1964 United States presidential election in West Virginia explained

See main article: 1964 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1964 United States presidential election in West Virginia
Country:West Virginia
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1960 United States presidential election in West Virginia
Previous Year:1960
Next Election:1968 United States presidential election in West Virginia
Next Year:1968
Election Date:November 3, 1964[1]
Image1:37 Lyndon Johnson 3x4 (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Lyndon B. Johnson
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State1:Texas
Running Mate1:Hubert Humphrey
Electoral Vote1:7
Popular Vote1:538,087
Percentage1:67.94%
Nominee2:Barry Goldwater
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Home State2:Arizona
Running Mate2:William E. Miller
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:253,953
Percentage2:32.06%
Map Size:300px
President
Before Election:Lyndon B. Johnson
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Lyndon B. Johnson
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1964 United States presidential election in West Virginia took place on November 3, 1964, as part of the 1964 United States presidential election. West Virginia voters chose seven[2] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

West Virginia was won by incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson (DTexas), with 67.94 percent of the popular vote, against Senator Barry Goldwater (R–Arizona), with 32.06 percent of the popular vote.[3] [4]

In a state where Goldwater was widely perceived as an extremist and excessively allied with the Deep South,[5] and where Johnson's campaign's presentation of his Republican opponent as a warmonger who would provoke nuclear war[6] had particular resonance in an isolationist Appalachian population,[5] the incumbent President's 67.94 percent vote share and 538,087-vote total are the highest percentage and vote count ever received by a Democratic presidential candidate in the state's history. West Virginia would be easily Johnson's strongest antebellum slave state and his sixth-best overall behind Rhode Island, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maine and New York, voting overall 13.29 percentage points more Democratic than the nation at-large even in a huge landslide.

, this is the only election since the Civil War in which a Democratic presidential candidate won Preston County and Upshur County.[7] It is also the last occasion when Berkeley County, Wood County, and Doddridge County backed a Democrat for President.[7]

This also remains the last time that West Virginia and neighboring Virginia would simultaneously vote Democratic at the presidential level. West Virginia was also Johnson's best state in the post-1996 “red wall” comprising states that have consistently voted Republican since 2000.

Results

Results by county

County[8] Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic
Barry Goldwater
Republican
MarginTotal votes cast
%%%
Barbour4,75865.26%2,53334.74%2,22530.52%7,291
Berkeley8,62861.26%5,45738.74%3,17122.52%14,085
Boone8,60977.73%2,46722.27%6,14255.46%11,076
Braxton4,78771.94%1,86728.06%2,92043.88%6,654
Brooke9,83474.51%3,36425.49%6,47049.02%13,198
Cabell28,43762.64%16,95737.36%11,48025.28%45,394
Calhoun2,62667.32%1,27532.68%1,35134.64%3,901
Clay3,18269.96%1,36630.04%1,81639.92%4,548
Doddridge1,58750.09%1,58149.91%60.18%3,168
Fayette19,99083.15%4,05116.85%15,93966.30%24,041
Gilmer2,83271.73%1,11628.27%1,71643.46%3,948
Grant1,49437.75%2,46462.25%−970−24.50%3,958
Greenbrier10,11268.97%4,54931.03%5,56337.94%14,661
Hampshire3,38169.65%1,47330.35%1,90839.30%4,854
Hancock14,00173.65%5,00926.35%8,99247.30%19,010
Hardy2,99669.61%1,30830.39%1,68839.22%4,304
Harrison25,68372.00%9,98628.00%15,69744.00%35,669
Jackson5,02253.53%4,35946.47%6637.06%9,381
Jefferson4,89272.02%1,90127.98%2,99144.04%6,793
Kanawha70,51164.75%38,38335.25%32,12829.50%108,894
Lewis5,24863.79%2,97936.21%2,26927.58%8,227
Lincoln5,85263.01%3,43636.99%2,41626.02%9,288
Logan16,99981.82%3,77618.18%13,22363.64%20,775
Marion22,04774.10%7,70725.90%14,34048.20%29,754
Marshall11,75765.56%6,17534.44%5,58231.12%17,932
Mason6,51159.31%4,46740.69%2,04418.62%10,978
McDowell18,04683.05%3,68416.95%14,36266.10%21,730
Mercer18,29867.26%8,90532.74%9,39334.52%27,203
Mineral6,34462.53%3,80137.47%2,54325.06%10,145
Mingo12,26679.55%3,15420.45%9,11259.10%15,420
Monongalia17,35872.84%6,47327.16%10,88545.68%23,831
Monroe3,36758.54%2,38541.46%98217.08%5,752
Morgan1,82049.38%1,86650.62%−46−1.24%3,686
Nicholas6,87872.35%2,62827.65%4,25044.70%9,506
Ohio21,17863.82%12,00636.18%9,17227.64%33,184
Pendleton2,49865.84%1,29634.16%1,20231.68%3,794
Pleasants2,28763.07%1,33936.93%94826.14%3,626
Pocahontas3,31765.91%1,71634.09%1,60131.82%5,033
Preston6,26460.94%4,01539.06%2,24921.88%10,279
Putnam6,91062.39%4,16537.61%2,74524.78%11,075
Raleigh23,60677.25%6,95222.75%16,65454.50%30,558
Randolph8,01272.86%2,98427.14%5,02845.72%10,996
Ritchie2,24445.23%2,71754.77%−473−9.54%4,961
Roane3,82052.54%3,45147.46%3695.08%7,271
Summers5,03771.97%1,96228.03%3,07543.94%6,999
Taylor4,44265.96%2,29234.04%2,15031.92%6,734
Tucker2,66466.97%1,31433.03%1,35033.94%3,978
Tyler2,27547.43%2,52252.57%−247−5.14%4,797
Upshur3,77451.14%3,60648.86%1682.28%7,380
Wayne11,57868.44%5,34031.56%6,23836.88%16,918
Webster3,75580.05%93619.95%2,81960.10%4,691
Wetzel6,23965.99%3,21534.01%3,02431.98%9,454
Wirt1,28658.86%89941.14%38717.72%2,185
Wood21,56059.06%14,94740.94%6,61318.12%36,507
Wyoming9,18873.12%3,37726.88%5,81146.24%12,565
Totals538,08767.94%253,95332.06%284,13435.88%

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United States Presidential election of 1964 — Encyclopædia Britannica. May 30, 2017.
  2. Web site: 1964 Election for the Forty-Fifth Term (1965-69). May 30, 2017.
  3. Web site: 1964 Presidential General Election Results — West Virginia. May 30, 2017.
  4. Web site: The American Presidency Project — Election of 1964. May 30, 2017.
  5. Book: Phillips, Kevin P.. The Emerging Republican Majority. 363–365. 978-0-691-16324-6.
  6. Book: Edwards. Lee. Schlafly. Phyllis. Goldwater: The Man Who Made a Revolution. 286–290. 162157458X.
  7. Book: Menendez, Albert J.. The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004. 334–336. 0786422173.
  8. Web site: Our Campaigns. WV US President — November 03, 1964.