1936 United States Senate election in South Carolina explained

Election Name:1936 Democratic Senate primary in South Carolina
Country:South Carolina
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1930 United States Senate election in South Carolina
Previous Year:1930
Next Election:1941 United States Senate special election in South Carolina
Next Year:1941 (special)
Election Date:September 6, 1936
Image1:Senator James F Byrnes.jpg
Nominee1:James F. Byrnes
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:257,247
Percentage1:87.08%
Nominee2:Thomas P. Stoney
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:25,627
Percentage2:8.67%
Map Size:250px
U.S. Senator
Before Election:James F. Byrnes
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:James F. Byrnes
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1936 South Carolina United States Senate election was held on November 2, 1936 to select the U.S. Senator from the state of South Carolina. Incumbent Democratic Senator James F. Byrnes won the Democratic primary and defeated two Republican candidates in the general election to win another six-year term.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Campaign

Byrnes was criticized for his enthusiastic support of the President Roosevelt's New Deal and both Stoney and Harillee argued that the New Deal's agriculture programs were destroying states' rights in South Carolina and bringing the state into the fold of a federal bureaucracy, but Byrnes responded by stating the New Deal was needed to assist South Carolinians during the economic hardships of the Great Depression and pointed out that agricultural prices had improved because of it.

Results

The attacks on Byrnes would be very ineffective and he went on to win the primary with over 87% of the vote.[2]

Democratic Primary
CandidateVotes%
James F. Byrnes 257,247 87.1
Thomas Porcher Stoney 25,627 8.7
William Curry Harllee 12,551 4.2

General election

Campaign

Since the end of Reconstruction in 1877, the Democratic Party dominated the politics of South Carolina and its statewide candidates were never seriously challenged. Byrnes did not campaign for the general election as there was no chance of defeat. The Republicans were split between two factions that wanted to control the spoils system should a Republican victory occur in the Presidential election. They did not compete against Byrnes, but were rather competing against each other to show the national Republican Party who held more influence in the state.

Results

|-| style="color:inherit;background:#FF3333" || Tolbert Republican | Joseph Augustis Tolbert| align="right" | 961| align="right" | 0.83%| align="right" | N/A|-| style="color:inherit;background:#FF3333" || Hambright Republican | Marion W. Seabrook| align="right" | 702| align="right" | 0.61%| align="right" | N/A|-|-| | colspan=5 |Democratic hold|-

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Herald-Journal - Google News Archive Search.
  2. News: POLITICAL NOTES: Southern Send-Off . https://web.archive.org/web/20081215085738/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,847800,00.html . dead . December 15, 2008 . Time . September 7, 1936.