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1966 California gubernatorial election

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1966 California gubernatorial election

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FieldValue
election_name1966 California gubernatorial election
countryCalifornia
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1962 California gubernatorial election
previous_year1962
next_election1970 California gubernatorial election
next_year1970
election_dateNovember 8, 1966
image1Ronald-Reagan-governor-California Crop.jpg
nominee1**Ronald Reagan**
party1Republican Party (United States)
popular_vote1**3,742,913**
percentage1**57.55%**
image2Pat Brown, 1963.jpg
nominee2Pat Brown
party2Democratic Party (United States)
popular_vote22,749,174
percentage242.27%
map_image
map_size301px
map_caption**Reagan:**
**Brown:**
titleGovernor
before_electionPat Brown
before_partyDemocratic Party (United States)
after_electionRonald Reagan
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)

Brown:
The 1966 California gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 1966. Incumbent Democratic Governor Pat Brown was defeated in his bid for re-election by Republican nominee and future President Ronald Reagan. As of , this remains the last time an incumbent governor of California lost re-election, though one subsequent governor was recalled from office in 2003.

Background

Incumbent governor Pat Brown had been twice elected with significant accomplishments, such as the construction of the state highway system.

Democratic primary

Candidates

  • Dale Alexander
  • Pat Brown, incumbent governor
  • Wallace James Duffy
  • Ingram W. Goad
  • Carlton B. Goodlett, publisher and activist
  • Samuel William Yorty, mayor of Los Angeles

Results

Republican primary

Candidates

  • George Christopher, former mayor of San Francisco
  • Warren N. Dorn, Los Angeles County Supervisor
  • Joseph R. Maxwell
  • William Penn Patrick, businessman
  • Ronald Reagan, actor and former president of the Screen Actors Guild

Campaign

California's liberal Republicans including George Christopher leveled attacks on Ronald Reagan for his conservative positions. In response, Reagan popularized the eleventh commandment created by California Republican Party chairman Gaylord Parkinson. In his 1990 autobiography An American Life, Reagan attributed the rule to Parkinson, explained its origin, and claimed to have followed it, writing, "The personal attacks against me during the primary finally became so heavy that the state Republican chairman, Gaylord Parkinson, postulated what he called the Eleventh Commandment: Thou shalt not speak ill of any fellow Republican. It's a rule I followed during that campaign and have ever since." Parkinson used the phrase as common ground to prevent a split in the party.

Polls in February 1966 showed Christopher with a seven-point lead over Brown and Brown leading Reagan by four, so Brown sought to influence the Republican primary in Reagan's favor by having operatives pass negative claims against Christopher to columnist Drew Pearson.

Results

Results by County:

]]

General election

Candidates

  • Pat Brown, incumbent Governor since 1959 (Democratic)
  • Ronald Reagan, actor and former president of the Screen Actors Guild (Republican)
  • Bill Busick, restaurant owner and taxpayers' rights advocate (write-in)

Campaign

With the nomination of Reagan, a well-known and charismatic political outsider-actor, the Republicans seized upon Brown's sudden unpopularity evidenced by a tough battle in the Democratic primary. Nixon worked tirelessly behind the scenes and Reagan trumpeted his law-and-order campaign message, going into the general election with a great deal of momentum. After pollsters discovered that the Berkeley student protests were a major priority of Republican voters, Reagan repeatedly promised to "clean up the mess at Berkeley".

At first, Brown tried to smear Reagan's conservative supporters with "lame Nazi metaphors". After Reagan deftly parried that tactic, Brown made a serious gaffe. He ran a television commercial in which he used a rhetorical question to remind a group of elementary school children that John Wilkes Booth, another actor, had killed Abraham Lincoln. Brown's crude comparison of Reagan to Booth based on their common background as actors—in the state that happens to be home to Hollywood—did not go over well with the California electorate. Within 48 hours, Reagan had overtaken Brown in the polls.

With a lead that grew throughout September and October, Reagan won by 993,739 votes, aided by traditionally Democratic working-class areas in Los Angeles and elsewhere. Brown won in only three counties, Alameda, Plumas, and San Francisco. He narrowly won Alameda by about 2,000 votes and Plumas by about 100 votes.

Results

Results by county

CountyRonald Reagan
RepublicanEdmund G. Brown
DemocraticScattering
Write-inMarginTotal votes cast#%#%#%#%Total3,742,91357.55%2,749,17442.27%11,3580.17%993,73915.28%6,503,445
Alameda189,05549.54%190,96850.04%1,6070.42%-1,913-0.50%381,630
Alpine14865.78%7734.22%00.00%7131.56%225
Amador2,98558.29%2,13241.63%40.08%85316.66%5,121
Butte25,44367.48%12,26332.52%00.00%13,18034.95%37,706
Calaveras3,81067.72%1,81232.21%40.07%1,99835.51%5,626
Colusa2,80662.07%1,71337.89%20.04%1,09324.18%4,521
Contra Costa107,54354.79%87,52544.59%1,2170.62%20,01810.20%196,285
Del Norte3,40963.96%1,91835.98%30.06%1,49127.97%5,330
El Dorado9,18962.97%5,37836.86%250.17%3,81126.12%14,592
Fresno70,18253.90%59,86945.98%1670.13%10,3137.92%130,218
Glenn4,67666.33%2,37133.63%30.04%2,30532.70%7,050
Humboldt19,21057.16%14,37442.77%230.07%4,83614.39%33,607
Imperial12,37262.84%7,30737.12%80.04%5,06525.73%19,687
Inyo3,96166.14%2,02333.78%50.08%1,93832.36%5,989
Kern64,71662.62%38,54337.29%960.09%26,17325.32%103,355
Kings9,95755.77%7,89044.19%70.04%2,06711.58%17,854
Lake5,49963.01%3,21736.86%110.13%2,28226.15%8,727
Lassen3,19053.95%2,72346.05%00.00%4677.90%5,913
Los Angeles1,389,99557.18%1,037,66342.68%3,4350.14%352,33214.49%2,431,093
Madera7,49054.13%6,33545.78%120.09%1,1558.35%13,837
Marin40,41157.02%30,23042.66%2270.32%10,18114.37%70,868
Mariposa1,81161.45%1,13338.45%30.10%67823.01%2,947
Mendocino10,16159.76%6,82740.15%150.09%3,33419.61%17,003
Merced14,10352.98%12,49946.96%160.06%1,6046.03%26,618
Modoc1,94662.67%1,15637.23%30.10%79025.44%3,105
Mono1,20577.84%34322.16%00.00%86255.68%1,548
Monterey35,94460.96%22,92338.88%960.16%13,02122.08%58,963
Napa17,74059.45%12,06040.42%400.13%5,68019.03%29,840
Nevada7,37365.80%3,82334.12%90.08%3,55031.68%11,205
Orange293,41372.06%113,27527.82%4660.11%180,13844.24%407,154
Placer14,66454.55%12,18745.33%320.12%2,4779.21%26,883
Plumas2,65849.15%2,74750.80%30.06%-89-1.65%5,408
Riverside84,50162.35%50,11236.98%9070.67%34,38925.38%135,520
Sacramento109,80150.85%105,86149.03%2620.12%3,9401.82%215,924
San Benito3,56560.96%2,28339.04%00.00%1,28221.92%5,848
San Bernardino121,91662.13%74,12037.77%1870.10%47,79624.36%196,223
San Diego252,07063.76%142,89036.14%3980.10%109,18027.62%395,358
San Francisco114,79641.06%164,43558.82%3410.12%-49,639-17.76%279,572
San Joaquin54,64760.73%35,28139.21%510.06%19,36621.52%89,979
San Luis Obispo21,52862.52%12,89137.44%130.04%8,63725.08%34,432
San Mateo107,49853.63%92,65446.23%2760.14%14,8447.41%200,428
Santa Barbara50,28463.21%28,85336.27%4140.52%21,43126.94%79,551
Santa Clara164,97055.33%132,79344.54%4100.14%32,17710.79%298,173
Santa Cruz26,98861.42%16,91338.49%420.10%10,07522.93%43,943
Shasta15,15554.76%12,48645.12%320.12%2,6699.64%27,673
Sierra65055.27%52644.73%00.00%12410.54%1,176
Siskiyou7,05754.17%5,96245.76%90.07%1,0958.40%13,028
Solano23,18750.11%23,04749.81%390.08%1400.30%46,273
Sonoma41,51660.57%26,89839.24%1260.18%14,61821.33%68,540
Stanislaus31,47354.36%26,41845.63%100.02%5,0558.73%57,901
Sutter9,82870.43%4,12629.57%00.00%5,70240.86%13,954
Tehama6,62962.94%3,89136.94%120.11%2,73826.00%10,532
Trinity2,05062.23%1,24237.70%20.06%80824.53%3,294
Tulare33,09559.91%22,10940.02%410.07%10,98619.89%55,245
Tuolumne4,84558.16%3,47941.76%60.07%1,36616.40%8,330
Ventura58,06860.82%37,22438.99%1810.19%20,84421.83%95,473
Yolo13,07349.97%13,03249.81%570.22%410.16%26,162
Yuba6,65860.50%4,34439.47%30.03%2,31421.03%11,005

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

  • Amador
  • Colusa
  • Contra Costa
  • Del Norte
  • El Dorado
  • Fresno
  • Humboldt
  • Kern
  • Kings
  • Lassen
  • Los Angeles
  • Madera
  • Mendocino
  • Merced
  • Modoc
  • Napa
  • Nevada
  • Placer
  • Sacramento
  • San Bernardino
  • San Joaquin
  • San Luis Obispo
  • San Mateo
  • Santa Clara
  • Shasta
  • Sierra
  • Siskiyou
  • Solano
  • Stanislaus
  • Tehama
  • Trinity
  • Tuolumne
  • Ventura
  • Yolo
  • Yuba

References

References

  1. "California State of Mind: The Legacy of Pat Brown". Paley Center.
  2. California Secretary of State. "California Statement of Vote Direct Primary Election June 7, 1966".
  3. Wilcox, David C.. (8 April 2002). "The "Eleventh Commandment"". Enter Stage Right.
  4. Reagan, Ronald (1990). ''An American Life''. Simon and Schuster. p. 150.
  5. . (2 October 1966). ["Busick Will Open Write-In Campaign"](https://cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=OT19661002.1.10&srpos=2&e=------196-en--20--1--txt-txIN-%22bill+busick%22-------). *[[Oakland Tribune]]*.
  6. {{harvnb. Cannon. 2003
  7. (2001). "The Gold and the Blue: A Personal Memoir of the University of California, 1949-1967, Volume 2". University of California Press.
  8. (2010). "The New Reagan Revolution: How Ronald Reagan's Principles Can Restore America's Greatness".
  9. {{harvnb. Cannon. 2003
  10. California Secretary of State. "State of California Statement of Vote and Supplement November 8, 1966 General Election".
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