1900 United States presidential election in Utah explained

See main article: 1900 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1900 United States presidential election in Utah
Country:Utah
Flag Year:1896
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1896 United States presidential election in Utah
Previous Year:1896
Next Election:1904 United States presidential election in Utah
Next Year:1904
Election Date:November 6, 1900
Image1:Mckinley (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:William McKinley
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Home State1:Ohio
Running Mate1:Theodore Roosevelt
Electoral Vote1:3
Popular Vote1:47,139
Percentage1:50.65%
Nominee2:William Jennings Bryan
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State2:Nebraska
Running Mate2:Adlai E. Stevenson
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:45,006
Percentage2:48.36%
Map Size:250px
President
Before Election:William McKinley
Before Party:Republican Party (United States)
After Election:William McKinley
After Party:Republican Party (United States)

The 1900 United States presidential election in Utah took place on November 6, 1900, as part of the 1900 United States presidential election held in each of the forty-five contemporary states. State voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

During its years as a territory the Republican Party's ancestral hostility to the polygamy of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church),[1] whose members settled Utah and have dominated the region ever since, meant that Utah territorial politics until 1891 was dominated by the Mormon-hierarchy-controlled "People's Party" and the anti-Mormon "Liberal Party".[2] Those Mormons who did affiliate with national parties generally were Democrats, who lacked moral qualms associated with polygamy and slavery – although the Liberal Party did have allies within the GOP.[3]

In order to achieve statehood, however, the LDS Church disbanded the "People's Party" in 1891 and most LDS members moved towards the Democratic Party. In Utah's statehood year – 1896 – Democrat/Populist William Jennings Bryan, whose "free silver" platform was immensely attractive to a state with large silver reserves, won the Mormon State by a five-to-one margin. However, by Bryan's 1900 rematch with incumbent Republican President McKinley, the Republican Party's ancestral hostility to Mormonism was beginning to dissipate,[4] and Republican National Committee Chairman Mark Hanna was able to persuade the Mormon hierarchy that Bryan's policies – financial and otherwise – were unsound.[5]

Consequently, although the LDS Church had not established the links to the GOP that they were after the Utah legislature elected Reed Smoot, those Utah voters who had supported Bryan overwhelmingly in 1896 deserted him to a degree that narrowly proved sufficient to give the state's three electoral votes to McKinley. Apart from Washington County in the Dixie region, McKinley was competitive everywhere and in Kane County – later a famous Republican bastion – he received over seventy percent. McKinley would win Utah by a narrow margin of 2.29% and this remains easily the closest presidential election in Utah history, and with the state voting essentially as the nation did, it was decisive in placing the Mormon State in the mainstream of US politics,[6] where Utah remained until becoming a Republican bastion in the 1950s and 1960s.

Bryan would later lose Utah again, this time to William Howard Taft in 1908.

Results

Results by county

CountyWilliam McKinley
Republican
William Jennings Bryan
Democratic
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast[7]
%%%%
Beaver68251.90%62947.87%30.23%534.03%1,314
Box Elder1,63552.72%1,46047.08%60.19%1755.64%3,101
Cache2,82047.59%3,08252.02%230.39%-262-4.43%5,925
Carbon74854.16%62144.97%120.87%1279.19%1,381
Davis1,23847.05%1,38052.45%130.49%-142-5.40%2,631
Emery66645.40%79854.40%30.20%-132-9.00%1,467
Garfield64962.16%39537.84%00.00%25424.32%1,044
Grand17846.11%20452.85%41.04%-26-6.74%386
Iron62846.94%70852.91%20.15%-80-5.97%1,338
Juab1,53242.52%1,98655.12%852.36%-454-12.60%3,603
Kane39270.89%16129.11%00.00%23141.78%553
Millard93852.55%84447.28%30.17%945.27%1,785
Morgan39151.72%36348.02%20.26%283.70%756
Piute33053.92%28045.75%20.33%508.17%612
Rich38757.76%28242.09%10.15%10515.67%670
Salt Lake13,49650.30%12,84047.86%4931.84%6562.44%26,829
San Juan8151.92%7246.15%31.92%95.77%156
Sanpete3,57559.15%2,44140.39%280.46%1,13418.76%6,044
Sevier1,58154.88%1,26143.77%391.35%32011.11%2,881
Summit1,55546.67%1,76352.91%140.42%-208-6.24%3,332
Tooele1,25952.70%1,11446.63%160.67%1456.07%2,389
Uintah63945.13%77354.59%40.28%-134-9.46%1,416
Utah5,69850.98%5,39148.24%870.78%3072.74%11,176
Wasatch72347.94%78151.79%40.27%-58-3.85%1,508
Washington40928.93%1,00370.93%20.14%-594-42.00%1,414
Wayne32453.38%28246.46%10.16%426.92%607
Weber4,58552.36%4,09246.73%790.90%4935.63%8,756
Totals47,13950.59%45,00648.30%9290.99%2,1332.29%93,189

See also

Notes and References

  1. Talbot, Christine; A Foreign Kingdom: Mormons and Polygamy in American Political Culture, 1852-1890, p. 113
  2. May, Dean L. ; Utah: A People's History, pp. 120-121
  3. Handy, Robert T.; Undermined Establishment: Church-State Relations in America, 1880-1920, p. 55
  4. Perry, Luke and Cronin, Christopher; Mormons in American Politics: From Persecution to Power, p. 52
  5. Rutland, Robert Allan (editor); The Republicans: From Lincoln to Bush, p. 128
  6. Balmer, Randall and Riess, Janet (editors); Mormonism and American Politics (Religion, Culture, and Public Life), pp. 135-137
  7. Robinson, Edgar Eugene; The Presidential Vote, 1896-1932 (second edition); pp. 223-224 Published 1947 by Stanford University Press