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词条 1920 United States presidential election in New York
释义
     Results by county 

  1. See also

  2. Notes

  3. References

{{Main|1920 United States presidential election}}{{Infobox Election
| election_name = United States presidential election in New York, 1920
| country = New York
| type = presidential
| ongoing = no
| previous_election = 1916 United States presidential election in New York
| previous_year = 1916
| next_election = 1924 United States presidential election in New York
| next_year = 1924
| election_date = November 2, 1920
| image1 =
| nominee1 = Warren G. Harding
| party1 = Republican Party (United States)
| home_state1 = Ohio
| running_mate1 = Calvin Coolidge
| electoral_vote1 = 45
| popular_vote1 = 1,871,167
| percentage1 = 64.6%
| image2 =
| nominee2 = James M. Cox
| party2 = Democratic Party (United States)
| home_state2 = Ohio
| running_mate2 = Franklin D. Roosevelt
| electoral_vote2 = 0
| popular_vote2 = 781,238
| percentage2 = 27.0%
| image3 =
| nominee3 = Eugene V. Debs
| party3 = Socialist Party of America
| home_state3 = Indiana
| running_mate3 = Seymour Stedman
| electoral_vote3 =0
| popular_vote3 = 203,201
| percentage3 = 7.0%
| map_image = New york presidential results 1920.svg
| map_size = 350px
| map_caption = County Results{{legend|#e27f90|Harding—50-60%}}{{legend|#cc2f4a|Harding—60-70%}}{{legend|#d40000|Harding—70-80%}}
| title = President
| before_election = Woodrow Wilson
| before_party = Democratic Party (United States)
| after_election = Warren G. Harding
| after_party = Republican Party (United States)
}}{{ElectionsNY}}

The 1920 United States presidential election in New York took place on November 2, 1920. All contemporary 48 states were part of the 1920 United States presidential election. New York voters chose 45 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.

New York was won by Republican Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio, who was running against Democratic Ohio Governor James M. Cox. Harding’s running mate was Governor Calvin Coolidge of Massachusetts, while Cox ran with Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York. Also running that year was Socialist candidate Eugene V. Debs of Indiana and his running mate Seymour Stedman of Illinois.

Harding won New York State with an overwhelming landslide of 64.56 percent of the vote to Cox’ 26.95 percent, a victory margin of 37.61 percentage points.

Socialist Party candidate Eugene Debs finished with a relatively strong showing for a third party candidate, taking 7.01 percent of the vote, more than twice his national vote share, making New York his third strongest state in the nation. The strongest county for Debs within the state was the New York City borough of the Bronx, where Debs broke fifteen percent of the vote.

With the deeply unpopular Democratic administration of Woodrow Wilson as the backdrop for the 1920 campaign,[1] Warren G. Harding promised a “return to normalcy” that appealed to many voters,[2] while Cox was tied to the policies of the Wilson administration, which had even in 1916 been criticized for insensitivity to Irish-American wishes.[3] Harding won nationally in one of the most decisive landslides in American history, and New York, already a fiercely Republican state, went even harder for Harding than the nation, making New York a solid 12 percentage points more Republican than the national average.[4] The Irish-Americans were offended by Cox’ close tied to Wilson’s proposed League of Nations;[5] whilst Palatine Germans who had been the Democratic Party’s other base in the Empire State since before the Civil War were similarly offended by Wilson’s pro-British policies. Schoharie County, which had been the only New York county to stay Democratic during the “free silver” election of 1896, went Republican for the first time ever[6] and has only twice voted Democratic since.[7]

Harding swept every county in the state of New York, winning every upstate county as well as winning every county in the New York City area and Long Island. All but five of New York State’s 62 counties went Republican with more than sixty percent of the vote.

Harding won heavily populated New York City as a whole with a commanding majority, sweeping all five boroughs. Harding received over sixty percent of the vote in the boroughs of Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island, and also won majorities in Manhattan and the Bronx.[8] 1920 was the first of only two occasions in which a Republican presidential candidate has won all five boroughs of New York City since the city’s incorporation in 1898, the other occasion being 1924. Likewise, this was the first of only two occasions (the other being 1924) in which a Republican has won the boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx since they took their modern forms with the creation of Bronx County in 1914.[9]

Finally, since the city's incorporation, 1920 remains the only election ever in which a Republican presidential candidate has won an absolute majority of the vote in all five boroughs as well as in New York City as a whole. In 1924, Calvin Coolidge would win New York City for the GOP once more, but with a plurality, and beginning in 1928, the city would become a Democratic stronghold that no Republican has since been able to win.[9]

In upstate New York, Harding also won decisive majorities both in rural and urban counties. Harding won over sixty percent in Albany County, home to the state capital of Albany, as well as in Erie County, home to the city of Buffalo, and in Monroe County, home to the city of Rochester.

1920 made Warren G. Harding one of only three presidential candidates of either party who has been able to sweep every county in New York State, the only others who have done so being Republican Calvin Coolidge in 1924 and Democrat Lyndon Johnson in 1964.

Harding's 64.56% of the vote in New York State remains the highest vote share any Republican presidential candidate has ever received in the state, and the second highest vote share any candidate of either party has ever gotten in the state, beaten only by Democrat Lyndon Johnson’s 68.56% in the Democratic landslide of 1964. Harding’s landslide victory margin of 37.61% remains the widest margin by which any candidate of either party has ever won New York State, beating even Lyndon Johnson's 37.25% in 1964.[10]

United States presidential election in New York, 1920[11]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
Republican Warren G. Harding1,871,16764.56%45
Democratic James Cox781,23826.95%0
Socialist Eugene V. Debs203,201 7.01%0
Prohibition Aaron S. Watkins19,653 0.68%0
Farmer-Labor Parley P. Christensen18,413 0.64%0
Socialist Labor William Wesley Cox4,8410.17%0
Totals2,898,513100.0%45

Results by county

Warren G. Harding
Republican
James M. Cox
Democratic
Eugene V. Debs
Socialist
Aaron Watkins
Prohibition
Parley P. Christensen
Farmer-Labor
William W. Cox
Socialist Labor
MarginTotal votes cast[12]
County#%#%#%#%#%#%#%#
Albany48,75061.72%28,37635.92%1,4381.82%2440.31%1180.15%630.08%20,37425.79%78,989
Allegany10,89874.15%2,79919.04%5133.49%4413.00%220.15%240.16%8,09955.11%14,697
Bronx106,05056.61%45,74124.42%32,92317.57%2140.11%1,9491.04%4520.24%60,30932.19%187,329
Broome24,75968.96%9,25125.77%1,1203.12%6231.74%900.25%600.17%15,50843.19%35,903
Cattaraugus16,08366.93%6,69327.85%6582.74%4812.00%750.31%390.16%9,39039.08%24,029
Cayuga15,23467.68%6,34328.18%6392.84%1910.85%330.15%700.31%8,89139.50%22,510
Chautauqua27,61871.57%6,78117.57%3,1438.15%8692.25%620.16%1140.30%20,83754.00%38,587
Chemung17,86468.53%7,06027.08%4311.65%6332.43%460.18%340.13%10,80441.45%26,068
Chenango10,11671.12%3,73526.26%680.48%2821.98%140.10%90.06%6,38144.86%14,224
Clinton9,06267.70%4,11030.71%290.22%1661.24%110.08%70.05%4,95237.00%13,385
Columbia9,28462.63%5,20335.10%2111.42%950.64%150.10%150.10%4,08127.53%14,823
Cortland9,60676.75%2,54120.30%1361.09%2181.74%60.05%90.07%7,06556.45%12,516
Delaware11,71970.17%4,52827.11%1500.90%2691.61%270.16%80.05%7,19143.06%16,701
Dutchess21,15265.60%9,93830.82%8822.74%1670.52%710.22%360.11%11,21434.78%32,246
Erie99,76263.22%40,43625.63%15,1119.58%1,4300.91%5210.33%5360.34%59,32637.60%157,796
Essex8,04277.48%2,21821.37%470.45%610.59%90.09%20.02%5,82456.11%10,379
Franklin9,78670.58%3,82527.59%620.45%1781.28%120.09%20.01%5,96142.99%13,865
Fulton10,94670.44%3,19220.54%8885.71%4362.81%350.23%420.27%7,75449.90%15,539
Genesee9,62874.50%2,57019.89%5394.17%1521.18%130.10%210.16%7,05854.62%12,923
Greene6,32361.50%3,49834.02%2642.57%1601.56%200.19%170.17%2,82527.48%10,282
Hamilton88162.66%51636.70%30.21%40.28%20.14%00.00%36525.96%1,406
Herkimer14,31065.27%6,50729.68%7933.62%2641.20%250.11%250.11%7,80335.59%21,924
Jefferson22,07270.74%7,92525.40%2520.81%4061.30%5101.63%360.12%14,14745.34%31,201
Kings292,69263.32%119,61225.88%45,1009.76%7330.16%3,4730.75%6380.14%173,08037.44%462,248
Lewis5,90667.95%2,67330.75%240.28%760.87%100.12%30.03%3,23337.20%8,692
Livingston9,48868.84%3,57125.91%4973.61%1921.39%170.12%180.13%5,91742.93%13,783
Madison11,09472.28%3,79724.74%2301.50%1821.19%220.14%230.15%7,29747.54%15,348
Monroe73,80963.78%28,52324.65%11,0899.58%1,3241.14%6780.59%2980.26%45,28639.13%115,721
Montgomery12,83566.07%5,91130.43%4762.45%1340.69%260.13%430.22%6,92435.64%19,425
Nassau33,09976.39%8,59519.84%1,2542.89%1550.36%1820.42%460.11%24,50456.55%43,331
New York275,01359.22%135,24929.12%46,0499.92%4630.10%7,0791.52%5670.12%139,76430.09%464,420
Niagara21,19368.29%7,41623.90%1,8726.03%3801.22%1040.34%670.22%13,77744.40%31,032
Oneida36,31166.27%15,56028.40%2,2974.19%4120.75%780.14%1330.24%20,75137.87%54,791
Onondaga57,00866.25%23,30827.09%4,7075.47%6400.74%1630.19%2210.26%33,70039.16%86,047
Ontario13,36166.20%5,67828.13%9144.53%1860.92%240.12%210.10%7,68338.06%20,184
Orange24,55866.13%10,56728.46%1,5734.24%2920.79%930.25%520.14%13,99137.68%37,135
Orleans8,30572.79%2,26619.86%6205.43%1761.54%300.26%130.11%6,03952.93%11,410
Oswego17,90566.37%8,04529.82%4911.82%4741.76%360.13%280.10%9,86036.55%26,979
Otsego12,11263.88%6,27533.09%1340.71%3912.06%360.19%130.07%5,83730.78%18,961
Putnam3,44770.19%1,40528.61%230.47%200.41%80.16%80.16%2,04241.58%4,911
Queens94,36068.71%35,29625.70%6,1434.47%1420.10%1,2040.88%1790.13%59,06443.01%137,324
Rensselaer28,81056.08%20,22439.37%1,8493.60%2780.54%1160.23%940.18%8,58616.71%51,371
Richmond17,84463.15%9,37333.17%7122.52%1110.39%1700.60%480.17%8,47129.98%28,258
Rockland11,16966.10%5,05729.93%4982.95%800.47%670.40%260.15%6,11236.17%16,897
St. Lawrence24,65175.60%7,21322.12%3721.14%2820.86%560.17%320.10%17,43853.48%32,606
Saratoga16,22267.99%6,90528.94%3511.47%2901.22%730.31%170.07%9,31739.05%23,858
Schenectady19,20857.20%8,74126.03%4,94114.71%5091.52%660.20%1170.35%10,46731.17%33,582
Schoharie5,57258.43%3,69738.76%300.31%2152.25%120.13%110.12%1,87519.66%9,537
Schuyler3,82771.29%1,23122.93%1512.81%1382.57%90.17%120.22%2,59648.36%5,368
Seneca6,26064.56%3,02331.18%2502.58%1351.39%120.12%160.17%3,23733.38%9,696
Steuben18,33565.79%7,40126.56%1,2174.37%7842.81%520.19%790.28%10,93439.23%27,868
Suffolk26,73773.10%8,85224.20%5961.63%2330.64%1180.32%380.10%17,88548.90%36,574
Sullivan8,02964.45%3,62329.08%6715.39%980.79%260.21%110.09%4,40635.37%12,458
Tioga6,77271.20%2,40625.30%830.87%2232.34%160.17%110.12%4,36645.90%9,511
Tompkins9,50870.05%3,48725.69%2882.12%2501.84%210.15%190.14%6,02144.36%13,573
Ulster19,00166.41%8,75930.61%3011.05%4551.59%760.27%200.07%10,24235.80%28,612
Warren9,00971.76%3,22725.70%1891.51%1010.80%200.16%90.07%5,78246.05%12,555
Washington13,64775.43%4,12422.79%1620.90%1230.68%240.13%130.07%9,52352.63%18,093
Wayne13,33373.24%4,28923.56%3041.67%2411.32%180.10%200.11%9,04449.68%18,205
Westchester76,02068.28%28,06025.20%6,0975.48%4350.39%4850.44%2380.21%47,96043.08%111,335
Wyoming9,13475.48%2,44220.18%2942.43%1941.60%210.17%160.13%6,69255.30%12,101
Yates5,63876.28%1,57121.26%520.70%1221.65%60.08%20.03%4,06755.03%7,391
Totals1,871,16764.56%781,23826.95%203,2017.01%19,6530.68%18,4130.64%4,8410.17%1,089,92937.60%2,898,513

See also

  • Presidency of Warren G. Harding

Notes

1. ^McGerr, Michael E.; The Decline of Popular Politics: The American North, 1865-1928; p. 169 {{ISBN|0195363760}}
2. ^Carr, Richard and Hart, Bradley W.; The Global 1920s: Politics, Economics and Society, p. 143 {{ISBN|1317277872}}
3. ^Lichtman, Allan J.; Prejudice and the Old Politics: The Presidential Election of 1928, p. 103 {{ISBN|0739101269}}
4. ^Counting the Votes; New York
5. ^Yanoso, Nicole Anderson; The Irish and the American Presidency, p. 143 {{ISBN|1351480642}}
6. ^Phillips, Kevin P.; The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 121 {{ISBN|9780691163246}}
7. ^These were for Lyndon Johnson against Barry Goldwater in 1964 and for Bill Clinton against Bob Dole in 1996.
8. ^Keuchtenberg, William E.; The Perils of Prosperity, 1914-1932; p. 88 {{ISBN|0226473716}}
9. ^Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
10. ^Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections; Presidential General Election Results Comparison – New York
11. ^{{cite web |url=http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/state.php?year=1920&fips=36&f=1|accessdate=2013-07-27 |title= 1920 Presidential Election Results - New York|publisher=Dave Leip's U.S. Election Atlas}}
12. ^New York State Board of Elections; ‘Vote for Electors of President in 1920’; New York Red Book (1921) p. 530

References

{{reflist}}{{State Results of the 1920 U.S. presidential election |state=expanded}}{{United States elections}}

3 : 1920 United States presidential election by state|United States presidential elections in New York (state)|1920 New York (state) elections

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