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County results Sulzer: 30–40% 40–50% 50–60% Hedges: 30–40% 40–50% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The1912 New York state election was held on November 5, 1912, to elect thegovernor, thelieutenant governor, theSecretary of State, thestate comptroller, theattorney general, thestate treasurer, thestate engineer and two judges (to fill the vacancies caused by the retirement ofAlbert Haight andIrving G. Vann who reached the constitutional age-limit) of theNew York Court of Appeals, as well as all members of theNew York State Assembly and theNew York State Senate. The voters were also asked if they approved a $50,000,000 bond issue for "good roads construction", which was answered in the affirmative, with 657,548 in favor and 281,265 against.
TheSocialist state convention met on June 30 atAuburn, New York. They nominated again, like in 1910, Charles Edward Russell for governor;Gustave Adolph Strebel for lieutenant governor; and Henry L. Slobodin for attorney general. They also nominated Carrie W. Allen, ofOnondaga County, for secretary of state; Olin Hoxie Smith, ofSchenectady, for comptroller; Frank Ehrenfried, ofErie County, for treasurer; and Dr. Charles H. Furman, ofBrooklyn, for state engineer.[1]
TheProgressive state convention met on September 6 atSyracuse, New York. Oscar S. Straus was chairman. The convention nominated Straus for governor by acclamation amid great noise after the name of New York City ComptrollerWilliam A. Prendergast, the bosses' andTheodore Roosevelt's choice, was withdrawn byTimothy L. Woodruff.[2]
TheRepublican state convention met on September 27 atSaratoga Springs, New York.[3]
TheDemocratic state convention met on October 2 atSyracuse, New York.Alton B. Parker was elected permanent chairman with 412 votes against 33 forJohn K. Sague, the Mayor ofPoughkeepsie. Congressman William Sulzer was nominated for governor after the third ballot (first ballot:John Alden Dix [incumbent] 147, Sulzer 136,Herman A. Metz 70, Martin H. Glynn 46, George H. Burd 28,Francis Burton Harrison 21, William Sohmer 1; second ballot: Sulzer 141, Dix 124, Metz 68, Glynn 48, Burd 28, Harrison 27, Sohmer 2,Robert F. Wagner 2,James Aloysius O'Gorman 1,Victor J. Dowling 1; third ballot: Sulzer 195, Dix 87, Metz 76, Glynn 41, Harrison 21, Burd 9, Dowling 4, Wagner 3, O'Gorman 1, Ellison 1,George W. Batten 1,James W. Gerard 1; then Dix and Metz withdrew, and Sulzer was chosen). Ex-Comptroller Martin H. Glynn (in office 1907–08) was nominated for lieutenant governor by acclamation, and the convention adjourned an hour after midnight.[4] The convention met again on October 3, and nominated Mitchell May for secretary of state; re-nominated the other incumbent state officers Sohmer, Carmody, Kennedy and Bensel; and nominated William H. Cuddeback and John W. Hogan for the Court of Appeals.[5]
TheIndependence League state convention met on October 3 at Arlington Hall inNew York City. James A. Allen was Temporary and Permanent Chairman. They nominated Progressive Oscar S. Straus for Governor with 89 votes against 79 for Democrat William Sulzer, and then adjourned[6] The convention met again on October 4, and nominated a ticket made up by Democrats Glynn, Sohmer and Cuddeback; Progressives Call, Palmieri, Leland and Kirchwey; and the only Independence Leaguer John Davis for treasurer.[7]William Randolph Hearst himself endorsed Sulzer and Glynn.[8]
The whole Democratic ticket was elected in a three-cornered race.
The incumbents Sohmer, Carmody, Kennedy and Bensel were re-elected.
The Republican, Democratic, Independence League, Socialist and Prohibition parties maintained automatic ballot status (necessary 10,000 votes), the Progressive Party attained it, and the Socialist Labor Party did not re-attain it.
| Office | Democratic ticket | Republican ticket | Progressive ticket | Socialist ticket | Prohibition ticket | Independence League ticket | Socialist Labor ticket | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Governor | William Sulzer | 649,559 | Job E. Hedges | 444,105 | Oscar S. Straus | 393,183 | Charles Edward Russell | 56,917 | T. Alexander MacNicholl[9] | 18,990 | Oscar S. Straus | John Hall | 4,461 | |
| Lieutenant Governor | Martin H. Glynn | 665,762 | James W. Wadsworth, Jr. | 450,539 | Frederick M. Davenport | 351,427 | Gustave A. Strebel | 60,481 | Clark Allis[10] | 19,764 | Martin H. Glynn | Jeremiah D. Crowley | 4,669 | |
| Secretary of State | Mitchell May | 649,073 | Francis M. Hugo | 460,651 | Homer D. Call | 353,170 | Carrie W. Allen | 61,548 | Ben D. Wright | 20,240 | Homer D. Call | Edmund Moonelis | 4,396 | |
| Comptroller | William Sohmer | 658,392 | William D. Cunningham[11] | 463,901 | Horatio C. King | 341,706 | Olin Hoxie Smith | 61,457 | Bernard Clauson | 19,793 | William Sohmer | Robert Downs | 3,865 | |
| Attorney General | Thomas Carmody | 651,875 | Meier Steinbrink[12] | 457,838 | John Palmieri | 354,450 | Henry L. Slobodin | 61,284 | Ernest H. Woodruff | 20,175 | John Palmieri | John Joss | 3,867 | |
| Treasurer | John J. Kennedy | 650,530 | William Archer[13] | 458,174 | Ernest Cawcroft | 341,581 | Frank Ehrenfried | 61,311 | Arthur A. Amidon | 19,902 | John Davis | 12,672 | Henry Kuhn | 3,872 |
| State Engineer | John A. Bensel | 649,839 | Frank M. Williams | 461,822 | Ora Miner Leland | 357,226 | Charles H. Furman | 61,587 | Van Cleve C. Mott | 19,950 | Ora Miner Leland | Thomas J. DeLee | 4,545 | |
| Judge of the Court of Appeals | William H. Cuddeback | 654,626 | Frank H. Hiscock | 470,895 | Carlos C. Alden | 336,918 | Jessie Ashley | 61,588 | Erwin J. Baldwin | 19,537 | William H. Cuddeback | Edmund Seidel | 4,281 | |
| Judge of the Court of Appeals | John W. Hogan | 642,004 | Emory A. Chase | 467,743 | George W. Kirchwey | 348,887 | Leon A. Malkiel[14] | 61,094 | Gilbert Elliott | 19,443 | George W. Kirchwey | Carl A. Luedecke | 4,265 | |
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