roosevelt Ed by Lewis L Gould UP of Kansas 2008 Wilson Woodrow 1956 John Wells Davidson ed A Crossroads of Freedom the 1912 Campaign Speeches online Porter Kirk H and Donald Bruce Johnson eds National party platforms 1840 1964 1965 online 1840 1956External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States presidential election 1912 Presidential Election of 1912 A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress editorial cartoons Archived February 15 2020 at the Wayback Machine Sound recording of TR speech 1912 popular vote by counties 1912 State by state Popular vote The Election of 1912 Archived September 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine Election of 1912 in Counting the Votes Theodore Roosevelt Speech Edison Recordings Campaign 1912 audio recording William Taft Edison Recordings Campaign 1912 audio recording Woodrow Wilson Edison Campaign Recordings 1912 audio recording Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1912 United States presidential election amp oldid 1218622453, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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