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1950 California gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1950 California gubernatorial election

← 1946
November 7, 1950
1954 →
 
NomineeEarl WarrenJames Roosevelt
PartyRepublicanDemocratic
Popular vote2,461,7541,333,856
Percentage64.85%35.14%

County results
Warren:     50–60%     60–70%     70–80%     80–90%

Governor before election

Earl Warren
Republican

ElectedGovernor

Earl Warren
Republican

Elections in California
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Elections by year

The1950 California gubernatorial election was held on November 7, 1950. For the last time, Warren was reelectedgovernor in alandslide over theDemocratic opponent,James Roosevelt, the son ofPresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt.

Warren is the last Republican gubernatorial nominee to have wonAlameda County, along with being the last nominee of any party to sweep every county in the state.[1]

Primary elections

[edit]

Primary elections were held on June 6, 1950.[2]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticJames Roosevelt969,43355.56%
DemocraticEarl Warren (incumbent)719,46841.23%
DemocraticWelburn Mayock27,5531.58%
DemocraticOlindo R. Angelillo10,5340.60%
DemocraticRoy E. Land10,0650.58%
DemocraticWilliam E. Riker7,9040.45%
Total votes1,744,957100.00%

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanEarl Warren (incumbent)1,101,41188.40%
RepublicanJames Roosevelt120,3289.66%
RepublicanRoy E. Land9,1490.73%
RepublicanOlindo R. Angelillo7,9660.64%
RepublicanWilliam E. Riker7,0530.57%
Total votes1,245,907100.00%

Independent–Progressive primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

Results

[edit]
Independent–Progressive primary results[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%
Independent-ProgressiveJames Roosevelt (write-in)[a]3,156100.00%
Total votes3,156100.00%

General election results

[edit]
1950 California gubernatorial election[8]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
RepublicanEarl Warren (incumbent)2,461,75464.85%−26.79%
DemocraticJames Roosevelt1,333,85635.14%+35.01%
Scattering4800.01%
Majority1,127,89829.71%
Total votes3,796,090100.00%
RepublicanholdSwing-61.80%

Results by county

[edit]
CountyEarl Warren
Republican
James Roosevelt
Democratic
Scattering
Write-in
MarginTotal votes cast[8]
#%#%#%#%
Alameda177,33061.52%110,87638.47%310.01%66,45423.06%288,237
Alpine10980.74%2619.26%00.00%8361.48%135
Amador2,21656.26%1,72343.74%00.00%49312.52%3,939
Butte14,36562.07%8,77937.93%00.00%5,58624.14%23,144
Calaveras2,81559.98%1,87840.02%00.00%93719.97%4,693
Colusa2,82572.14%1,09127.86%00.00%1,73444.28%3,916
Contra Costa53,48657.56%39,43042.43%70.01%14,05615.13%92,923
Del Norte2,09165.16%1,11834.84%00.00%97330.32%3,209
El Dorado4,58862.64%2,73637.36%00.00%1,85225.29%7,324
Fresno56,98765.69%29,76434.31%70.01%27,22331.38%86,758
Glenn3,94871.86%1,54528.12%10.02%2,40343.74%5,494
Humboldt14,94662.04%9,14337.96%00.00%5,80324.09%24,089
Imperial8,87969.22%3,94730.77%10.01%4,93238.45%12,827
Inyo2,88674.55%98525.45%00.00%1,90149.11%3,871
Kern39,25060.95%25,14339.04%60.01%14,10721.91%64,399
Kings7,69462.82%4,55237.17%10.01%3,14225.66%12,247
Lake3,70868.15%1,73031.80%30.06%1,97836.35%5,441
Lassen3,12056.02%2,44943.98%00.00%67112.05%5,569
Los Angeles1,005,34463.94%566,80536.05%2730.02%438,53927.89%1,572,422
Madera6,10262.45%3,66937.55%00.00%2,43324.90%9,771
Marin25,34777.31%7,43522.68%60.02%17,91254.63%32,788
Mariposa1,60365.91%82934.09%00.00%77431.83%2,432
Mendocino7,82461.09%4,98338.91%10.01%2,84122.18%12,808
Merced11,47664.00%6,45435.99%10.01%5,02228.01%17,931
Modoc2,27565.13%1,21834.87%00.00%1,05730.26%3,493
Mono70276.89%21123.11%00.00%49153.78%913
Monterey22,85866.10%11,72133.89%40.01%11,13732.20%34,583
Napa11,42970.14%4,86629.86%00.00%6,56340.28%16,295
Nevada5,27665.32%2,80134.68%00.00%2,47530.64%8,077
Orange57,33575.38%18,72024.61%40.01%38,61550.77%76,059
Placer9,36158.12%6,74441.88%00.00%2,61716.25%16,105
Plumas2,92351.51%2,74948.44%30.05%1743.07%5,675
Riverside37,33466.92%18,44933.07%80.01%18,88533.85%55,791
Sacramento65,74864.98%35,44135.02%00.00%30,30729.95%101,189
San Benito3,23171.28%1,30228.72%00.00%1,92942.55%4,533
San Bernardino59,13863.39%34,13536.59%120.01%25,00326.80%93,285
San Diego128,30967.20%62,59832.79%260.01%65,71134.42%190,933
San Francisco200,32365.22%106,80934.78%60.00%93,51430.45%307,138
San Joaquin36,27560.96%23,22139.02%90.02%13,05421.94%59,505
San Luis Obispo13,04366.75%6,49633.24%20.01%6,54733.50%19,541
San Mateo68,54875.79%21,88024.19%160.02%46,66851.60%90,444
Santa Barbara25,51973.98%8,97626.02%00.00%16,54347.96%34,495
Santa Clara67,54870.77%27,87629.21%190.02%39,67241.57%95,443
Santa Cruz18,92668.39%8,74631.60%20.01%10,18036.79%27,674
Shasta7,15553.24%6,28246.75%10.01%8736.50%13,438
Sierra74161.14%47038.78%10.08%27122.36%1,212
Siskiyou8,14163.72%4,63536.28%00.00%3,50627.44%12,776
Solano20,26159.42%13,83840.58%00.00%6,42318.84%34,099
Sonoma27,89670.55%11,62929.41%140.04%16,26741.14%39,539
Stanislaus27,12169.73%11,77330.27%30.01%15,34839.46%38,897
Sutter5,40068.92%2,43531.08%00.00%2,96537.84%7,835
Tehama4,44362.24%2,69437.74%10.01%1,74924.50%7,138
Trinity1,43459.60%97240.40%00.00%46219.20%2,406
Tulare27,05064.29%15,01835.69%90.02%12,03228.60%42,077
Tuolumne3,66062.39%2,20637.61%00.00%1,45424.79%5,866
Ventura20,23161.70%12,55638.29%20.01%7,67523.41%32,789
Yolo8,65467.83%4,10432.17%00.00%4,66035.66%12,758
Yuba4,52758.62%3,19541.38%00.00%1,33217.25%7,722
Total2,461,75464.85%1,333,85635.14%4800.01%1,127,89829.71%3,796,090

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Was not listed as Independent-Progressive in the general election

References

[edit]
  1. ^"CA Governor, 1950". Our Campaigns. RetrievedJuly 11, 2023.
  2. ^Burton, p. 68.
  3. ^"Welburn Mayock, Ex-Democratic Aide".New York Times. New York, NY. March 14, 1970. p. 31. RetrievedJuly 11, 2023.
  4. ^"Angelillo, Olindo R."Social Networks and Archival Context. RetrievedJuly 11, 2023.
  5. ^"Democrats! These Republicans are Riding the DONKEY on Your Ballot!".Bakersfield Californian. Bakersfield, CA. June 5, 1950. p. 32. RetrievedJuly 11, 2023.
  6. ^"Political Muddle".Milford Chronicle. Milford, Del. June 16, 1950. p. 25. RetrievedJuly 11, 2023.
  7. ^abcCalifornia Secretary of State.State of California Statement of Vote Direct Primary Election and Special State-Wide Election June 6, 1950. Sacramento, California: State Printing Office. pp. 4–5. RetrievedJuly 20, 2024.
  8. ^abCalifornia Secretary of State.State of California Statement of Vote General Election November 7, 1950. Sacramento, California: State Printing Office. p. 4. RetrievedJuly 20, 2024.

Bibliography

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