1944 United States presidential election in Wyoming explained

See main article: article and 1944 United States presidential election.

Election Name:1944 United States presidential election in Wyoming
Country:Wyoming
Flag Year:1923
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1940 United States presidential election in Wyoming
Previous Year:1940
Next Election:1948 United States presidential election in Wyoming
Next Year:1948
Election Date:November 7, 1944
Image1:Dewey circa 1946 (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Thomas E. Dewey
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Home State1:New York
Running Mate1:John W. Bricker
Electoral Vote1:3
Popular Vote1:51,921
Percentage1:51.23%
Nominee2:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Home State2:New York
Running Mate2:Harry S. Truman
Electoral Vote2:0
Popular Vote2:49,419
Percentage2:48.77%
Map Size:290px
President
Before Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
Before Party:Democratic Party (United States)
After Election:Franklin D. Roosevelt
After Party:Democratic Party (United States)

The 1944 United States presidential election in Wyoming took place on November 7, 1944, as part of the 1944 United States presidential election. State voters chose three representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Wyoming was won by the Republican nominee, Governor of New York Thomas Dewey, running with Governor of Ohio John W. Bricker, by a 2.5% margin of victory, with 51.23 percent of the popular vote against incumbent Democratic President Franklin D. Roosevelt, running with Missouri Senator Harry S. Truman, with 48.77 percent of the popular vote, becoming the first Republican to win Wyoming since Herbert Hoover in 1928, sixteen years earlier.[1]

This election was conducted in the midst of The Second World War, which was going well for America and the Allied Powers, Dewey campaigned against The New Deal, arguing in support of a smaller government and repealing many of the wartime regulations on the economy, as the end of the war appeared in sight. Roosevelt, now running for an unprecedented 4th term, faced allegations of poor health, which he would attempt to dispel by campaigning vigorously across the country, especially in the last month of the campaign, in October.[2] Though many were weary of Roosevelt's long tenure, as Americans were used to Presidents only seeking two terms, Roosevelt's longstanding popularity would prove too difficult to overcome, and major American victories in Europe and the Pacific, such as The Liberation of Paris in France, and the Battle of Leyte Gulf in the Philippines gave Americans little to no reason to switch leadership in this election, and made Roosevelt unbeatable, with him leading Dewey in all pre-election polls.

Though voters nationwide would prefer Roosevelt over Dewey, voters in Wyoming, despite the fact that they had voted for Roosevelt by 6 points just 4 years ago in 1940, choose Dewey over Roosevelt, a sign of the conservative bastion that the state would become in future elections; indeed, Wyoming has only voted for the Democratic nominee twice since then, in 1948 and 1964. Dewey flipped 4 counties that Roosevelt won in 1940; Teton, Natrona, Park, and Platte. Additionally, he significantly closed the gaps in the rest of Wyoming's counties, losing the bellwether county of Albany by just 4.2%, compared to Wendell Willkie who had lost it by 18.5%, losing Sheridan by just 0.8% compared to Willkie's 7.5% loss, Laramie by 1.5% versus Willkie's 13.4% margin, Hot Springs and Carbon counties by 5% versus Willkie's 16.1% and 8.7% losses, respectively. Though his margin was narrow, and the state would remain a tossup in the next cycle, Wyoming's growing Republican trend was evidenced not only by Dewey being the first Republican to win it since 1928, but by Republican success in the 1942 midterm elections, when Republicans gained control of the state's Class II Senate seat and lone House seat.

This marked the first time since Grover Cleveland in 1892 that a Democrat won the presidency without carrying Wyoming. Despite his victory in this election, Dewey would go on to lose the state to Harry Truman in 1948, when he lost in an upset. This would be the last time until 1992 that a Republican would win Wyoming without getting 70% of the vote in at least one county. Wyoming weighed in as 10 points more Republican than the rest of the nation in this election.

Results

Results by county

CountyThomas Edmund Dewey
Republican
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Democratic
MarginTotal votes cast[3]
data-sort-type="number" data-sort-type="number" %data-sort-type="number" data-sort-type="number" %data-sort-type="number" data-sort-type="number" %
Albany2,97047.91%3,22952.09%-259-4.18%6,199
Big Horn2,65953.47%2,31446.53%3456.94%4,973
Campbell1,51462.87%89437.13%62025.74%2,408
Carbon2,69847.49%2,98352.51%-285-5.02%5,681
Converse1,60162.05%97937.95%62224.10%2,580
Crook1,24464.32%69035.68%55428.64%1,934
Fremont3,19359.46%2,17740.54%1,01618.92%5,370
Goshen2,67463.85%1,51436.15%1,16027.70%4,188
Hot Springs87747.51%96952.49%-92-4.98%1,846
Johnson1,38464.67%75635.33%62829.34%2,140
Laramie7,32649.27%7,54250.73%-216-1.46%14,868
Lincoln1,64943.52%2,14056.48%-491-12.96%3,789
Natrona5,19651.52%4,89048.48%3063.04%10,086
Niobrara1,31261.37%82638.63%48622.74%2,138
Park2,57153.25%2,25746.75%3146.50%4,828
Platte1,77653.49%1,54446.51%2326.98%3,320
Sheridan3,80249.61%3,86250.39%-60-0.78%7,664
Sublette68359.24%47040.76%21318.48%1,153
Sweetwater2,62331.90%5,59968.10%-2,976-36.20%8,222
Teton63756.07%49943.93%13812.14%1,136
Uinta1,30542.66%1,75457.34%-449-14.68%3,059
Washakie1,13059.26%77740.74%35318.52%1,907
Weston1,09759.27%75440.73%34318.54%1,851
Totals51,92151.23%49,41948.77%2,5022.46%101,340

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1944 Presidential Election Results – Wyoming.
  2. Jordan, David M.; FDR, Dewey, and the Election of 1944, pp. 119
  3. Scammon, Richard M. (compiler); America at the Polls: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics 1920-1964; p. 517