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1924 United States presidential election in California

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FieldValue
election_name1924 United States presidential election in California
countryCalifornia
flag_imageFlag of California (1924–1953).pngborder
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1920 United States presidential election in California
previous_year1920
next_election1928 United States presidential election in California
next_year1928
turnout73.34% (of registered voters) 1.47 pp
48.53% (of eligible voters) 1.27 pp
election_dateNovember 4, 1924
image_sizex160px
image1Calvin Coolidge cph.3g10777 crop.jpg
nominee1**Calvin Coolidge**
party1Republican Party (United States)
home_state1Massachusetts
running_mate1**Charles G. Dawes**
electoral_vote1**13**
popular_vote1**733,250**
percentage1**57.20%**
image2Robert La Follette Sr crop.jpg
nominee2Robert M. La Follette
party2Socialist
alliance2Progressive
home_state2Wisconsin
running_mate2Burton K. Wheeler
electoral_vote20
popular_vote2424,649
percentage233.13%
image3John William Davis.jpg
nominee3John W. Davis
party3Democratic Party (United States)
home_state3West Virginia
running_mate3Charles W. Bryan
electoral_vote30
popular_vote3105,514
percentage38.23%
map_image325px
map_size300px
map_captionCounty Results
titlePresident
before_electionCalvin Coolidge
before_partyRepublican Party (United States)
after_electionCalvin Coolidge
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)

Main article: 1924 United States presidential election

48.53% (of eligible voters) 1.27 pp Coolidge La Follette The 1924 United States presidential election in California took place on November 4, 1924, as part of the 1924 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors, or representatives to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

Since the "Panic of 1893" and large-scale voter registration, California had become a one-party state dominated by the Republican Party. The Democratic Party was largely moribund as a result of its association with the Populist revolt, the rural formerly slave South, and the polyglot metropolis – which held no appeal in an old-stock Western state with very few Southern and Eastern European immigrants. Rigid registration laws and, before 1914, poll taxes, largely disfranchised what immigrants (who had leaned Democratic during the Third Party System) did enter the state.

Nonetheless, the appeal of Progressivism and tendency towards nonpartisan politics allowed Woodrow Wilson to nearly carry the state in 1912 and do so in 1916 despite substantial Socialist votes in both elections; however, James M. Cox lost most of this support by 1920 as a result of a powerful reaction in the West against the social upheaval Wilson had caused.

Following the Cox debacle, the Democratic Party disintegrated even further. In that same 1920 election they failed to re-elect U.S. Senator James D. Phelan, and after the 1922 election they claimed only five seats in the 80-member California State Assembly, the lower house of the state Legislature, and just two seats out of 40 in the upper house, the California State Senate. Phelan's efforts to have William Gibbs McAdoo chosen as the Democratic presidential nominee in 1924 were defeated, and further ruined the party's organization and furthered cleavages between the "dry" and "wet" sections of the party.

California's large "Progressive" electorate had been divided by issues such as the League of Nations and Prohibition, and was weakened by the election of economy-minded Friend W. Richardson as Governor in 1922. When Wisconsin Senator Robert M. La Follette announced he would run a third-party presidential campaign in 1924, there remained division, but San Francisco Progressive Rudolph Spreckels supported him on the "Socialist" line against indifference from Hiram Johnson (who had attempted to unseat Coolidge in the GOP primaries) and state senators Herbert C. Jones and Joseph M. Inman.

Democratic nominee John W. Davis of West Virginia and Coolidge both spent most of their campaign attacking La Follette as a political extremist. At the beginning of the campaign, Davis had substantial hope of recovering support lost in 1920. However, Davis' opposition to women's suffrage, and belief in strictly limited government with no expansion in nonmilitary fields had almost no appeal in California. Although in September Davis underwent an extensive tour of the region and of the Great Plains, and campaigned to eliminate the income tax burden of the poorer classes, he received a mere 8.23 percent of the vote in California – the worst for any major party nominee in the state's history and his fourth-worst state nationwide.

Reduced to a battle between Coolidge and La Follette, the incumbent president campaigned upon present prosperity in addition to his opponent's perceived extremism. Despite perception the state may be doubtful, Coolidge won a plurality of over 24 percentage points, aided by a campaign based upon vilification. La Follette did nonetheless match Coolidge outside conservative, heavily populated Southern California, and he carried most urban working-class districts in Northern California, as well as most of the Sierra logging counties that were to become Democratic strongholds between FDR and Jimmy Carter. La Follette's vote was later to revive the moribund Democratic Party when it turned largely to Al Smith (whom La Follette's family was to endorse when he died) in the following election.

Results

PartyPledged toElectorVotesVotes cast1,281,900
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeLouis M. Cole733,250
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeMrs. John M. Eshleman733,196
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeJohn L. McNab732,893
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeGeorge C. Pardee732,788
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeJames M. Cremin732,749
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeJesse W. Lilienthal Jr.732,697
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeC. R. Clinch732,681
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeGeorge W. Peltier732,681
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeMadison T. Owens732,649
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeCharles A. Wayland732,626
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeThomas W. McManus732,619
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeMartin C. Neuner732,552
Republican Party (United States)}}"Republican PartyCalvin CoolidgeLouise Harvey Clark732,512
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Albert G. Rogers424,649
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Agnes H. Downing424,170
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.W. E. Murphy424,170
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Lola Coggins424,102
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Walter S. Fogg424,098
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Frank C. Page424,095
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Hugo Ernst424,086
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.John C. Packard424,068
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.William M. Falls424,057
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Alice S. Eddy424,017
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Samuel Weisenberg424,009
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.E. Backus423,996
Socialist Party USA}}Socialist PartyRobert M. La Follette Sr.Walter E. Walker423,968
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisJames D. Phelan105,514
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisMattison B. Jones105,504
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisAnnette A. Adams105,485
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisR. F. Del Valle105,468
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisThomas M. Storke105,396
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisMary E. Foy105,393
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisWilliam M. Conley105,392
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisWilliam Kettner105,392
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisKatherine Braddock105,323
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisE. S. Heller105,320
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisJames F. Peck105,299
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisC. L. Culbert105,270
Democratic Party (United States)}}Democratic PartyJohn W. DavisEdna L. Knight105,229
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisJ. S. Edwards18,436
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisH. A. Johnson18,365
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisS. P. Meads18,259
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisHelen M. Brown18,250
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisJohn H. Kendall18,243
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisJ. C. Bell18,216
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisJ. L. Rollings18,212
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisH. Clay Needham18,205
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisDana G. Boleyn18,188
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisFrederick Head18,173
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisWiley J. Phillips18,172
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisLucius C. Dale18,155
Prohibition Party}}"Prohibition PartyHerman P. FarisO. U. Hull18,141
Independent}}"Write-inScattering122

Results by county

CountyCalvin Coolidge
RepublicanRobert M. La Follette
SocialistJohn W. Davis
DemocraticHerman Faris
ProhibitionScattering
Write-inMarginTotal votes cast#%#%#%#%#%#%Total733,25057.20%424,64933.12%105,5148.23%18,4361.44%1220.00%308,60124.08%1,281,971
Alameda81,45461.42%41,43431.24%8,0206.05%1,5921.20%1110.08%40,02030.18%132,601
Alpine5288.14%11.69%58.47%11.69%00.00%4779.67%59
Amador71938.93%78742.61%31617.11%251.35%00.00%-68-3.68%1,847
Butte4,38242.24%4,58244.17%1,29912.52%1111.07%00.00%-200-1.93%10,374
Calaveras87239.46%97544.12%33315.07%301.36%00.00%-103-4.66%2,210
Colusa1,12743.82%88934.56%49519.25%612.37%00.00%2389.26%2,572
Contra Costa9,06154.69%6,23137.61%1,1146.72%1630.98%00.00%2,83017.08%16,569
Del Norte53052.63%32231.98%12212.12%333.28%00.00%20820.65%1,007
El Dorado85228.49%1,74958.48%36112.07%290.97%00.00%-897-29.99%2,991
Fresno15,63544.00%14,83641.75%4,61012.97%4531.27%00.00%7992.25%35,534
Glenn1,44444.91%1,33041.37%36711.42%742.30%00.00%1143.54%3,215
Humboldt6,76756.83%4,14834.83%8457.10%1481.24%00.00%2,61922.00%11,908
Imperial3,45550.24%2,54937.07%75911.04%1141.66%00.00%90613.17%6,877
Inyo95047.45%77938.91%25612.79%170.85%00.00%1718.54%2,002
Kern8,64646.08%6,75436.00%3,15916.84%2031.08%00.00%1,89210.08%18,762
Kings2,81250.00%1,61128.65%1,10919.72%921.64%00.00%1,20121.35%5,624
Lake79544.92%65837.18%26114.75%563.16%00.00%1377.74%1,770
Lassen1,07240.74%1,16444.24%35613.53%391.48%00.00%-92-3.50%2,631
Los Angeles299,67565.51%117,24925.63%33,5547.33%6,9971.53%50.00%182,42639.88%457,480
Madera1,51842.64%1,51442.53%45012.64%782.19%00.00%40.11%3,560
Marin5,78053.51%4,23039.16%6566.07%1361.26%00.00%1,55014.35%10,802
Mariposa34440.23%33238.83%16819.65%111.29%00.00%121.40%855
Mendocino3,46556.48%1,85030.15%73912.05%811.32%00.00%1,61526.33%6,135
Merced3,57352.95%2,30134.10%71010.52%1642.43%00.00%1,27218.85%6,748
Modoc73143.72%54732.72%37422.37%201.20%00.00%18411.00%1,672
Mono16653.55%9831.61%4514.52%10.32%00.00%6821.94%310
Monterey4,74461.06%2,03526.19%88611.40%1041.34%00.00%2,70934.87%7,769
Napa3,60554.83%2,23734.02%67010.19%630.96%00.00%1,36820.81%6,575
Nevada1,51342.24%1,68246.96%3078.57%802.23%00.00%-169-4.72%3,582
Orange19,91367.35%6,48021.92%2,5658.68%6092.06%00.00%13,43345.43%29,567
Placer2,19236.63%3,29054.98%3906.52%1121.87%00.00%-1,098-18.35%5,984
Plumas56432.87%95655.71%18210.61%140.82%00.00%-392-22.84%1,716
Riverside9,61962.01%4,20427.10%1,3188.50%3712.39%00.00%5,41534.91%15,512
Sacramento13,40041.08%16,57050.80%2,2857.01%3591.10%20.00%-3,170-9.72%32,616
San Benito1,44353.56%85731.81%36113.40%331.22%00.00%58621.75%2,694
San Bernardino15,97456.91%8,72031.07%2,6349.38%7412.64%00.00%7,25425.84%28,069
San Diego22,72648.99%20,20043.54%2,9446.35%5231.13%00.00%2,5265.45%46,393
San Francisco73,49447.74%68,86444.73%9,8116.37%1,7811.16%00.00%4,6303.01%153,950
San Joaquin11,05648.91%8,88539.30%2,39710.60%2681.19%00.00%2,1719.61%22,606
San Luis Obispo3,80449.01%3,06139.44%7319.42%1652.13%00.00%7439.57%7,761
San Mateo8,12655.28%5,69438.73%7715.24%1090.74%00.00%2,43216.55%14,700
Santa Barbara8,61564.69%3,29224.72%1,2429.33%1691.27%00.00%5,32339.97%13,318
Santa Clara20,05658.02%11,47433.19%2,5607.41%4761.38%00.00%8,58224.83%34,566
Santa Cruz5,40260.85%2,55728.80%8019.02%1181.33%00.00%2,84532.05%8,878
Shasta1,95141.95%2,04944.06%59812.86%531.14%00.00%-98-2.11%4,651
Sierra27638.93%35049.37%7310.30%101.41%00.00%-74-10.44%709
Siskiyou2,43740.60%2,84447.38%5849.73%1382.30%00.00%-407-6.78%6,003
Solano4,78248.01%4,12341.40%9579.61%1001.00%00.00%6596.61%9,962
Sonoma9,53555.99%5,46932.11%1,76710.38%2591.52%10.00%4,06623.88%17,031
Stanislaus7,56956.83%4,12530.97%1,2749.57%3502.63%00.00%3,44425.86%13,318
Sutter1,61749.92%1,21937.64%36711.33%361.11%00.00%39812.28%3,239
Tehama1,94345.96%1,66739.43%48611.49%1323.12%00.00%2766.53%4,228
Trinity33636.52%41445.00%15416.74%161.74%00.00%-78-8.48%920
Tulare9,48450.78%5,50429.47%3,42518.34%2621.40%30.00%3,98021.31%18,678
Tuolumne1,28743.03%1,32744.37%35711.94%200.67%00.00%-40-1.34%2,991
Ventura5,70565.16%2,02923.18%91110.41%1101.26%00.00%3,67641.98%8,755
Yolo2,47045.35%2,09738.50%79714.63%831.52%00.00%3736.85%5,447
Yuba1,73547.40%1,45439.73%42611.64%451.23%00.00%2817.67%3,660

Counties that flipped from Republican to Socialist

  • Amador
  • Butte
  • Calaveras
  • El Dorado
  • Lassen
  • Nevada
  • Placer
  • Plumas
  • Sacramento
  • Shasta
  • Sierra
  • Siskiyou
  • Trinity
  • Tuolumne

Notes

References

References

  1. "Historical Voter Registration and Participation in Statewide General Elections 1910-2018".
  2. Burnham, Walter Dean; 'The [[System of 1896]]: An Analysis'; in ''The Evolution of American Electoral Systems'', pp. 178-179 {{ISBN. 0313213798
  3. Burnham Walter Dean; 'The "System of 1896" and the American Electorate', in ''Critical elections and the Mainsprings of American Politics'' (1970), pp. 74-79
  4. Bentele, Keith G. and O'Brien, Erin E.; 'Jim Crow 2.0? Why States Consider and Adopt Restrictive Voter Access Policies', p. 1092; in ''Perspectives on Politics'', Vol. 11, No. 4 (December 2013), pp. 1088-1116
  5. Faykosh, Joseph D., [[Bowling Green State University]]; ''The Front Porch of the American People: James Cox and the Presidential Election of 1920'' (thesis), p. 68
  6. Hennings, Robert E.; 'California Democratic Politics in the Period of Republican Ascendancy'; ''Pacific Historical Review'', vol. 31, no. 3 (August 1962), pp. 267-280
  7. Shover, John L.; 'The California Progressives and the 1924 Campaign', in ''California Historical Quarterly'', vol. 51, no. 1 (Spring, 1972), pp. 59-74
  8. Richardson, Danny G.; ''Others: "Fighting Bob" La Follette and the Progressive Movement: Third-Party Politics in the 1920s'', p. 180 {{ISBN. 0595481264
  9. Johnston, Scott D.; 'Robert La Follette and the Socialists: Aspects of the 1924 Presidential Campaign Reexamined'; ''Social Science'', Vol. 50, No. 2 (Spring 1975), pp. 69-77
  10. Parrish, Michael E.; ''Anxious Decades: America in Prosperity and Depression, 1920-1941'', pp. 70-71 {{ISBN. 0393311341
  11. Melcher, Daniel P.; 'The Challenge to Normalcy: The 1924 Election in California'; ''Southern California Quarterly'', Vol. 60, No. 2 (Summer 1978), pp. 155-182
  12. Newman, Roger K.; ''The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law'', p. 153 {{ISBN. 0300113005
  13. [[Rodney Stark. Stark, Rodney]] and Christiano, Kevin J.; 'Support for the American Left, 1920-1924: The Opiate Thesis Reconsidered'; ''[[Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion]]'', Vol. 31, No. 1 (March, 1992), pp. 62-75
  14. Tucker, Garland; ''High Tide of American Conservatism: Davis, Coolidge, and the 1924 Election'', p. 191 {{ISBN. 193711029X
  15. Melcher, Daniel; "The Politics of Discontent: California Politics, 1920-1932,' (Ph.D. Dissertation, [[University of California, San Diego]], 1975), pp. 152-156, 164-173.
  16. "Statement of Vote at General Election held on November 4, 1924 in the State of California".
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