1960 United States presidential election in Mississippi explained

See main article: 1960 United States presidential election.

Ongoing:No
Party Name:no
Type:Presidential
Election Name:1960 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Country:Mississippi
Flag Image:Flag of Mississippi (1894-1996).svg
Election Date:November 8, 1960
Previous Election:1956 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Previous Year:1956
Next Election:1964 United States presidential election in Mississippi
Next Year:1964
Image1:Harry F. Byrd (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Harry F. Byrd
(by unpledged electors)
Party1:Southern Democrat
Color1:ffdc43
Home State1:Virginia
Running Mate1:Strom Thurmond
Electoral Vote1:8
Popular Vote1:116,248
Percentage1:38.99%
Nominee2:John F. Kennedy
Party2:Democratic
Home State2:Massachusetts
Running Mate2:Lyndon B. Johnson
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:108,362
Percentage2:36.34%
Image3:Richard Nixon official portrait as Vice President (cropped).tiff
Nominee3:Richard Nixon
Party3:Republican
Home State3:California
Running Mate3:Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.
Electoral Vote3:0
Popular Vote3:73,561
Percentage3:24.67%
Map Size:304px

The 1960 United States presidential election in Mississippi took place on November 8, 1960, as part of the 1960 United States presidential election. Voters chose eight representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. This was the last election in which Mississippi had eight electoral votes: the Great Migration of Black Americans caused the state to lose congressional districts for the third time in four censuses before the next election.

The election saw the only case of a state being carried by a slate of unpledged electors. Mississippi voted narrowly for this slate, who voted unanimously for long-time Virginia Senator and political machine director Harry Flood Byrd, over the national Democratic nominee, Senator John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts. Republican nominee and outgoing Vice President Richard Nixon, from California, came in third, with his percentage of the vote practically unchanged from what outgoing President Dwight D. Eisenhower recorded in 1956.

Governor Ross Barnett, a segregationist, was faced with a severe dilemma upon becoming governor at the beginning of the year owing to the rigid opposition of Mississippi’s limited and almost exclusively White electorate[1] to the active Civil Rights Movement. Pressured by the "Citizens' Council" who wished to unite the South behind a White-supremacist Democratic candidate,[2] Governor Barnett repeated James P. Coleman’s strategy from 1956 and nominated two sets of Democratic Party electors for the presidential ballot.[3] The first slate was pledged to Kennedy, while the other was not pledged to any candidate. The aim of placing unpledged electors on the ballot was to gain leverage from either major party in a close election,[3] with the possibility of the House of Representatives electing a candidate more favourable to opponents of Brown v. Board of Education than either national major party nominee.[4]

Because the civil rights movement’s supporters regarded Kennedy’s record as poor on this issue, Senators John C. Stennis and James Eastland supported his candidacy, although state-level politicians were not at all supportive.[5] The state’s media saw a vigorous debate between the loyalist and unpledged Democrats in the week before the election.[6] Outside heavily French-settled Hancock County, which has greater cultural ties with Louisiana than with most of the rest of Mississippi, Kennedy’s Catholic faith was also considered suspect.[7]

Polls

SourceRankingAs of
The Philadelphia Inquirer[8] (Flip)October 3, 1960
Knoxville News Sentinel[9] October 23, 1960
Daily News[10] October 28, 1960
The Daily Item[11] November 4, 1960
The Clarion-Ledger[12] November 7, 1960
Hattiesburg American[13] November 7, 1960

Results

The following slates were nominated for the November general election:[14]

General election results

1960 United States presidential election in Mississippi[15]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
Unpledged Electors116,24838.99%8
DemocraticJohn F. Kennedy108,36236.34%0
RepublicanRichard Nixon73,56124.67%0
Totals298,171100.00%8

Results by county

CountyUnpledged Electors
Democratic
John F. Kennedy
Democratic
Richard Nixon
Republican
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%%
Adams2,52648.53%1,45227.90%1,22723.57%1,07420.63%5,205
Alcorn60113.43%3,05468.25%82018.32%2,23449.93%4,475
Amite1,65572.72%33814.85%28312.43%1,31757.87%2,276
Attala1,28139.20%1,33740.91%65019.89%-56-1.71%3,268
Benton34831.90%56852.06%17516.04%-220-20.16%1,091
Bolivar1,63843.46%1,11929.69%1,01226.85%51913.77%3,769
Calhoun1,29953.09%76531.26%38315.65%53421.83%2,447
Carroll84057.07%42528.87%20714.06%41528.20%1,472
Chickasaw1,36253.66%79131.17%38515.17%57122.49%2,538
Choctaw58435.48%81749.64%24514.88%-233-14.16%1,646
Claiborne65162.84%20519.79%18017.37%44643.05%1,036
Clarke1,47844.68%1,24437.61%58617.71%2347.07%3,308
Clay1,29554.60%62626.39%45119.01%66928.21%2,372
Coahoma1,38535.82%1,38635.84%1,09628.34%-1-0.02%3,867
Copiah1,95754.15%89624.79%76121.06%1,06129.36%3,614
Covington98544.81%84238.31%37116.88%1436.50%2,198
DeSoto73435.25%79538.18%55326.56%-61-2.93%2,082
Forrest3,15236.52%2,06823.96%3,41239.53%2603.01%8,632
Franklin1,11566.37%44126.25%1247.38%67440.12%1,680
George91744.28%84440.75%31014.97%733.53%2,071
Greene78149.49%55034.85%24715.65%23114.64%1,578
Grenada1,13248.31%52922.58%68229.11%45019.20%2,343
Hancock50214.97%2,13263.58%71921.44%1,41342.14%3,353
Harrison2,62115.64%8,96153.47%5,17730.89%3,78422.58%16,759
Hinds12,09441.72%5,81120.05%11,08338.23%1,0113.49%28,988
Holmes1,48457.81%62824.46%45517.72%85633.35%2,567
Humphreys73251.48%45932.28%23116.24%27319.20%1,422
Issaquena18142.79%17842.08%6415.13%30.71%423
Itawamba65323.57%1,75263.23%36613.21%-1,099-39.66%2,771
Jackson1,90820.80%5,00054.50%2,26624.70%2,73429.80%9,174
Jasper92638.03%1,14747.10%36214.87%-221-9.07%2,435
Jefferson72866.54%22920.93%13712.52%49945.61%1,094
Jefferson Davis98857.34%51029.60%22513.06%47827.74%1,723
Jones2,92827.81%4,87146.27%2,72925.92%-1,943-18.46%10,528
Kemper58734.31%93154.41%19311.28%-344-20.10%1,711
Lafayette90931.11%1,30844.76%70524.13%-399-13.65%2,922
Lamar1,04644.83%65127.90%63627.26%39516.93%2,333
Lauderdale4,15438.66%3,75534.95%2,83626.39%3993.71%10,745
Lawrence92355.91%46928.41%25915.69%45427.50%1,651
Leake2,01161.88%95329.32%2868.80%1,05832.56%3,250
Lee1,43821.65%3,65355.01%1,55023.34%2,10331.67%6,641
Leflore2,11245.51%1,21226.12%1,31728.38%79517.13%4,641
Lincoln2,18544.73%1,44929.66%1,25125.61%73615.07%4,885
Lowndes1,43030.56%1,24026.50%2,01042.95%58012.39%4,680
Madison1,58355.33%75326.32%52518.35%83029.01%2,861
Marion1,26541.54%1,08235.53%69822.92%1836.01%3,045
Marshall70039.22%68138.15%40422.63%191.07%1,785
Monroe1,55932.08%1,90139.12%1,40028.81%-342-7.04%4,860
Montgomery76138.65%62331.64%58529.71%1387.01%1,969
Neshoba1,71641.49%1,84044.49%58014.02%-124-3.00%4,136
Newton1,95657.94%91227.01%50815.05%1,04430.93%3,376
Noxubee87058.43%27718.60%34222.97%52835.46%1,489
Oktibbeha1,67248.95%91526.79%82924.27%75722.16%3,416
Panola1,40448.61%84129.12%64322.26%56319.49%2,888
Pearl River1,55644.67%1,27636.64%65118.69%2808.03%3,483
Perry55641.37%51438.24%27420.39%423.13%1,344
Pike2,63249.13%1,25823.48%1,46727.38%1,16521.75%5,357
Pontotoc79229.29%1,58458.58%32812.13%-792-29.29%2,704
Prentiss46815.68%1,77759.53%74024.79%1,03734.74%2,985
Quitman67443.32%58337.47%29919.22%915.85%1,556
Rankin3,11465.12%85017.77%81817.11%2,26447.35%4,782
Scott1,84153.02%1,02429.49%60717.48%81723.53%3,472
Sharkey43142.80%26326.12%31331.08%11811.72%1,007
Simpson1,56848.88%1,03432.23%60618.89%53416.65%3,208
Smith1,02534.79%1,56853.22%35311.98%-543-18.43%2,946
Stone81856.96%34323.89%27519.15%47533.07%1,436
Sunflower1,24135.96%1,03329.93%1,17734.11%641.85%3,451
Tallahatchie1,42154.72%83031.96%34613.32%59122.76%2,597
Tate84547.69%68638.71%24113.60%1598.98%1,772
Tippah46716.15%1,93967.05%48616.80%1,45350.25%2,892
Tishomingo66927.56%1,22250.35%53622.08%-553-22.79%2,427
Tunica24026.76%32336.01%33437.24%-11-1.23%897
Union68920.91%2,00160.73%60518.36%-1,312-39.82%3,295
Walthall1,08250.58%74734.92%31014.49%33515.66%2,139
Warren2,02130.68%2,28934.75%2,27734.57%120.18%6,587
Washington1,25818.90%3,10546.66%2,29234.44%81312.22%6,655
Wayne1,03646.39%70731.66%49021.94%32914.73%2,233
Webster1,17457.95%55327.30%29914.76%62130.65%2,026
Wilkinson83268.09%21617.68%17414.24%61650.41%1,222
Winston1,50550.74%1,05635.60%40513.65%44915.14%2,966
Yalobusha70436.99%65034.16%54928.85%542.83%1,903
Yazoo1,84755.30%71521.41%77823.29%1,06932.01%3,340
Totals116,24838.99%108,36236.34%73,56124.67%7,8862.65%298,171

Analysis

In the coastal counties, Kennedy improved considerably upon what Adlai Stevenson II achieved in 1956, but except for those counties around the cities of Natchez and Vicksburg, Kennedy otherwise showed a major decline from the Democratic result in 1956.[7] Kennedy held up best in the poor White upcountry counties that had historically been much more anti-Catholic than the Black Belt,[16] suggesting that voters throughout the state had become more suspicious of the Democrats’ civil rights policies. Since the Republican percentage of the vote essentially failed to change – Nixon lost Hancock to Kennedy and Adams and Warren to the unpledged slate but picked up Tunica and Lowndes Counties – the unpledged slate took almost all of Kennedy’s lost votes and thus shaded him for the state overall.

Despite Kennedy’s statewide defeat being only the second for a national Democrat in Mississippi since Reconstruction, this remains the last election when the coastal, French-influenced counties of Harrison and Jackson have voted for a Democratic presidential nominee.[17] The following landlocked counties have also never voted Democratic since: Choctaw, Jones and Smith.[17] Warren County would not vote Democratic again until Barack Obama won it in 2012.[18]

Notes and References

  1. See Book: Bullock. Charles S.. Gaddie. Ronald Keith. The Triumph of Voting Rights in the South. 31–33. 0806185309.
  2. Book: McMillen, Neil R.. The Citizens' Council: Organized Resistance to the Second Reconstruction, 1954-64. 0252064410 . 333.
  3. Book: Crespino, Joseph. In Search of Another Country: Mississippi and the Conservative Counterrevolution. 0691122091. 35–36.
  4. News: Hills. Charles M.. October 11, 1960 . Barnett’s Colonels Hear Elector Plan. 1, 6. Clarion-Ledger. Jackson, Mississippi.
  5. Book: Bolton, Charles C. . William F. Winter and the New Mississippi: A Biography . 1617037877 . 113.
  6. News: November 3, 1960 . Loyalist, Unpledged Slug Away on Television . 7 . Enterprise-Journal . McComb, Mississippi.
  7. Book: Menendez, Albert J.. The Religious Factor in the 1960 Presidential Election: An Analysis of the Kennedy Victory over Anti-Catholic Prejudice. 0786484934. 132–133.
  8. News: Hoffman . Fred S. . October 3, 1960 . How Election Looks Today . 1, 3 . . Philadelphia.
  9. News: October 23, 1960 . Populous States Are Key: Both Parties Claim Enough Votes To Win . A-4 . . Knoxville, Tennessee.
  10. News: Lewis . Ted . October 28, 1960 . Campaign Circus . 4C . . Jersey City, New Jersey.
  11. News: November 4, 1960. Poll of Editors Predicts Victory for Nixon-Lodge: Republican Ticket Seen Winning in 28 States and Democrats in 19. 3. The Daily Item.
  12. News: Hoffman . Fred S. . November 7, 1960 . AP Poll Puts Jack Ahead in Electors . 1–2 . . Jackson, Mississippi.
  13. News: Gould . Geoffrey . November 7, 1960 . Final Survey Shows Race a Tossup to the Finish . 16 . . Hattiesburg, Mississippi.
  14. Book: Mississippi official and statistical register 1960-64 . 1965 . Secretary of State of Mississippi . Jackson, MS . 393–395.
  15. Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections; 1960 Presidential General Election Results – Mississippi
  16. Book: Phillips, Kevin P.. The Emerging Republican Majority. Arlington House . 1969. 0870000586. New Rochelle, New York. 220, 234–237.
  17. Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  18. Web site: The Political Graveyard. Warren County, Mississippi Votes.