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1964 United States presidential election in Wyoming

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Main article:1964 United States presidential election
1964United States presidential election in Wyoming

← 1960
November 3, 1964[1]
1968 →
 
NomineeLyndon B. JohnsonBarry Goldwater
PartyDemocraticRepublican
Home stateTexasArizona
Running mateHubert HumphreyWilliam E. Miller
Electoral vote30
Popular vote80,71861,998
Percentage56.56%43.44%

County Results

Johnson

  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%

Goldwater

  50–60%
  60–70%


President before election

Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic

Elected President

Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic

Elections in Wyoming
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The1964 United States presidential election in Wyoming took place on November 3, 1964, as part of the1964 United States presidential election. State voters chose three[2] representatives, or electors, to theElectoral College, who voted forpresident andvice president.

Wyoming was won byincumbentDemocratic PresidentLyndon B. Johnson, with 56.56% of the popular vote, against theRepublican nominee,ArizonaSenatorBarry Goldwater, with 43.44% of the popular vote, representing a margin of victory of 13.2%.[3][4] Johnson's victory was part of a nationwide landslide in which he captured many traditionally Republican states, and Wyoming was no exception.

Johnson enjoyed bipartisan support due to sympathy over theAssassination of his predecessor John F. Kennedy in 1963, along with support for many of his programs such as theGreat Society, which aimed to eliminate poverty in America, and theCivil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed racial discrimination. Goldwater, a believer in free markets and low taxes, famously opposed both of these programs, and suggested making social security voluntary, which cost him a great deal of support among moderates – including Republicans – who viewed him as too conservative.Nelson Rockefeller andGeorge W. Romney, the governors ofNew York andMichigan respectively, refused to endorse Goldwater. He did receive some support from Nixon and former PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower; however, the former wanted to see much of Goldwater's agenda struck down, while Eisenhower's support was limited to a single commercial, as he never fully forgave the Arizona Senator for calling many of his biggest accomplishments as president such as theInterstate Highway System "adime storeNew Deal.[5] Democrats successfully portrayed him as an extremist, most famously with theDaisy Television Ad. With Johnson's victory, DemocratGale W. McGeeheld his Senate seat andDemocrats flipped the state's sole congressional seat. They even managed to regain control of theWyoming House of Representatives and got within a single seat of capturing theState Senate, an astounding achievement in a state that political pundits had written off in the years prior as "too Republican".[6]

Despite his stunning defeat, Goldwater's campaign began a long term political realignment in American politics, with conservatives beginning to sway towards the Republican Party, ultimately culminating in the1980 presidential victory ofRonald Reagan, who had supported Goldwater in 1964, famously giving a speech on his behalf titled "A Time For Choosing", which raised over $1 million for the Republican nominee's campaign,[7] and launching Reagan into the national political spotlight. Additionally, many Northeastern liberals who had previously favored the Republicans began to move towards the Democrats, which would ultimately flip the Northeast blue in1992.

As of 2024, this is the only presidential race since1948 that Wyoming has voted Democratic; in fact, no Democratic presidential nominee since 1964 has reached even 40% of the state's vote. This is also the last occasion thatLaramie County (home to the capital and largest city of Cheyenne),Fremont County,Sheridan County,Park County,Uinta County,Lincoln County,Goshen County,Big Horn County,Platte County, andHot Springs County have voted for a Democratic presidential nominee.[8]

Results

[edit]
1964 United States presidential election in Wyoming[9]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticLyndon B. Johnson (inc.)80,71856.56%
RepublicanBarry Goldwater61,99843.44%
Total votes142,716100.00%

Results by county

[edit]
County[9]Lyndon B. Johnson
Democrat
Barry Goldwater
Republican
MarginTotal votes cast
#%#%#%
Albany6,01967.31%2,92332.69%3,09634.62%8,942
Big Horn2,69050.21%2,66849.79%220.42%5,358
Campbell1,19642.68%1,60657.32%-410-14.64%2,802
Carbon4,32266.68%2,16033.32%2,16233.36%6,482
Converse1,25044.50%1,55955.50%-309-11.00%2,809
Crook78039.12%1,21460.88%-434-21.76%1,994
Fremont5,98555.45%4,80944.55%1,17610.90%10,794
Goshen2,74951.35%2,60448.65%1452.70%5,353
Hot Springs1,38052.91%1,22847.09%1525.82%2,608
Johnson85234.19%1,64065.81%-788-31.62%2,492
Laramie16,05965.22%8,56334.78%7,49630.44%24,622
Lincoln2,27355.66%1,81144.34%46211.32%4,084
Natrona11,16752.42%10,13547.58%1,0324.84%21,302
Niobrara84342.90%1,12257.10%-279-14.20%1,965
Park3,74550.32%3,69849.68%470.64%7,443
Platte1,89056.25%1,47043.75%42012.50%3,360
Sheridan4,74751.39%4,49148.61%2562.78%9,238
Sublette79146.78%90053.22%-109-6.44%1,691
Sweetwater5,96975.43%1,94424.57%4,02550.86%7,913
Teton96847.24%1,08152.76%-113-5.52%2,049
Uinta1,92961.93%1,18638.07%74323.86%3,115
Washakie1,69549.74%1,71350.26%-18-0.52%3,408
Weston1,41949.07%1,47350.93%-54-1.86%2,892
Totals80,71856.56%61,99843.44%18,72013.12%142,716

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"United States Presidential election of 1964 – Encyclopædia Britannica". RetrievedMay 30, 2017.
  2. ^"1964 Election for the Forty-Fifth Term (1965–69)". RetrievedMay 30, 2017.
  3. ^"1964 Presidential General Election Results – Wyoming". RetrievedMay 30, 2017.
  4. ^"The American Presidency Project – Election of 1964". RetrievedMay 30, 2017.
  5. ^"The Living Room Candidate – Commercials – 1964 – Social Security".
  6. ^Hinckley, John T. (January 22, 1965)."The 1964 Election in Wyoming".The Western Political Quarterly.18 (2):523–526.doi:10.2307/445300.JSTOR 445300.
  7. ^Cannon, Lou (June 6, 2004). "Actor, Governor, President, Icon". The Washington Post. p. A01.
  8. ^Sullivan, Robert David;‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’;America Magazine inThe National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
  9. ^abWyoming Secretary of State (1965). "Summary - Official Vote General Election, November 3, 1964".1965 Wyoming Official Directory and 1964 Election Returns. p. 62. RetrievedOctober 18, 2024.
State and district results of the1964 United States presidential election
Electoral map, 1964 election
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