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County results Javits: 50–60% 60–70% 70–80% Wagner: 50–60% 60–70% | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TheUnited States Senate election of 1956 in New York was held on November 6, 1956. Incumbent SenatorHerbert H. Lehman retired after one full term in the Senate. RepublicanAttorney General of New York Jacob K. Javits defeatedMayor of New York City Robert F. Wagner Jr. to win the open seat.
The major parties met on September 10 in Albany and nominated Javits and Wagner unanimously, though not without some pre-convention campaigning.
Incumbent SenatorHerbert H. Lehman decided against seeking re-election at the age of 78.[1]
Several candidates put their name forward for the Democratic nomination. RepresentativeEmanuel Celler expressed his willingness to "make the ascent," citing his long service in the House as a "stepping stone."[1]
Eventually, the party was able to persuadeRobert F. Wagner Jr. to run, and the field was cleared for him.[2]
TheDemocratic state convention met on September 10 atAlbany and nominatedMayor of New York City Robert F. Wagner Jr. by acclamation.[3][2]
Jacob Javits began his campaign for the Republican nomination as early as 1954, almost immediately upon taking office as Attorney General.[5] He openly solicited support from key leaders around the state, going around his party to do so. In essence, he was able to wall off the nomination before another strong candidate could challenge him.[5]
During the pre-convention campaign, Javits was criticized by fellow Republicans for being soft oncommunism, particularly during his time in Congress. He voted against theMundt-Nixon Bill, which would have required registration of Communist Party members, and was one of only 10 Representatives to vote against a wiretap bill sponsored by his New York colleagueKenneth Keating.[6] In September, he testified before theSenate Internal Security Subcommittee to "clear his name" regarding rumors linking him personally to theCommunist Party, including ex-communistBella Dodd's testimony that she had guided Javits's early political career. He testified that he had "no connections" to Communists and that his House record was "effectively anti-Communist." Though he admitted he had met with Dodd in 1946, he said he had not known she was a Communist Party activist.[7] He had in fact voted for a number of measures opposed by communists, primarily on international affairs and national security, including theMarshall Plan, aid to Greece, Turkey, and Korea, extension of the draft, and appropriations for national defense.[6]
Javits also faced criticism for his liberalism more generally,[6] especially on those occasions when he opposed theEisenhower administration.[5] In the 81st Congress, he voted with his party only 27 percent of the time. During the 82nd Congress, when Republicans were returned to the minority, he voted the Republican line only 15 percent of the time versus 80 percent for the average Republican.[6] He voted in favor of public housing, expansion of theTennessee Valley Authority, state ownership of the Niagara power plant, and federal consumer and industrial regulations. He voted against theTaft-Hartley Act and theImmigration and Nationality Act of 1952.[6] Because of Javits's tendency to break from the party, some Republicans hoped to engineer the nomination of former GovernorThomas E. Dewey orHerbert Brownell instead.[6] Most, however, feared that nominating a less popular candidate would harm President Eisenhower's chances in New York.[5]
Most of the criticism of Javits came fromupstate New York and eventually settled onJ. Raymond McGovern, the former state Comptroller, as its standard-bearer.[4][8] Two far stronger candidates, Governor Dewey andDouglas MacArthur, declined to back movements to draft them as candidates, though Dewey's denial was far more emphatic. A third candidate,Dean Alfange, withdrew after finding little support among delegates.[4]
By the time the convention arrived on September 10, Javits had withstood most of the criticism against him and an alternative had failed to emerge. In a crucial private meeting before the convention, the executive committee of the party endorsed Javits by a vote of 17 to 8 for McGovern. Failed attempts were made to present Dewey or MacArthur as alternatives. Discussion of Javits's alleged ties to communists were discussed, but the committee members agreed that Javits had acquitted himself well before the Senate subcommittee. Supporters on the committee argued that any losses upstate would be made up by gains inNew York City.[4]
The vote was then made formally unanimous, with the dissenters agreeing not to publicly criticize Javits or allow their names to be used.[5] Javits appeared before the committee to accept the nomination.[4]
The convention met on September 10 and nominated Javits unanimously.[9] McGovern gave the nominating speech for Javits, having bowed out upon realization that he could not win.
TheLiberal Party endorsed Wagner, the Democratic nominee, for Senate.[10]
With twoNew York City candidates, the campaign was expected to center on the city, with upstate New York taking a back seat.[5]
On October 1, a movement was launched to vote for General of the ArmyDouglas MacArthur as awrite-in candidate.[11] On October 2, MacArthur disavowed the campaign and stated that he was not a candidate.[12]
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Jacob K. Javits | 3,723,933 | 53.27% | |
| Democratic | Robert F. Wagner Jr. | 2,964,511 | 42.42% | |
| Liberal | Robert F. Wagner Jr. | 300,648 | 4.30% | |
| Total | Robert F. Wagner, Jr. | 3,265,159 | 46.71% | |
| Write-in | Douglas MacArthur | 1,312 | 0.02% | |
| Total votes | 6,990,404 | 100.00% | ||