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1968 United States Senate election in Alaska

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1968 United States Senate election in Alaska

← 1962
November 5, 1968
1974 →
 
NomineeMike GravelElmer RasmusonErnest Gruening
(write-in)
PartyDemocraticRepublicanDemocratic
Popular vote36,52730,28614,118
Percentage45.13%37.42%17.44%

Results by borough and census area
Results by state house district
Gravel:     40–50%     50–60%     60–70%
Rasmuson:     40–50%
Gruening:     30–40%

U.S. senator before election

Ernest Gruening
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

Mike Gravel
Democratic

Elections in Alaska

The1968 United States Senate election in Alaska took place on November 5, 1968. Incumbent Democratic U.S. SenatorErnest Gruening ran for a second full term in office but finished behind Speaker of the Alaska House of RepresentativesMike Gravel in the Democratic primary. Gruening launched a write-in bid for the seat in the general election, but finished third to Gravel and Republican former Anchorage mayorElmer Rasmuson.

Gravel would later lose the primary in 1980 toGruening's grandson Clark.

This would be the first of 3 times where the incumbent holder of Alaska's Class 3 U.S. Senate seat was defeated in the primary while running for re-election.

Future SenatorTed Stevens also ran in the Republican primary, but lost to Rasmuson by around 1,000 votes. When incumbent Democratic Class 2 SenatorBob Bartlett died that December, GovernorWally Hickel appointed Stevens to the vacant seat, giving Stevens a seniority advantage of 10 days over the incoming Gravel.

Primary election

[edit]

Democratic

[edit]

Gravel ran against 81-year-old incumbent Democratic United States SenatorErnest Gruening, a popular formergovernor of theAlaska Territory who was considered one of the fathers of Alaska's statehood,[1] for his party's nomination to theU.S. Senate. Gravel's campaign was primarily based on his youth and telegenic appearance rather than issue differences.[2][3][4] He hiredJoseph Napolitan, the first self-describedpolitical consultant, in late 1966.[2] They spent over a year and a half planning a short, nine-day primary election campaign that featured the slogans "Alaska first" and "Let's do something about the state we're in", the distribution of a collection of essays titledJobs and More Jobs, and the creation of a half-hour, well-produced, glamorized biographical film of Gravel,A Man for Alaska.[5][1][2][6] The film was shown twice a day on every television station in Alaska, and carried by plane and shown on home projectors in hundreds ofAlaska Native villages.[5][2][4] The heavy showings quickly reversed a 2–to–1 Gruening lead in polls into a Gravel lead.[2] Gravel visited many remote villages byseaplane and showed a thorough understanding of the needs of the bush country and the fishing and oil industries.[5][7]

Gravel also benefited from maintaining a deliberately ambiguous posture about Vietnam policy.[7] Gruening had been one of only two senators to vote against theGulf of Tonkin Resolution and his opposition to PresidentLyndon B. Johnson's war policies was harming him among the Democratic electorate;[8] according to Gravel, "all I had to do was stand up and not deal with the subject, and people would assume that I was to the right of Ernest Gruening, when in point of fact I was to the left of him".[1] InA Man for Alaska, Gravel argued that "the liberals" would come toWest Germany's defense if it was attacked, and that they "should apply the same rule to Asians".[9] During the campaign he also claimed that he was "more in the mainstream of American thought on Vietnam" than Gruening, despite the fact that he had written to Gruening to praise his antiwar stance four years earlier. Decades later, Gravel conceded that "I said what I said [about Vietnam] to advance my career."[3]

Gravel beat Gruening in the primary by about 2,000 votes.[8][10] Gruening found "the unexpected defeat hard to take" and thought that some aspects of his opponent's biographical film had misled viewers.[11]

Candidates

[edit]
Results
[edit]
U.S. Senate Democratic primary results[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticMike Gravel17,97152.9
DemocraticErnest Gruening (incumbent)16,01547.1
Total votes33,986100.00

Republican

[edit]

Results

[edit]
U.S. Senate Republican primary results[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%
RepublicanElmer Rasmuson10,32053.1
RepublicanTed Stevens9,11146.9
Total votes19,431100.00

General election

[edit]

In the general election, Gravel facedRepublicanElmer E. Rasmuson, a banker and former mayor of Anchorage.[13] College students in the state implored Gruening to run awrite-in campaign as anIndependent, but legal battles prevented him from getting approval for it until only two weeks were left.[13] A late appearance by anti-war presidential candidateEugene McCarthy did not offset Gruening's lack of funds and endorsements; meanwhile, Gravel and Rasmuson both saturated local media with their filmed biographies.[13] On November 5, 1968, Gravel won the general election with 45 percent of the vote to Rasmuson's 37 percent and Gruening's 18 percent.[14]

Results

[edit]
1968 United States Senate election in Alaska[15]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
DemocraticMike Gravel36,52745.13%
RepublicanElmer Rasmuson30,28637.42%
Write-inErnest Gruening (incumbent)14,11817.44%
Total votes80,931100.00%
DemocraticholdSwing

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcAlex Koppelman (May 7, 2007)."Don't worry, be Mike Gravel".salon.com. Archived fromthe original on June 27, 2009. RetrievedJuly 4, 2007.
  2. ^abcdeWarren Weaver Jr. (July 2, 1971)."Impetuous Senator: Maurice Robert Gravel"(fee required).The New York Times. RetrievedDecember 24, 2007.
  3. ^abPower, Chris (June 27, 2021)."Mike Gravel, gadfly senator from Alaska with flair for the theatrical, dies at 91".The Washington Post.
  4. ^abGruening, Ernest (1973).Many Battles: The Autobiography of Ernest Gruening. New York: Liveright. pp. 510–511.ISBN 978-0-87140-565-4.
  5. ^abcCurrent Biography Yearbook 1972, p. 182.
  6. ^Faucheux, Ron (June 1993)."Great slogans: reading between the lines of America's best political rhymes and mottos".Campaigns and Elections. Archived fromthe original(fee required) on May 11, 2011. RetrievedFebruary 2, 2008.
  7. ^abCurrent Biography Yearbook 1972, p. 183.
  8. ^abChinn, Ronald E. (September 1969). "The 1968 Election in Alaska".The Western Political Quarterly.22 (3):456–461.doi:10.2307/446336.JSTOR 446336.
  9. ^A Man For Alaska (Film). Alaskans for Mike Gravel. 1968. Event occurs at 11:22.
  10. ^Johnson, Robert KC (August 7, 2006)."Not Many Senators Have Found Themselves in Joe Lieberman's Predicament".History News Network. RetrievedJuly 7, 2007.
  11. ^Gruening, Ernest (1973).Many Battles: The Autobiography of Ernest Gruening. New York: Liveright. pp. 510–511.ISBN 978-0-87140-565-4.
  12. ^ab"Our Campaigns - AK US Senate - Open Primary Race - Aug 27, 1968".
  13. ^abcChinn, Ronald E. (September 1969). "The 1968 Election in Alaska".The Western Political Quarterly.22 (3):456–461.doi:10.2307/446336.JSTOR 446336.
  14. ^Chinn, Ronald E. (September 1969). "The 1968 Election in Alaska".The Western Political Quarterly.22 (3):456–461.doi:10.2307/446336.JSTOR 446336.
  15. ^"Our Campaigns - AK US Senate Race - Nov 05, 1968".
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