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1912 United States presidential election in Massachusetts

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Main article:1912 United States presidential election
1912 United States presidential election in Massachusetts

← 1908November 5, 19121916 →
Turnout63.4%[1]Decrease 1.7pp
 
NomineeWoodrow WilsonWilliam Howard TaftTheodore Roosevelt
PartyDemocraticRepublicanProgressive
Home stateNew JerseyOhioNew York
Running mateThomas R. MarshallNicholas Murray ButlerHiram Johnson
Electoral vote1800
Popular vote173,408155,948142,228
Percentage35.53%31.95%29.14%

County results
Municipality results

Wilson

  30–40%
  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%

Taft

  30–40%
  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%

Roosevelt

  30–40%
  40–50%
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%

Tie

  30–40%
  40–50%


President before election

William Howard Taft
Republican

Elected President

Woodrow Wilson
Democratic

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The1912 United States presidential election in Massachusetts took place onNovember5,1912, as part of the1912 United States presidential election, which was held throughout all contemporary 48 states. Voters chose 18 representatives, or electors to theElectoral College, who voted forpresident andvice president.

Massachusetts was won by theDemocratic nominees, New JerseyGovernorWoodrow Wilson and his running mate, IndianaGovernorThomas R. Marshall, marking the first time in history that the state had backed a Democrat for president. Opposing him were the Republican nominees, incumbentPresidentWilliam Howard Taft andVice PresidentJames S. Sherman, and theProgressive Party candidates, former PresidentTheodore Roosevelt and his running mate CaliforniaGovernorHiram Johnson. Also in the running was theSocialist Party candidate,Eugene V. Debs, who ran withEmil Seidel.

Wilson won Massachusetts with a plurality of 35.53% of the vote, Taft came in second, with 31.95%, and Roosevelt came in third, with 29.14%, Wilson's margin over Taft being 3.58%. Debs came in fourth, with 2.58% of the total vote. In terms of margin, Massachusetts was about 11% more Republican than the national average.

Massachusetts had long been a typical Yankee Republican bastion in the wake of theCivil War, having voted Republican in every election from1856 through1908. However, in 1912, former Republican President Theodore Roosevelt decided to run as athird-party candidate with his Bull Moose Party against incumbent Republican President William Howard Taft, splitting the Republican vote and allowing Woodrow Wilson as the Democratic candidate to win Massachusetts with a plurality of only 35.53% of the vote. Were Taft and Roosevelt voters united behind a single Republican candidate, they would have taken a combined majority of over 61% of the vote, but the split would instead prove fatal to the Republicans both nationally and in Massachusetts. As a result of Wilson's win, 1912 marked the first time in history that Massachusetts had ever given its electoral votes to a Democratic presidential candidate.

Theodore Roosevelt finished strong for a third-party candidate with 29.14% of the vote, about 2% more than he received nationally, although Massachusetts was not amongst his strongest states. Nonetheless, Roosevelt's performance remains as of 2020 the best-ever third-party presidential performance in Massachusetts.[2] The state's traditional Republican voters, especially in rural Western Massachusetts,[3] proved to be mostly loyal to President Taft as the official Republican nominee. While Roosevelt came in second place nationally ahead of Taft, in Massachusetts, Taft beat Roosevelt and finished second behind Wilson.

Results

[edit]
1912 United States presidential election in Massachusetts[4]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticWoodrow Wilson173,40835.53%18
RepublicanWilliam Howard Taft (incumbent)155,94831.95%0
ProgressiveTheodore Roosevelt142,22829.14%0
SocialistEugene V. Debs12,6162.58%0
ProhibitionEugene W. Chafin2,7540.56%0
Socialist LaborArthur E. Reimer1,1020.23%0
Write-insWrite-ins10.00%0
Totals488,057100.00%18

Results by county

[edit]
CountyWoodrow Wilson DemocraticWilliam H. Taft RepublicanTheodore Roosevelt Progressive "Bull Moose"Eugene Debs SocialistEugene Chafin ProhibitionArthur Reimer Socialist LaborTotal votes cast[5]
#%#%#%#%#%#%
Barnstable1,32226.57%1,24925.11%2,31546.53%200.40%671.35%20.04%4,975
Berkshire6,21136.10%6,39737.19%3,80922.14%5983.48%1240.72%640.37%17,203
Bristol12,42032.72%13,27934.98%10,63028.00%1,1182.94%3770.99%1390.37%37,963
Dukes21527.78%26934.75%27835.92%10.13%111.42%00.00%774
Essex20,69131.05%21,44132.17%21,09831.66%2,7164.08%4440.67%2490.37%66,639
Franklin2,04628.00%2,63636.08%2,26831.04%2693.68%731.00%140.19%7,306
Hampden10,62034.91%11,39337.45%7,09923.34%1,0943.60%1320.43%840.28%30,423
Hampshire3,08832.06%4,51246.84%1,60616.67%2923.03%1121.16%220.23%9,632
Middlesex36,68935.67%30,51129.66%33,51732.58%1,5301.49%4460.43%1740.17%102,867
Nantucket24743.79%12321.81%19434.40%00.00%00.00%00.00%564
Norfolk9,24431.41%9,65032.79%9,77933.23%6092.07%1010.34%480.16%29,431
Plymouth6,99129.56%5,59023.63%9,64540.78%1,2165.14%1710.72%400.17%23,653
Suffolk46,05947.07%24,17924.71%24,97725.53%2,1552.20%2990.31%1820.19%97,851
Worcester17,56529.88%24,71942.06%15,01325.54%9981.70%3970.68%840.14%58,776
Totals174,20835.64%155,94831.90%142,22829.09%12,6162.58%2,7540.56%1,1020.23%488,856

Analysis

[edit]

Taft carried the most counties in Massachusetts, winning 6 of the state's 14 counties, while Wilson and Roosevelt each took 4. Taft's support was strongest inWestern andCentral Massachusetts, his most significant win beingWorcester County, where he won with over 40% of the vote. Roosevelt was strongest in the southeast part of the state, his overall most significant win beingPlymouth County, where he won with over 40% of the vote. Roosevelt's most populous county win wasNorfolk County, although he only won it with a plurality of less than forty percent of the vote.

However, Wilson was able to edge them out statewide by holding on to the Democratic base of support in the cities. Wilson's most important county victory by far was winningSuffolk County, home to the state's capital and largest city,Boston, winning it with over 40% of the vote. Wilson also won heavily populatedMiddlesex County with a plurality of less than 40% of the vote.

While, due to vote-splitting, Massachusetts finally voted Democratic for the first time ever in 1912, this was not indicative of any long-term trend at the time. With the Republican base re-united in1916, Massachusetts returned to the Republican column and remained solidly Republican until the1928 election.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Bicentennial Edition: Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, part 2, p. 1072.
  2. ^Thomas, G. Scott;The Pursuit of the White House: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics and History, p. 433ISBN 0313257957
  3. ^Robinson, Edgar Eugene; ‘Distribution of the Presidential Vote of 1912’;American Journal of Sociology, vol. 20, no. 1 (July 1914), pp. 18–30
  4. ^"1912 Presidential General Election Results – Massachusetts". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. RetrievedFebruary 7, 2013.
  5. ^Massachusetts; Taylor, Charles Henry; Robinson, William S.; Stowe, William; Kimball, James W.; Coolidge, Henry D.; Sleeper, George T.; Clapp, E. Herbert; McLaughlin, Edward A.; Marden, Geo A.; Gifford, Stephen Nye (1858)."A manual for the use of the General Court".Manual for the General Court: v.ISSN 0196-5298.
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