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35Democratic National Convention delegates (27 pledged, 8 unpledged) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Allegiance of winning district delegates George Wallace Jimmy Carter Uncommitted | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Apresidential primary was held in theU.S. state ofAlabama on May 4, 1976, withrunoff elections on May 25 to elect delegates representing Alabama to the1976 Democratic National Convention. In order to choose the state's thirty-five delegates, the state was divided up into twenty-seven delegate districts based on state house lines. Delegate districts were made up by grouping together three to five state house districts, based on their voting strength for national Democratic presidential nominees in1968 and1972, with weaker districts containing more House districts. The remaining eight delegates were hand-picked by the state Executive Democratic Committee in proportion to the winner's share of the popular vote.[1]Governor of Alabama George Wallace won a large majority of the state's delegates.
In the first round of the primary, nineteen were elected outright, seventeen pledged to GovernorGeorge Wallace and two uncommitted, both of whom were Black state legislators.[2] In therunoff, Wallace picked up four more delegates, two more uncommitted delegates were nominated, andGovernor of Georgia and eventual nomineeJimmy Carter won his only two district delegates.[3] In response to the primary results, the Committee was set to choose six Wallace delegates, one uncommitted delegate, and one Carter delegate at a convention. Wowever, Wallace withdrew from the race and threw his support behind Carter before the Committee could convene.[4]
| Candidate | Delegates | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Pl. | Unpl. | Total | |
| George Wallace | 21 | 6 | 27 |
| Uncommitted | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| Jimmy Carter | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| Frank Church | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Fred R. Harris | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Hubert Humphrey | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Mo Udall | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| District | Elected delegate | Pledged to |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | James Hunt | Wallace |
| 5th | Sen. Robert T. Wilson | Wallace |
| 6th | Sen. Bingham Edwards | Wallace |
| 7th | Rep. Kerry Rich | Wallace |
| 8th | Rep. Ed Robertson | Wallace |
| 10th | Rep. Tony Harrison | Uncommitted |
| 11th | Rep. Jack Biddle | Wallace |
| 14th | James M. Campbell | Wallace |
| 15th | John Hollis Jackson Jr. | Wallace |
| 16th | Rep. Larry Morris | Wallace |
| 17th | Rep. Rick Manley | Wallace |
| 18th | Earl Goodwin | Wallace |
| 20th | Charles M. Crook | Wallace |
| 22nd | Joe McCorquodale III | Wallace |
| 23rd | Wallace Miller | Wallace |
| 24th | Mrs. S. A. Cherry | Wallace |
| 25th | Rep. Tommy Sandusky | Wallace |
| 26th | Rep. Cain Kennedy | Uncommitted |
| 27th | Mrs. L. W. Noonan | Wallace |
| Source:TheBirmingham Post-Herald[5] | ||
| District | George Wallace | Jimmy Carter | Uncommitted | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | Candidate | Votes | % | ||
| 2nd | Mrs. Albert McDonald | 12,265 | 56.52% | Timothy W. Hudson | 9,435 | 43.48% | — | — | — | 21,700 |
| 3rd | Rep. Hartwell Lutz | 8,963 | 47.14% | Charles Cummings Jr. | 10,051 | 52.86% | — | — | — | 19,014 |
| 4th | George M. Barnett | 9,846 | 54.25% | Carol G. Richards | 8,302 | 45.75% | — | — | — | 18,148 |
| 9th | Joni Meeks | 5,535 | 50.58% | Charles J. McClees | 5,407 | 49.42% | — | — | — | 10,942 |
| 12th | — | — | — | Rep. Ron Jackson | 3,829 | 48.46% | Sen.J. Richmond Pearson | 4,073 | 51.54% | 7,902 |
| 13th | Rep. Bob Gafford | 5,154 | 66.44% | Mark Polson | 2,603 | 33.56% | — | — | — | 7,757 |
| 19th | — | — | — | Herman Harris | 4,086 | 51.58% | Rep. Alvin Holmes | 3,835 | 48.42% | 7,921 |
| 21st | Sen. Dudley Perry | 7,551 | 47.04% | — | — | — | Rep. Thomas Reed | 8,503 | 52.96% | 16,054 |
| Source:Alabama Official and Statistical Register, 1979 (p. 239–241)[6] | ||||||||||