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1960 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1960 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania

← 1956
November 8, 1960
1964 →
 
NomineeJohn F. KennedyRichard Nixon
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Home stateMassachusettsCalifornia
Running mateLyndon B. JohnsonHenry Cabot Lodge Jr.
Electoral vote320
Popular vote2,556,2822,439,956
Percentage51.06%48.74%

County results

Kennedy

  50–60%
  60–70%

Nixon

  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%


President before election

Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican

Elected President

John F. Kennedy
Democratic

Main article:1960 United States presidential election
Elections in Pennsylvania
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The1960 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania took place on November 8, 1960, as part of the1960 United States presidential election. Voters chose 32 representatives, or electors to theElectoral College, who voted forpresident andvice president.

Pennsylvania had historically been a powerfully Republican state that owing to the industrialization had become Democratic-leaning following theNew Deal:[1] 1960 saw Democrats surpass Republicans in registration for the first time since theCivil War.[2] However, the nomination of the second Catholic presidential candidate in John F. Kennedy complicated this issue because most of rural Pennsylvania was powerfully Protestant and extremely hostile to voting for a Catholic,[3] creating the potential for large anti-Democratic swings and trends in the northeastern non-YankeePocono Mountains. ThePennsylvania Dutch Country had been similarly hostile to Catholicism throughout the state's history,[4] and, owing to the opposition to Irish control of the Democratic Party, most of the state's urban Catholics would, before the New Deal, back dominant Republican machines in which they had no actual political power.[5]

However, in 1958 Pennsylvania – a state historically very reluctant to elect Catholics to major offices – had electedDavid L. Lawrence asgovernor. Nevertheless, his margin was much smaller than polls had previously predicted, with decreases vis-à-vis the 1954 gubernatorial election even in heavily Catholic urban counties.[6] Kennedy had emerged as the front-runner for the Democratic nomination but Pennsylvania Democrats were reluctant to run him for fear of an anti-Catholic reaction in traditionally Democratic rural counties. However, lobbying byBoston ArchbishopRichard Cushing meant Governor Lawrence released 64 of the state's 81 delegates for Kennedy[7] in a bid to stopAdlai Stevenson II from gaining a third nomination.[8]

Pennsylvania narrowly voted for Kennedy over theRepublican nominee,Vice PresidentRichard Nixon. Kennedy won Pennsylvania by a slim margin of 2.32%, being aided rather than hindered by his Catholic faith owing to the numerical power of his co-religionists in urban Philadelphia,Lackawanna County, and in the industrial areas aroundLake Erie.[6] This clearly outnumbered anti-Catholic sentiment in rural areas, which caused him to lose ground vis-à-vis Adlai Stevenson in 16 rural counties.[6] Kennedy became the first Democrat ever to win the White House withoutYork County and the second to win withoutColumbia County andBerks County. Kennedy also became the first non-incumbent Democrat sinceJames Buchanan in1856 to win the state.

Primaries

[edit]

Pennsylvania held its primaries on April 26.[9][10]

Democratic primary

[edit]
See also:1960 Democratic Party presidential primaries

With 81 delegates to the1960 Democratic National Convention, Pennsylvania was among the largest states to hold a primary.[9] Pennsylvania's nonbinding Democratic primary did not list candidate's names. However, write-in presidential preference votes were allowed. Delegates were elected directly.[9]

By January 1960, the Kennedy campaign became aware of "non-partisan citizen committees" operating in support of Kennedy's candidacy in the state, without any direct connection to his official campaign.[9] However, the state as a whole was still cold on Kennedy.[9] Its liberals were fervent supporters ofAdlai Stevenson II, and therefore hoped to see Stevenson nominated for a third time.[9] Philadelphia's Democratic organization, which had a significant sway upon the state's Democratic establishment, was led byWilliam J. Green Jr., who favored the prospective candidacy ofStuart Symington.[9] As the year progressed, Green and other leaders were persuaded by polls to switch their allegiance to Kennedy.[9] Liberal senatorJoseph S. Clark Jr. even made it known that Kennedy ranked at least second (behind Stevenson) in his own preference.[9]

However, despite others moving to embrace Kennedy, GovernorDavid L. Lawrence withheld his own support from Kennedy, even as he picked up momentum in the state.[9] Lawrence still reserved hope that Adlai Stevenson could be successfully nominated at the convention.[9] An olderCatholic Democrat, Lawrence was public in his belief that the country was still not ready to elect a Catholic president.[9] Kennedy would tell reporters that inquired with him about Lawrence's frequent comments doubting the viability of a Catholic presidential nominee by stating that he was, "deeply disturbed" by them.[9] Referencing Lawrence's own strong victory in the state's1958 gubernatorial election, Kennedy commented that, "It still behooves him now to be urging that this same opportunity should be denied to others."[9]

Kennedy handily won the primary.

Results

[edit]
1960 Pennsylvania Democratic Presidential Primary Results[10]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentage
DemocraticJohn F. Kennedy183,07371.3%
DemocraticAdlai Stevenson II29,66011.5%
RepublicanRichard Nixon15,1365.9%
DemocraticHubert Humphrey13,8605.4%
DemocraticStuart Symington6,7912.6%
DemocraticLyndon B. Johnson2,9181.1%
RepublicanNelson Rockefeller1,0780.4%
DemocraticOthers4,2971.7%
Totals100.00%

Republican primary

[edit]
See also:1960 Republican Party presidential primaries

Nixon was the only candidate on the Republican primary ballot and won nearly all of the vote. However, thousands of write-in votes were cast for other individuals.[10]

Results

[edit]
1960 Pennsylvania Republican Presidential Primary Results[10]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentage
RepublicanRichard Nixon968,53898.1%
RepublicanNelson Rockefeller (write-in)12,4911.3%
DemocraticJohn F. Kennedy (write-in)3,8860.4%
DemocraticAdlai Stevenson II (write-in)4280.0%
RepublicanBarry Goldwater (write-in)2860.0%
RepublicanOthers (write-in)1,2020.1%
Totals100%

Results

[edit]
1960 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania[11]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
DemocraticJohn F. Kennedy2,556,28251.06%32
RepublicanRichard Nixon2,439,95648.74%0
Socialist LaborEric Hass7,1850.14%0
Militant WorkersFarrell Dobbs2,6780.05%0
Write-insWrite-ins4400.01%0
Totals5,006,541100.00%32
Voter Turnout (Voting age/Registered)70%/88%

Results by county

[edit]
CountyJohn F. Kennedy
Democratic
Richard Nixon
Republican
Various candidates
Other parties
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%#%
Adams7,89537.86%12,93362.02%260.12%-5,038-24.16%20,854
Allegheny428,45557.07%320,97042.76%1,2930.17%107,48514.31%750,718
Armstrong14,79942.59%19,88357.23%630.18%-5,084-14.64%34,745
Beaver47,18256.04%36,79643.71%2120.25%10,38612.33%84,190
Bedford6,03032.41%12,54267.42%320.17%-6,512-35.01%18,604
Berks50,57244.87%61,74354.78%3910.35%-11,171-9.91%112,706
Blair19,44535.48%35,29764.40%670.12%-15,852-28.92%54,809
Bradford6,92029.82%16,25270.04%330.14%-9,332-40.22%23,205
Bucks57,17745.70%67,50153.95%4380.35%-10,324-8.25%125,116
Butler17,80538.45%28,34861.22%1520.33%-10,543-22.77%46,305
Cambria52,40958.48%37,06241.35%1510.17%15,34717.13%89,622
Cameron1,35338.80%2,12961.06%50.14%-776-22.26%3,487
Carbon12,39149.50%12,58650.28%550.22%-195-0.78%25,032
Centre8,60131.85%18,35767.98%460.17%-9,756-36.13%27,004
Chester30,16736.18%53,05963.64%1470.18%-22,892-27.46%83,373
Clarion5,50634.74%10,30765.04%340.21%-4,801-30.30%15,847
Clearfield14,21242.81%18,91156.97%720.22%-4,699-14.16%33,195
Clinton5,96539.34%9,18460.58%120.08%-3,219-21.24%15,161
Columbia9,32237.82%15,31062.11%190.08%-5,988-24.29%24,651
Crawford12,05038.99%18,75460.68%1020.33%-6,704-21.69%30,906
Cumberland15,96830.83%35,63668.79%1970.38%-19,668-37.96%51,801
Dauphin33,96235.33%61,72664.22%4270.44%-27,764-28.89%96,115
Delaware124,62947.79%135,67252.02%4820.18%-11,043-4.23%260,783
Elk8,39853.95%7,15545.96%140.09%1,2437.99%15,567
Erie53,72350.90%51,52548.82%2950.28%2,1982.08%105,543
Fayette41,56060.35%27,12039.38%1810.26%14,44020.97%68,861
Forest82835.51%1,49764.19%70.30%-669-28.68%2,332
Franklin12,08835.41%22,01064.48%360.11%-9,922-29.07%34,134
Fulton1,67238.18%2,69861.61%90.21%-1,026-23.43%4,379
Greene9,64556.21%7,49843.70%160.09%2,14712.51%17,159
Huntingdon4,71029.69%11,11670.07%380.24%-6,406-40.38%15,864
Indiana13,17441.15%18,75658.59%830.26%-5,582-17.44%32,013
Jefferson7,81136.01%13,84563.82%380.18%-6,034-27.81%21,694
Juniata2,61535.19%4,80564.66%110.15%-2,190-29.47%7,431
Lackawanna80,09861.72%49,63638.25%490.04%30,46223.47%129,783
Lancaster33,23329.70%78,39070.06%2660.24%-45,157-40.36%111,889
Lawrence24,30950.58%23,64649.20%1090.23%6631.38%48,064
Lebanon11,76131.49%25,52568.33%670.18%-13,764-36.84%37,353
Lehigh39,64042.10%54,27857.64%2490.26%-14,638-15.54%94,167
Luzerne102,99859.10%70,71140.58%5620.32%32,28718.52%174,271
Lycoming18,35137.85%30,08362.05%480.10%-11,732-24.20%48,482
McKean7,76736.07%13,69963.62%660.31%-5,932-27.55%21,532
Mercer24,24345.33%29,10954.43%1280.24%-4,866-9.10%53,480
Mifflin4,81631.68%10,31567.85%720.47%-5,499-36.17%15,203
Monroe6,31235.61%11,29963.74%1150.65%-4,987-28.13%17,726
Montgomery92,21239.18%142,79660.68%3180.14%-50,584-21.50%235,326
Montour2,62938.71%4,15461.17%80.12%-1,525-22.46%6,791
Northampton41,55250.48%40,68349.43%710.09%8691.05%82,306
Northumberland22,23344.61%27,56855.31%400.08%-5,335-10.70%49,841
Perry3,41329.50%8,13470.30%230.20%-4,721-40.80%11,570
Philadelphia622,54468.02%291,00031.79%1,7330.19%331,54436.23%915,277
Pike1,67629.49%4,00070.39%70.12%-2,324-40.90%5,683
Potter2,71534.67%5,09965.12%160.20%-2,384-30.45%7,830
Schuylkill44,43050.10%44,18749.82%700.08%2430.28%88,687
Snyder1,99819.75%8,10380.09%160.16%-6,105-60.34%10,117
Somerset14,73941.71%20,55458.17%420.12%-5,815-16.46%35,335
Sullivan1,47144.79%1,80855.05%50.15%-337-10.26%3,284
Susquehanna5,76036.07%10,20163.88%90.06%-4,441-27.81%15,970
Tioga4,07626.86%11,08273.04%150.10%-7,006-46.18%15,173
Union1,99321.04%7,46678.82%130.14%-5,473-57.78%9,472
Venango8,06431.90%17,19368.01%230.09%-9,129-36.11%25,280
Warren6,52535.86%11,61163.81%590.32%-5,086-27.95%18,195
Washington53,72958.28%38,34841.59%1200.13%15,38116.69%92,197
Wayne4,42532.04%9,36067.77%260.19%-4,935-35.73%13,811
Westmoreland85,64155.31%68,82544.45%3740.24%16,81610.86%154,840
Wyoming2,72630.56%6,18869.36%70.08%-3,462-38.80%8,921
York39,16441.02%55,92258.57%3930.41%-16,758-17.55%95,479
Totals2,556,28251.06%2,439,95648.74%10,3030.20%116,3262.32%5,006,541

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^See Phillips, Kevin P.;The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 135ISBN 978-0-691-16324-6
  2. ^Kennedy, John J.;Pennsylvania Elections, p. 191ISBN 0761864431
  3. ^Menendez, Albert J.;The Religious Factor in the 1960 Presidential Election: An Analysis of the Kennedy Victory Over Anti-Catholic Prejudice, pp. 193, 196ISBN 0786484934
  4. ^Menendez,The Religious Factor in the 1960 Presidential Election, p. 195
  5. ^Phillips;The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 34
  6. ^abcMcKenna, William J.; ‘The Influence of Religion in the Pennsylvania Elections of 1958 and 1960’;Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies, vol. 29, no. 4 (October, 1962), pp. 407-419
  7. ^Carty, Thomas;A Catholic in the White House?: Religion, Politics, and John F. Kennedy’s Presidential Campaign, p. 102ISBN 1403981302
  8. ^Donaldson, Gary;The First Modern Campaign: Kennedy, Nixon, and the Election of 1960, p. 75ISBN 0742548007
  9. ^abcdefghijklmnOliphant, Thomas; Wilkie, Curtis (2017).The road to Camelot: Inside JFK's Five-Year Campaign. Simon & Schuster.
  10. ^abcd"RESULTS OF 1960 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION PRIMARIES". John F. Kennedy presidential library. RetrievedJanuary 18, 2019.
  11. ^David Leip."1960 Presidential General Election Results – Pennsylvania". Dave Leip’s U.S. Election Atlas. RetrievedMarch 25, 2018.
State and district results of the1960 United States presidential election
Electoral map, 1960 election
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