1916 United States presidential election in Washington (state) explained

See main article: 1916 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1916 United States presidential election in Washington (state)
Country:Washington
Flag Year:1923
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1912 United States presidential election in Washington (state)
Previous Year:1912
Next Election:1920 United States presidential election in Washington (state)
Next Year:1920
Election Date:November 7, 1916
Image1:Thomas Woodrow Wilson, Harris & Ewing bw photo portrait, 1919 (cropped 3x4).jpg
Nominee1:Woodrow Wilson
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:New Jersey
Running Mate1:Thomas R. Marshall
Electoral Vote1:7
Popular Vote1:183,388
Percentage1:48.13%
Nominee2:Charles Evans Hughes
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:New York
Running Mate2:Charles W. Fairbanks
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:167,208
Percentage2:43.89%
Image3:Allan Louis Benson (1871–1940) circa 1915 (cropped_closein).jpg
Nominee3:Allan L. Benson
Party3:Socialist Party of America
Home State3:New York
Running Mate3:George Ross Kirkpatrick
Electoral Vote3:0
Popular Vote3:22,800
Percentage3:5.98%
Map Size:380px
President
Before Election:Woodrow Wilson
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Woodrow Wilson
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1916 United States presidential election in Washington took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1916 United States presidential election in which all contemporary 48 states participated. Voters chose seven electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting Democratic incumbents Woodrow Wilson Thomas R. Marshall, against Republican challengers Associate Justice Charles Evans Hughes and his running mate, former Vice-President Charles W. Fairbanks.

Washington had been a one-party Republican bastion for twenty years before this election.[1] Democratic representation in the Washington legislature would during this period at times be countable on one hand,[2] and neither Alton B. Parker nor William Jennings Bryan in his third presidential run carried even one county in the state. Republican primaries had taken over as the chief mode of political competition when introduced in the late 1900s.[3]

However, a powerful "peace vote" in the Western states[4] due to opposition to participation in World War I, and the transfer of a considerable part of the substantial vote for Eugene Debs from the previous election to Wilson owing to such Progressive reforms as the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Amendments[5] allowed Woodrow Wilson to carry Washington by a 4.25 percentage point margin. In doing this, Wilson was the first ever Democratic victor in the Western Washington Puget Sound counties of Island, San Juan and Kitsap,[6] and the only Democrat between 1904 and 1924 to carry any Washington county in a two-way presidential race.

After the votes were counted, there was some debate over who should be the seventh elector from the state. One of the original electors on the Democratic ticket, A. T. Steam, died prior to election day. The state's Democratic party replaced him with Edwin M. Connor, but Stream's name was not replaced on the ballot in ten of Washington's 39 counties.[7] [8] Since voters chose electors directly at the time, this resulted in a split of the vote between Connor and Steam and a Republican elector, Warren H. Lewis, received the seventh-most votes and therefore would be entitled to the final elector position and subsequently cast a vote for Charles Evans Hughes. Many believed, however, that given the voters' clear intent to elect Wilson and Washington's potential split not affecting the final outcome, Lewis should either cast his electoral vote for the Wilson ticket or step aside and allow Connor to be appointed the seventh elector. After consulting with the state's Republican committee, Lewis declined to contest Connor's appointment as elector.[9] [10] As such, all seven of Washington's electoral votes were cast for Wilson and Marshall.

Results

Party! Pledged to! Elector! Votes
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonD. M. Drumheller183,388
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonC. C. Brown183,242
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonGeorge F. Christensen183,230
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonFrancis Donahoe183,028
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonJoseph A. Sloan182,813
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonG. W. Hoxie182,806
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesWarren H. Lewis167,208
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesJ. Henry Smith166,406
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesGeorge E. Finley166,375
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesLuther Weedin166,340
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesE. E. Beard166,298
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesRichard M. Buttle166,143
Republican PartyCharles Evans HughesJ. A. Perkins165,971
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonEdwin M. Connor134,481
Democratic PartyWoodrow WilsonA. T. Stream47,977
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonMarie Nielsen22,800
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonAllen Brooks22,518
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonLaura M. House22,515
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonHelen Camp22,510
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonKate Sutton22,490
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonBertha Zietz22,486
Socialist PartyAllan L. BensonBonner Bartlett22,482
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlySalome R. Lippy6,868
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlyWalter F. McDowell6,840
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlyJohn Anderson6,838
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlyR. M. Shoemake6,819
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlyL. Stanton6,814
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlyE. B. Crary6,812
Prohibition PartyFrank HanlyC. C. Gridley6,790
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerGotfried Gustafson730
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerJerry E. Sullivan711
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerAndrew P. Anderson701
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerJohn C. Schafer701
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerArne Hage699
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerLeslie H. Sawyer697
Socialist Labor PartyArthur E. ReimerFred Kurtzman690
Votes cast380,994

Results by county

CountyWoodrow Wilson
Democratic
Charles Evans Hughes
Republican
Allan L. Benson
Socialist
Frank Hanly
Prohibition
Arthur E. Reimer
Socialist Labor
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%%%
Adams1,29448.41%1,23746.28%1124.19%210.79%90.34%572.13%2,673
Asotin1,13648.59%1,00442.94%1175.00%803.42%10.04%1325.65%2,338
Benton1,35142.03%1,46045.43%34210.64%531.65%80.25%-109-3.39%3,214
Chelan2,74743.46%3,01147.63%4056.41%1512.39%70.11%-264-4.18%6,321
Clallam1,33941.06%1,47545.23%41812.82%190.58%100.31%-136-4.17%3,261
Clark3,72841.28%4,41948.93%6777.50%1982.19%100.11%-691-7.65%9,032
Columbia1,16447.57%1,14846.91%1084.41%251.02%20.08%160.65%2,447
Cowlitz1,28233.44%2,11355.11%3789.86%571.49%40.10%-831-21.67%3,834
Douglas1,91659.52%1,12534.95%1484.60%280.87%20.06%79124.57%3,219
Ferry91352.99%58133.72%22112.83%50.29%30.17%33219.27%1,723
Franklin1,11057.93%67135.02%1095.69%231.20%30.16%43922.91%1,916
Garfield72845.02%84552.26%321.98%110.68%10.06%-117-7.24%1,617
Grant1,56351.58%1,20539.77%2217.29%381.25%30.10%35811.82%3,030
Grays Harbor4,99244.04%5,02444.32%1,20910.67%960.85%150.13%-32-0.28%11,336
Island85546.34%80443.58%1709.21%160.87%00.00%512.76%1,845
Jefferson86140.77%1,09451.80%1346.34%221.04%10.05%-233-11.03%2,112
King52,36254.71%38,95940.71%3,1933.34%9220.96%2720.28%13,40314.00%95,708
Kitsap3,47949.89%2,63837.83%75110.77%941.35%120.17%84112.06%6,974
Kittitas2,60949.40%2,31043.74%2624.96%931.76%70.13%2995.66%5,281
Klickitat1,47845.35%1,57048.17%1865.71%230.71%20.06%-92-2.82%3,259
Lewis4,31840.73%5,18648.92%8457.97%2392.25%130.12%-868-8.19%10,601
Lincoln2,82751.67%2,35643.06%2214.04%621.13%50.09%4718.61%5,471
Mason77945.19%76444.32%1629.40%160.93%30.17%150.87%1,724
Okanogan2,92454.82%1,89635.55%4748.89%330.62%70.13%1,02819.27%5,334
Pacific1,53734.02%2,68859.50%2575.69%300.66%60.13%-1,151-25.48%4,518
Pend Oreille1,08050.94%91643.21%1115.24%90.42%40.19%1647.74%2,120
Pierce18,94048.85%16,78043.28%1,8944.89%1,0592.73%970.25%2,1605.57%38,770
San Juan66947.96%59142.37%1228.75%130.93%00.00%785.59%1,395
Skagit4,93647.88%4,14240.17%9519.22%2562.48%250.24%7947.70%10,310
Skamania45146.07%48949.95%343.47%50.51%00.00%-38-3.88%979
Snohomish8,39041.52%8,62542.68%2,54312.58%6063.00%430.21%-235-1.16%20,207
Spokane21,33949.49%19,50345.23%1,3213.06%8772.03%800.19%1,8364.26%43,120
Stevens3,18447.84%2,68440.32%67810.19%1041.56%60.09%5007.51%6,656
Thurston2,65839.39%3,22347.76%6249.25%2313.42%120.18%-565-8.37%6,748
Wahkiakum34036.13%49052.07%10310.95%70.74%10.11%-150-15.94%941
Walla Walla4,45648.29%4,42948.00%2182.36%1201.30%40.04%270.29%9,227
Whatcom5,62935.53%7,63248.18%2,07513.10%4652.94%410.26%-2,003-12.64%15,842
Whitman5,88852.33%4,93343.84%2392.12%1861.65%50.04%9558.49%11,251
Yakima6,13641.91%7,18849.10%7355.02%5753.93%60.04%-1,052-7.19%14,640
Totals183,38848.13%167,20843.89%22,8005.98%6,8681.80%7300.19%16,1804.25%380,994

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Counties that flipped from Progressive to Democratic

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

Counties that flipped from Progressive to Republican

See also

Notes and References

  1. Burnham, Walter Dean; ‘The System of 1896’, in Kleppner, Paul (editor), The Evolution of American Electoral Systems, pp. 176-179
  2. [Elmer Eric Schattschneider|Schattschneider, Elmer Eric]
  3. Murray, Keith; ‘Issues and Personalities of Pacific Northwest Politics, 1889-1950’, The Pacific Northwest Quarterly, vol. 41, no. 3 (July 1950), pp. 213-233
  4. Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004, p. 47
  5. Sarasohn, David; 'The Election of 1916: Realigning the Rockies', Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 11, No. 3 (July 1980), pp. 285-305
  6. Menendez, The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, p. 332
  7. Book: Abstract of Votes Polled in the State of Washington at the General Election Held November 7, 1916 . Washington Secretary of State. Olympia, Washington . 6-10.
  8. Book: Second Biennial Report Election Division. Washington Secretary of State. Olympia, Washington . 84-88. 30 July 2024.
  9. Web site: Interesting Happenings in Pacific Northwest. Washington Digital Newspapers . The Leavenworth Echo. 30 July 2024 . en . 12 Jan 1917.
  10. Web site: To The Spotlight, Mr. Connor!. Washington Digital Newspapers . Washington Standard. 30 July 2024 . en . 5 Jan 1917.