1936 United States presidential election in New Jersey explained

See main article: 1936 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1936 United States presidential election in New Jersey
Country:New Jersey
Flag Year:1896
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1932 United States presidential election in New Jersey
Previous Year:1932
Next Election:1940 United States presidential election in New Jersey
Next Year:1940
Election Date:November 3, 1936
Image1:FDR in 1933 (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:New York
Running Mate1:John Nance Garner
Electoral Vote1:16
Popular Vote1:1,083,850
Percentage1:59.54%
Nominee2:Alf Landon
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:Kansas
Running Mate2:Frank Knox
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:720,322
Percentage2:39.57%
Map Size:405px
President
Before Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1936 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 3, 1936. All contemporary 48 states were part of the 1936 United States presidential election. Voters chose 16 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.

New Jersey was won by the Democratic nominees, incumbent President Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York and his running mate incumbent Vice President John Nance Garner of Texas. Roosevelt and Garner defeated the Republican nominees, Governor Alf Landon of Kansas and his running mate newspaper publisher Frank Knox of Illinois. Roosevelt decisively carried New Jersey with 59.54 percent of the vote to Landon's 39.57 percent, a victory margin of 19.97 percent.[1]

Reflecting the decisiveness of his statewide victory, Roosevelt carried 17 of the New Jersey's 21 counties with majorities of the vote, breaking 60% of the vote in five. This result represented dramatic gains from 1932, when Roosevelt had narrowly carried the state by less than 2 points while winning only four counties in the state. In 1932, Roosevelt had won majorities in populous Middlesex County and rural Warren County, along with a plurality win in Passaic County, but much of Roosevelt's margin of victory was provided by a landslide win in heavily populated Hudson County. Roosevelt had received more than 70% of the vote in Hudson County, part of the New York City metro area.

In 1936, Roosevelt again broke 70% of the vote in Hudson County, but this time thirteen other counties flipped from voting for Herbert Hoover in 1932 to Roosevelt in 1936, enabling him to win the state with a much more comfortable 20 point margin. In North Jersey, Roosevelt won all but two out of the ten northernmost counties. Besides his landslide win in Hudson County, Roosevelt also received more than 60% of the vote in Middlesex and Mercer Counties and won majorities in seven other counties. Landon won only rural Sussex and Morris counties. Roosevelt decisively swept South Jersey, winning majorities in all seven of the southernmost counties in the state. Landon fared better in Central Jersey, where he won Monmouth and Ocean counties.

New Jersey in the early decades of the 20th century had been a reliably Republican state; prior to FDR's 1936 victory, the state had not given a majority of the vote to a Democratic presidential candidate since 1892, with FDR only winning the state with a bare plurality in 1932. However, in 1936, with the emergence of the New Deal Coalition, FDR made dramatic gains for the Democratic Party in New Jersey that would endure and transform it into a closely divided swing state with only a slight Republican lean, a pattern that would endure for much of the 20th century until New Jersey ultimately became a solidly Democratic state in the 1990s. The 1936 election would be the first of many elections to conform to that pattern, with the results making the state about 4 points more Republican than the nation.

Roosevelt was the first Democratic victor in Cumberland County since James Buchanan in 1856, and the first in Essex County since Grover Cleveland in 1892.[2] He was the first to win Hunterdon County since 1916, and the first to win Bergen, Union, Somerset, Mercer, Burlington, Camden, Gloucester, Atlantic, Cape May, and Salem counties since 1912.

Results

1936 United States presidential election in New Jersey
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticFranklin D. Roosevelt (incumbent)1,083,85059.54%16
RepublicanAlf Landon720,32239.57%0
National UnionWilliam Lemke9,4070.52%0
SocialistNorman Thomas3,931 0.22%0
CommunistEarl Browder1,6390.09%0
National ProhibitionD. Leigh Colvin9260.05%0
3620.02%0
Totals1,820,437100.0%16

Results by county

CountyFranklin Delano Roosevelt[3]
Democratic
Alfred Mossman Landon
Republican
William Frederick Lemke
National Union
Norman Mattoon Thomas
Socialist
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%data-sort-type="number"data-sort-type="number"%
Atlantic39,60561.22%24,68038.15%2960.46%470.07%600.09%14,92523.07%64,688
Bergen91,10750.09%89,62849.28%5300.29%4610.25%1520.08%1,4790.81%181,878
Burlington26,09557.78%18,64441.29%2390.53%1030.23%780.17%7,45116.50%45,159
Camden86,30069.74%35,87428.99%7570.61%5110.41%3000.24%50,42640.75%123,742
Cape May9,36352.16%8,53147.52%230.13%160.09%190.11%8324.63%17,952
Cumberland20,49258.06%14,50041.09%740.21%630.18%1630.46%5,99216.98%35,292
Essex174,85754.74%140,99144.14%2,3640.74%7140.22%5150.16%33,86610.60%319,441
Gloucester20,51656.02%15,81343.18%880.24%700.19%1350.37%4,70312.84%36,622
Hudson233,39077.65%65,11021.66%1,2590.42%5310.18%2690.09%168,28055.99%300,559
Hunterdon9,52651.75%8,83247.98%10.01%200.11%300.16%6943.77%18,409
Mercer47,70261.52%29,28337.77%2930.38%1510.19%1050.14%18,41923.76%77,534
Middlesex61,67964.69%32,95934.57%4890.51%920.10%1210.13%28,72030.12%95,340
Monmouth38,91448.18%41,46051.33%2280.28%980.12%670.08%-2,546-3.15%80,767
Morris24,97843.11%32,36555.86%3000.52%2110.36%890.15%-7,387-12.75%57,943
Ocean9,88946.27%11,29352.84%1170.55%310.15%420.20%-1,404-6.57%21,372
Passaic71,38458.42%49,04640.14%1,1130.91%3080.25%3390.28%22,33818.28%122,190
Salem11,61459.86%7,67139.54%310.16%360.19%500.26%3,94320.32%19,402
Somerset15,98750.14%15,80649.57%150.05%350.11%440.14%1810.57%31,887
Sussex6,86246.17%7,94553.46%250.17%100.07%190.13%-1,083-7.29%14,861
Union70,81353.61%59,55345.08%1,1620.88%3630.27%2060.16%11,2608.52%132,097
Warren12,47656.82%9,43742.98%10.00%240.11%190.09%3,03913.84%21,957
Totals1,083,54959.56%719,42139.55%9,4050.52%3,8950.21%2,8520.16%364,12820.02%1,819,122

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1936 Presidential General Election Results – New Jersey. Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. 1 December 2013.
  2. Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004, pp. 258-259
  3. Our Campaigns; NJ US President Race, November 03, 1936