Election Name: | 1932 New York gubernatorial election |
Country: | New York |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1930 New York state election |
Previous Year: | 1930 |
Next Election: | 1934 New York state election |
Next Year: | 1934 |
Election Date: | November 8, 1932 |
Image1: | Herbert_Lehman.jpg |
Nominee1: | Herbert H. Lehman |
Party1: | Democratic Party (United States) |
Popular Vote1: | 2,659,519 |
Percentage1: | 56.69% |
Nominee2: | William J. Donovan |
Party2: | Republican Party (United States) |
Popular Vote2: | 1,812,080 |
Percentage2: | 38.62% |
Governor | |
Before Election: | Franklin D. Roosevelt |
Before Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
After Election: | Herbert H. Lehman |
After Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
The 1932 New York state election was held on November 8, 1932, to elect the governor, the lieutenant governor, the state comptroller, the attorney general, the chief judge,[1] a U.S. Senator and two U.S. Representatives-at-large, as well as all members of the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate.
By a re-apportionment in 1932, the state of New York received two more seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, but instead of redistricting the congressional districts, the additional congressmen were elected at-large on the state ticket until the election of 1944.
The Socialist Labor state convention met on April 29, a day before the party's national convention, in New York City, and nominated Aaron M. Orange for governor; and Emil F. Teichert for lieutenant governor.[2]
The Communist state convention met on June 19 at Schenectady, New York, and nominated Israel Amter for governor; and Henry Shepard, a "Harlem Negro", for Lieutenant Governor[3]
The Socialist state convention met on July 3 at Utica, New York, and nominated Louis Waldman for the third time to run for governor; and Frank R. Crosswaith for lieutenant governor.[4] Crosswaith however declined, instead running for Congress in Harlem, and Charles W. Noonan was substituted on the ticket.[5]
The Law Preservation state convention met on October 3 at Syracuse, New York and nominated the Rev. Dr. John F. Vichert, of Rochester, a professor of practical theology at Colgate Divinity School, for governor; H. Westlake Coons for lieutenant governor; Ralph H. Culley, of Rochester, for attorney general; Francis A. Walters, of Rome, for comptroller; and Dr. D. Leigh Colvin for U.S. Senator. At first Vichert declined,[6] but a few days later changed his mind.[7]
The Republican state convention met on October 4 at Buffalo, New York, and nominated Colonel William J. "Wild Bill" Donovan for governor; and Assistant U.S. Secretary of War F. Trubee Davison for lieutenant governor; Mayor of Rochester, New York Charles S. Owen for comptroller; Moses G. Hubbard, of Utica, for attorney general; George Z. Medalie for the U.S. Senate; and the incumbent[8] Chief Judge Cuthbert W. Pound to succeed himself.[9]
The Democratic state convention met on October 4 at Albany, New York, and nominated Lieutenant Governor Herbert H. Lehman for governor to succeed Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt who had been nominated for U.S. President; M. William Bray for lieutenant governor; and re-nominated the other incumbent state officers, among them the Republican Chief Judge Cuthbert W. Pound.[10]
The whole Democratic ticket was elected in another landslide.
The incumbents Tremaine, Bennett, Pound and Wagner were re-elected. The incumbent Governor Roosevelt was elected President of the United States, defeating incumbent President Herbert Hoover.
Office | Democratic ticket | Republican ticket | Socialist ticket | Law Preservation ticket | Communist ticket | Socialist Labor ticket | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governor | Herbert H. Lehman | 2,659,519 | William J. Donovan | 1,812,080 | Louis Waldman | 102,959 | John F. Vichert | 83,452 | Israel Amter | 26,407 | Aaron M. Orange[11] | 7,233 | ||
Lieutenant Governor | M. William Bray | 2,469,371 | F. Trubee Davison | 1,806,941 | Charles W. Noonan[12] | 141,401 | H. Westlake Coons[13] | 71,862 | Henry Shepard[14] | 29,080 | Emil F. Teichert[15] | 9,913 | ||
Comptroller | Morris S. Tremaine | 2,468,228 | Charles S. Owen | 1,771,104 | Elizabeth C. Roth[16] | 153,299 | Francis A. Watters | 68,947 | Rose Wortis | 29,558 | John E. DeLee | 10,394 | ||
Attorney General | John J. Bennett Jr. | 2,472,739 | Moses G. Hubbard | 1,764,549 | William Karlin | 155,174 | Ralph H. Culley | 68,030 | J. Louis Engdahl | 29,737 | Simeon Bickwheat | 10,224 | ||
Chief Judge | Cuthbert W. Pound | Cuthbert W. Pound | 4,183,939 | Jacob Panken | 193,409 | George E. Powers | 31,076 | |||||||
U.S. Senator | Robert F. Wagner | 2,532,905 | George Z. Medalie | 1,751,186 | Charles Solomon | 143,282 | D. Leigh Colvin | 74,611 | William Weinstone | 29,052 | Jeremiah D. Crowley[17] | 10,328 | ||
U.S. Representative-at-large | Elmer E. Studley | 2,363,627 | Nicholas H. Pinto | 1,756,343 | G. August Gerber | 166,781 | Elizabeth A. Smart | 74,436 | Jacob Berlin[18] | 12,546 | ||||
U.S. Representative-at-large | John Fitzgibbons | 2,333,787 | Sherman J. Lowell | 1,740,325 | Fred Sander[19] | 163,648 | J. Elmer Cates | 68,622 | O. Martin Olson[20] | 11,623 | ||||
Results-New York Red Book 1933