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County results McGill: 40−50% 50−60% 60−70% 70−80% 80−90% Ames: 40−50% 50−60% 60−70% 70−80% 80−90% Unknown/No Vote: | |||||||||||||||||
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The1886 Minnesota gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 1886, to elect thegovernor of Minnesota. IncumbentLucius Frederick Hubbard was not seeking a third term. This was the first gubernatorial election held in Minnesota on an even-numbered year.
The Republican State Convention was held on September 22, 1886. Five candidates contested in the primary. McGill,Charles A. Gilman,John L. Gibbs,Albert Scheffer, andTheodore H. Barrett. Barrett dropped out after the first informal ballot. For the fourth ballot, the supporters of Gilman and Gibbs began to rally around Sheffer in an effort to defeat McGill. However, not enough Gibbs and Gilman voters switched to Sheffer in the ballot, and instead split the vote, resulting in a McGill victory in the primary.[1]
The Democratic State Convention was held on September 23, 1886. Prior to the convention even beginning, there were great political dealings regardingA. A. Ames. Ames was the only major Democratic candidate, however to win the nomination he was expected to agree to reform some of his positions to appease assumed to-be convention leaders and major party bossesMichael Doran andPatrick H. Kelly. Mainly, this included Ames allowing for them to re-organize the state Democratic party to their wishes. If Ames would fail to fall in line, Doran was expected to run against him in the primary. Kelly soon became a strong supporter of Ames. Ames would then collaborate with Kelly andIgnatius Donnelly to agree to support his campaign on the condition that Ames would be able to select a new central committee for the party, which really meant the ability to remove Doran from party leadership. The deal was successful.[2]
Come the convention day itself, Donnelly and Ames would make their platform, endorsed by theFarmer's Alliance andKnights of Labor, the official platform of the State Democratic Party. Further controversy occurred when the nomination of Ames was presented as a motion of the convention, instead of a primary. It was hotly debated, with delegate G.A. Lafayette expressing the opinion that "If the convention was sensible, it would not indorse anybody for governor." What followed were further arguments, and even an accusation of bribery, between delegates. The arguments became unruly enough, Donnelly amended the motion to state the party "endorses nobody". However, after only a few minutes, some men called for a motion to re-endorse Ames. At this time, Ames remarked that he was now powerless over the convention. After Ames was nominated, and amid rising arguments and increasingly large claims of corruption from many sides, Donnelly announced his intention to kick delegates from the Farmer's Alliance out of the convention and repeal all motions they had proposed. The convention began chanting "NO! NO!". The motion was passed. Following the chaotic convention, Donnelly was removed from his position and Doran re-took his position as Chairman of the party.[3]
The narrow margin of victory sparked controversy over who was the actual winner, and the election was contested until Ames decided the effort was not worth the time and conceded.[4]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Andrew Ryan McGill | 107,064 | 48.54 | |
| Democratic | A. A. Ames | 104,464 | 47.36 | |
| Prohibition | James E. Childs | 9,030 | 4.09 | |
| Total votes | 220,558 | 100 | ||
| Republicanhold | ||||