1960 Democratic Party presidential primaries explained

Election Name:1960 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Country:United States
Flag Year:1959
Type:primary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1956 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Previous Year:1956
Next Election:1964 Democratic Party presidential primaries
Next Year:1964
Election Date:March 8 to June 7, 1960
Votes For Election:1,521 delegates to the 1960 Democratic National Convention
Needed Votes:761 (majority)
Candidate1:John F. Kennedy
Color1:81B5FF
Home State1:Massachusetts
States Carried1:10
Popular Vote1:1,847,259
Percentage1:31.4%
Candidate2:Hubert Humphrey
Color2:FFA500
Home State2:Minnesota
States Carried2:2
Popular Vote2:590,410
Percentage2:10.1%
Democratic nominee
Before Election:Adlai Stevenson
After Election:John F. Kennedy

From March 8 to June 7, 1960, voters and members of the Democratic Party elected delegates to the 1960 Democratic National Convention through a series of caucuses, conventions, and primaries, partly for the purpose of nominating a candidate for President of the United States in the 1960 election. The presidential primaries were inconclusive, as several of the leading contenders did not enter them, but U.S. Senator John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts emerged as the strongest candidate and won the nomination over Lyndon B. Johnson at the convention, held from July 11 to 15 at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.

Recalling the experience of 1928 Democratic nominee Al Smith (who was Catholic), many wondered if anti-Catholic prejudice would affect Kennedy's chances of winning the nomination and the election in November.[1] To prove his vote-getting ability, Kennedy challenged U.S. senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, a liberal, in the Wisconsin primary. Although Kennedy defeated Humphrey in Wisconsin, his reliance on heavily Catholic areas left many party bosses unconvinced. Kennedy thus faced Humphrey in the heavily Protestant state of West Virginia. Humphrey's campaign was low on money and could not compete with the well-organized, well-financed Kennedy team. Kennedy's siblings combed the state looking for votes, leading Humphrey to complain that he "felt like an independent merchant running against a chain store."[2] On primary day, Kennedy crushed Humphrey with over 60% of the vote, and Humphrey withdrew from the race.

Although Kennedy won the popular contests by comfortable margin, his main opponent, Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, did not participate (except as a write-in candidate). Johnson had a very strong base in the party establishment and gained the support of many delegates chosen through caucus and convention selection processes.[3] In the months leading up to the Democratic Convention, Kennedy traveled around the nation persuading delegates from various states to support him. However, as the Convention opened, Kennedy was still a few dozen votes short of victory.

Several major candidates served as Democratic Party nominees, with John F. Kennedy serving as the nominee for 1960, Johnson in 1964, and Humphrey in 1968.

Background

1952 and 1956 elections

After controlling the White House for five consecutive terms from 1933 through 1953, the Democratic Party had been defeated in two consecutive elections. Both times, popular World War II general Dwight D. Eisenhower defeated Adlai Stevenson II.[4]

At the 1956 Democratic National Convention, Stevenson surprisingly left the choice of his vice-presidential running mate to the delegates.[5] Following his nomination in Chicago, Stevenson made a brief appearance before the convention. He told the delegates he had decided "to depart from the precedents of the past" and that "the selection of the Vice Presidential nominee should be made through the free processes of this convention."[6] With one day's notice, the candidates scrambled to assemble campaigns for delegate support. The leaders were Estes Kefauver, who had run two populist campaigns for the presidency but lost the nomination each time to Stevenson, and John F. Kennedy, a relatively unknown United States Senator from Massachusetts but a scion of the powerful Kennedy family. Kennedy surprised observers by surging into the lead on the second ballot and falling only 39 votes short of the nomination, but on the third ballot, several favorite son candidates threw their delegations' support to Kefauver, and he prevailed. Kennedy gave a gracious concession speech, raising his national profile within the party.

1958 midterm elections

In the 1958 elections, the Republican Party suffered heavy losses due to a nationwide economic recession, the launch of Sputnik by the Soviet Union, and the galvanized opposition of organized labor following the passage of strengthened labor restrictions. Kennedy was re-elected in a historic landslide; the gain of ten Senate seats also buttressed the political power of Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, who had won the regional support of some Southern delegations in 1956.[7]

"Democrats won seats in the Senate in California, Connecticut, Indiana, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, Ohio, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming." Democrats conceded no seats they had obtained in previous years.

Candidates

The following political leaders were candidates for the 1960 Democratic presidential nomination:

Nominee

CandidateMost recent officeHome statedata-sort-type="date" CampaignWithdrawal datePopular voteContests wonRunning mate
John F. KennedyUnited States Senator
from Massachusetts
(1953–1960)

Massachusetts
data-sort-value="0"
(Campaign)
Secured nomination: July 15, 1960
data-sort-value="1,847,259" 1,847,259
(31.4%)
data-sort-value="10" 10 Lyndon B. Johnson

Other major candidates

These candidates participated in multiple state primaries or were included in multiple major national polls.

CandidateMost recent officeHome statedata-sort-type="date" CampaignWithdrawal date
Lyndon B. JohnsonUnited States Senator
from Texas
(1949–1961)

Texas

Announced: July 1960
(Campaign)
Hubert HumphreyUnited States Senator
from Minnesota
(1949–1964, 1971–1978)

Minnesota
data-sort-value="03-04-2016"
Announced: December 30, 1959
Withdrew: May 10, 1960
(Campaign)
Adlai Stevenson IIGovernor
of Illinois
(1949–1953)

Illinois
data-sort-value="03-04-2016" (Campaign)
Stuart SymingtonU.S. Senator
from Missouri

(1953–1976)

Missouri
(Campaign)
Robert B. Meyner[8] Governor
of New Jersey
(1954–1962)

New Jersey
data-sort-value="03-04-2016" (Campaign)
Wayne MorseUnited States Senator
from Oregon
(1945–1969)

Oregon
(Campaign)

Favorite sons

The following candidates ran only in their home state's primary or caucus for the purpose of controlling its delegate slate at the convention and did not appear to be considered national candidates by the media.

Declined to run

The following persons were listed in two or more major national polls or were the subject of media speculation surrounding their potential candidacy, but declined to actively seek the nomination.

Polling

National polling

Poll sourcePublication
Gallup[9] Aug. 11, 19575%29%23%8%5%14%16%
Gallup[10] Nov. 16, 19573%26%19%11%5%15%21%
Gallup[11] June 11, 19583%16%19%12%23%4%8%15%
Gallup[12] Nov. 30, 19581%11%23%6%29%5%11%14%
Gallup[13] Jan. 25, 19594%10%25%7%29%4%12%9%
Gallup[14] April 5, 195912%28%9%27%5%11%9%
Gallup[15] May 18, 19595%10%25%13%26%7%6%8%
Gallup[16] June 10, 19596%26%12%29%4%6%8%
Gallup[17] July 9, 19594%11%29%14%25%6%4%7%
Gallup[18] Aug. 14, 19592%5%9%26%12%26%7%6%7%
Gallup[19] Sep. 27, 19591%5%9%30%10%26%6%8%5%
Gallup[20] Nov. 18, 19593%4%10%27%11%26%6%5%8%
Gallup[21] Dec. 18, 19593%4%10%24%14%26%5%4%10%
Gallup[22] Jan. 29, 19602%5%6%32%12%28%6%3%6%
Gallup[23] Feb. 26, 19606%6%35%13%23%5%5%7%
Gallup[24] March 27, 19603%5%34%15%23%6%6%8%
Gallup[25] April 20, 19603%7%39%11%21%6%5%8%
Gallup[26] May 27, 19607%41%11%21%7%9%4%

Two-way races

Kennedy v. Kefauver

Kennedy v. JohnsonKennedy v. Stevenson
Poll sourceDate(s)
Gallup[29] Dec. 3, 195842%42%16%
Gallup[30] Feb. 6, 195944%45%1%
Gallup[31] June 12, 195945%44%11%
GallupFeb. 28, 196050%43%7%
Look magazine[32] June 21, 196059%20%21%
Johnson v. Symington

Statewide polling

Wisconsin

Schedule and results

States by winner

DateContestPledged delegatesJohn F. KennedyLyndon JohnsonPat BrownHubert HumphreyGeorge SmathersMichael DiSalleGeorge H. McLainUnpledgedOthers
March 8New Hampshire primary111143,3727,527
April 5Wisconsin primary3123476,0248366,753
April 12Illinois preference primary034,3324,28314,552
Illinois delegate primary69
April 19New Jersey primary0217,608
April 26Massachusetts primary414191,6077946,762
Pennsylvania primary83183,07313,86059,880
May 3Indiana primary34353,83282,937
Ohio primary64315,312
Washington D.C. primary98,2396,127
May 8Texas caucuses[35] 6161
May 10Nebraska primary1680,4083,2027,082
West Virginia primary25236,510152,187
May 17Maryland primary24201,76924,35049,420
May 20Oregon primary17146,66316,319
May 24Florida primary29322,235
June 7California primary811,354,031646,387
South Dakota primary1124,773
TOTALS1,847,2591,354,031590,410322,235315,312646,387241,958369,072

Primary race

From the outset of the campaign, Kennedy's religion played a major role. Happy Chandler, the governor of Kentucky and a major power broker in the party, emphatically stated that Kennedy could not win Kentucky due to his Catholicism.[36]

New Hampshire: March 8

See also: 1960 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary. Kennedy faced trivial opposition in the neighboring state of New Hampshire and won overwhelmingly.[37] While campaigning in Madison, Wisconsin, Kennedy expressed enthusiasm about the New Hampshire results: "I'm very happy about it; we did better than I thought we would."[38]

Wisconsin: April 5

The first sharply contested popular primary was in Wisconsin, where Kennedy faced Humphrey on April 5.

Kennedy had begun building campaign operations in the state as early as June 1959, when he hired Jerry Bruno, the organizer behind William Proxmire's election to the Senate, and laid the groundwork for a campaign headquarters in Milwaukee.[39] Kennedy formally announced his intention to run in Wisconsin on January 21, intending to show popular support for his campaign.[40] The wealthy Kennedy was far better funded than Humphrey, a man of relatively modest means.[41] Kennedy was also supported by his wealthy and glamorous extended family and friends; in his memoirs, Humphrey later lamented that "Muriel and I and our 'plain folks' entourage were no match for the glamour of Jackie Kennedy and the other Kennedy women, for Peter Lawford ... and Frank Sinatra singing their commercial 'High Hopes'. Jack Kennedy brought family and Hollywood to Wisconsin. The people loved it and the press ate it up."[42] Humphrey nevertheless believed that by beating Kennedy in Wisconsin, he could blunt the latter's momentum and overtake him in later primaries.

In Wisconsin, Kennedy won with the support of Catholic voters, including some Republican Catholics who voted in the Democratic primary.[43] [44] Days before the primary, Kennedy said it had been the "toughest, closest, most meaningful".[45] However, some observers found his margin of victory unexpectedly narrow and attributed it solely to Catholic support, while Protestants had backed Humphrey, leaving questions about Kennedy's ability to carry the convention or the election in the fall.[46] Humphrey remained in the race, setting up a second popular showdown in the more heavily Protestant state of West Virginia.

The Wisconsin race was covered in the documentary film Primary.

West Virginia: May 10

In West Virginia, Kennedy sought to show that he could win the support of Protestant voters and to remove Humphrey from the race, securing the party's liberal wing and setting up a showdown with Johnson for the nomination. Humphrey had high expectations, given that the state's population was rural, working class, ninety-five percent Protestant, and its delegates had backed him against Kennedy in the vice presidential contest four years prior.

Kennedy met the religious issue head-on, hoping to redefine the race as one of "tolerance against intolerance," rather than Catholic against Protestant. He also brought Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr. to campaign in the state; Roosevelt then raised the issue of Humphrey's failure to serve in World War II. Though Humphrey had tried and failed to serve due to physical disability,[47] Roosevelt attacked his lack of service record, publicly telling audiences, "I don't know where [Humphrey] was in World War Two," and distributing flyers that accused him of draft dodging. After the primary was over, Roosevelt apologized to Humphrey and retracted the claims, which he later called his greatest political regret.[48]

Kennedy continued to outspend Humphrey heavily in West Virginia; though he publicly claimed expenditures of $100,000, later estimates placed his family's overall spending at $1.5 million, dwarfing Humphrey's $23,000. Humphrey traveled the state in a rented bus, while the Kennedys used a family-owned airplane.[49] Humphrey later wrote of the West Virginia campaign, "as a professional politician I was able to accept and indeed respect the efficacy of the Kennedy campaign. But underneath the beautiful exterior, there was an element of ruthlessness and toughness that I had trouble either accepting or forgetting."

On May 4, 1960, Humphrey and Kennedy took part in a televised one-on-one debate at WCHS-TV in Charleston, West Virginia, ahead of the state's primary.[50]

Kennedy defeated Humphrey soundly in West Virginia, and Humphrey announced his withdrawal from the race that night.

Convention

Presidential nomination

See main article: 1960 Democratic National Convention.

Presidential tally:[51]

Vice-presidential nomination

See also: 1960 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection. Kennedy announced Lyndon B. Johnson as his choice of running-mate on the afternoon following his nomination.[52] Johnson was nominated by acclamation that evening.[53]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: John Kennedy As U.S. Presidential Hopeful. The Canberra Times. Associated Press. January 2, 1960. March 25, 2021. 2.
  2. Book: Schlesinger, Arthur M. . Robert Kennedy and His Times . New York . Houghton Mifflin Company . 1978 . 2002 . 0-618-21928-5 . 195 .
  3. http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=55200 Our Campaigns - US President - D Primaries Race - Feb 01, 1960
  4. Web site: CQ Almanac Online Edition . 2023-08-02 . library.cqpress.com.
  5. Web site: Stevenson 1956 Presidential Acceptance Speech C-SPAN.org . 2023-08-02 . www.c-span.org.
  6. Web site: CQ Almanac Online Edition . 2023-08-02 . library.cqpress.com.
  7. Web site: CQ Almanac Online Edition . 2023-08-02 . library.cqpress.com.
  8. Book: Oliphant . Thomas . Wilkie . Curtis . 2017 . The road to Camelot: Inside JFK's Five-Year Campaign . Simon & Schuster .
  9. News: Kefauver, Kennedy Tops in Party. Gallup. George. 11 Aug 1957. The Washington Post. E5.
  10. News: GALLUP POLL SHOWS: Kefauver Democratic Choice for 1960, Sen. Kennedy Second. Gallup. George. 17 Nov 1957. Los Angeles Times. 21.
  11. News: Stevenson Top Choice of Democratic Voters. Gallup, George. Los Angeles Times. 11 June 1958. 15.
  12. News: Stevenson Tops Poll of Democrats: Kennedy Leads in Gallup Survey of Independent Voters. Gallup, George. Los Angeles Times. 30 Nov 1958.
  13. News: STEVENSON LEAD IN POLL LOWERED: Kennedy Closes Gap Over November Gallup Rating; Still lndependents'-Choice. Gallup. George. 25 Jan 1959. Los Angeles Times. A.
  14. News: Kennedy, Stevenson Tie for Democratic Favor: Massachusetts Senator Gains Slightly, Gallup Poll Sampling Reveals. Gallup, George. Los Angeles Times. 5 Apr 1959.
  15. News: Stevenson, Kennedy Run Close: Gallup Poll Shows Johnson Third With Democrats. Gallup. George. 18 May 1959. Los Angeles Times. 6.
  16. News: Top Places Maintained by Stevenson, Kennedy. Gallup. George. 10 June 1959. The Hartford Courant. 16.
  17. News: Kennedy Moves Out Ahead of Adlai In Democrats' Rating for Nomination. Gallup. George. 9 July 1959. The Washington Post. A21.
  18. News: Kennedy and Stevenson Still Pace the Democrats. Gallup. George. 14 Aug 1959. The Washington Post. D4.
  19. News: Party Rates Kennedy No. 1. Gallup. George. 27 Sep 1959. The Boston Globe. A3.
  20. News: Stevenson Pulls Closer to Kennedy in Poll. Gallup. George. 18 Nov 1959. The Hartford Courant. 16.
  21. News: Kennedy Loses Ground Slightly, Johnson Gains. Gallup. George. 18 Dec 1959. The Washington Post. A21.
  22. News: Kennedy Scores Gain in Democrat Backing. Gallup. George. 29 Jan 1960. Los Angeles Times. 6.
  23. News: Kennedy Lead Gains as Democratic Choice. Gallup. George. 26 Feb 1960. Los Angeles Times. 21.
  24. News: Kennedy Keeps Lead in Democratic Vote. Gallup. George. 27 Mar 1960. Los Angeles Times. A.
  25. News: Kennedy Widens Lead in New Gallup Poll. Gallup. George. 20 Apr 1960. Los Angeles Times. 24.
  26. News: Kennedy In Same Spot As Previous Candidates. Gallup. George. 27 May 1960. The Hartford Daily Courant. 17.
  27. News: Kennedy Widens Lead Over Kefauver in Poll. Gallup, George. 7 Feb 1958. Los Angeles Times. 24.
  28. News: Kennedy Favored by Democrats. Gallup. George. 28 Feb 1960. Los Angeles Times. B14.
  29. News: Kennedy, Stevenson Tied As '60 'Show-Down' Choice. Gallup, George. 3 Dec 1958. The Hartford Courant.
  30. News: GALLUP POLL REPORTS:: Stevenson in Slight Gain on Sen. Kennedy. Gallup, George. 6 Feb 1959. Los Angeles Times.
  31. News: Stevenson, Kennedy in Close Race. Gallup. George. 12 June 1959. Los Angeles Times. 17.
  32. News: Poll Finds Nixon, Kennedy Favored. 21 June 1960. The Washington Post.
  33. News: West Virginia Poll Finds Kennedy Gain. Lawrence. W.H.. 6 May 1960. The New York Times. 1.
  34. News: Kennedy, Nixon in Poll Lead. The Austin Statesman. 5 Aug 1959. 3.
  35. News: 1960-05-09 . JOHNSON SWEEPS TEXAS CAUCUSES; Senator Assured of Control of State's Delegation to Democratic Convention . 2024-04-24 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  36. News: Kennedy Can't Take Kentucky, Chandler Says . January 13, 1960 . The Boston Globe . live . https://archive.today/20200305152028/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/46158108/the-boston-globe/ . March 5, 2020 . 16 . Newspapers.com.
  37. Book: O'Brien, Michael. John F. Kennedy: A Biography. 2006. 444. 978-0-312-35745-0 . St. Martin's Griffin .
  38. News: Many Factors Aid Kennedy's N.H. Triumph. March 10, 1960. William. Fulton. Chicago Tribune.
  39. Book: Savage, Sean J.. JFK, LBJ, and the Democratic Party. 2004. 978-0-7914-6169-3. State University of New York Press. registration.
  40. Book: Pietrusza, David. 1960: LBJ Vs. JFK Vs. Nixon: the Epic Campaign that Forged Three Presidencies. 2008. Union Square Press. 978-1-4027-6114-0.
  41. Web site: JFK and the Public View. shanti.virginia.edu.
  42. Book: Humphrey, Hubert H.. Education of a Public Man: My Life and Politics. Doubleday & Company. 1976. 978-0-8166-1897-2. 207.
  43. Lawrence W.H.; 'Wisconsin Buoys Kennedy's Drive but Poses Perils: Senator's Feat in Outpolling Humphrey and Nixon Aids His Presidential Fight'; Special to The New York Times , April 7, 1960, p. 1
  44. Janson, Donald; 'Religion Big Factor In Kennedy Victory', Special to The New York Times, April 6, 1960, p. 1
  45. News: Press Wisconsin Campaign; Sen. Kennedy, Humphrey In Final Drive. April 3, 1960. Chicago Tribune.
  46. Book: Solberg, Carl. Hubert Humphrey: A Biography. Borealis Books. 1984. 208. 0-87351-473-4.
  47. Book: Dallek, Robert. Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961–1973. 256. 978-0-19-505465-1. Oxford University Press. 1998.
  48. Book: Schlesinger, Arthur M. Jr.. Robert Kennedy and His Times. New York. Ballantine Books. 1996. 201.
  49. Web site: Battleground West Virginia Electing the President in 1960. Bryan Ward Jr.. wvculture.org. 26 Apr 2013. 21 Apr 2023. 12 Nov 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121112055237/http://www.wvculture.org/history/1960presidentialcampaign/article.html.
  50. Berquist . Goodwin F. Jr. . The Kennedy-Humphrey debate . Today's Speech . 10 September 2020 . 2–31 . 10.1080/01463376009385139 . 1 September 1960. 8 . 3 .
  51. http://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=58375 Our Campaigns - US President - D Convention Race - Jul 11, 1960
  52. Book: White. Theodore. The Making of the President 1960. 1961. Giant Cardinal. 212.
  53. News: Lawrence. W. H.. Johnson is Nominated for Vice President; Kennedy Picks Him to Placate the South. 11 September 2016. The New York Times. July 15, 1960.