UNITED STATES PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION, 1924


The 'United States presidential election of 1924' was won by incumbent President Calvin Coolidge, the Republican candidate. Coolidge was given credit for a booming economy at home and no visible crises abroad. He was aided by a split within the Democratic Party. The regular Democratic candidate was John W. Davis, a little-known former congressman and diplomat from West Virginia. Since Davis was a conservative, many liberal Democrats bolted the party and backed the third-party campaign of Wisconsin Senator Robert M. LaFollette, Sr., who ran as the candidate of the Progressive Party. This was the first presidential election in which Native Americans were allowed to vote.

Contents
Nominations
Republican Party nomination
Democratic Party Nomination
Progressive Party
General election
The Fall Campaign
Results
See also
References
External links
Navigation

Nominations


Republican Party nomination

Republican Candidates

Calvin Coolidge, President of the United States from Massachusetts

Hiram W. Johnson, U.S. senator and candidate for the 1920 nomination from California

Robert M. LaFollette, U.S. senator and candidate for the 1908, 1912, 1916 and 1920 nominations Wisconsin
The Republican Convention was held in Cleveland from 10 June to 12 June, with the easy choice of nominating incumbent President Coolidge for a full term of his own.
Presidential vote
ballot 1
Calvin Coolidge 1065
Robert LaFollette 34
Hiram Johnson10

Coolidge's prospective running mate, former Illinois Governor Frank O. Lowden, became the only nominee to refuse to accept a major party nomination during the 20th century. He was replaced by Charles Dawes, a prominent Republican businessman.
Democratic Party Nomination

The 1924 Democratic National Convention was held in New York from 24 June to 9 July. The two leading candidates were William G. McAdoo of California, former Secretary of the Treasury and son-in-law of former President Woodrow Wilson; and Governor Al Smith of New York, a popular former mayor of New York City. The balloting revealed a clear geographic and cultural split in the party, as McAdoo was supported mostly by rural, Protestant delegates from the South and West who were supporters of Prohibition (called "drys"). In some cases McAdoo's delegates were also supporters of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), which was at its peak of nationwide popularity in the 1920's, with chapters in all 48 states and 4 to 5 million members. Governor Smith was supported by the anti-Prohibition forces (called "wets"), many Roman Catholics and other ethnic minorities, big-city delegates in the Northeast and Midwest, and by liberal delegates opposed to the influence of the Ku Klux Klan. An example of the deep split within the party came in a brutal floor fight over a proposal to publicly condemn the Klan; most of McAdoo's delegates in the South and West opposed the motion, while most of Smith's big-city delegates supported it. In the end the motion failed to carry by a single vote; William Jennings Bryan, the three-time Democratic presidential candidate, argued against condemning the Klan for fear that it would permanently split the party. Wendell Willkie, who would go on to become the Republican Party's 1940 presidential candidate, was a Democratic delegate in 1924 and he supported the proposal to condemn the KKK. The bitter fight between the McAdoo and Smith delegates over the KKK set the stage for the nominating ballots to come.
Due to the two-thirds rule governing nominations, neither McAdoo, who briefly got a majority of the votes halfway through the balloting, nor Smith, were able to get the two-thirds majority necessary to win, and the deadlock between the two men continued for days on end. However, neither candidate would back down, and eventually the convention would go to over 100 ballots, becoming the longest-running political convention in American history. Will Rogers, a popular comedian of the era, joked that New York City had invited the Democratic delegates to visit the city, not to live there.
Senator Oscar W. Underwood of Alabama, the Democratic leader in the Senate, also had some support, and as this was the first Democratic Convention to be broadcast on radio, Alabama's clarion "...casts 24 votes for Oscar... Dubya!...UNDERWOOD!!!" declaration for ballot after ballot became a symbol of the convention. With neither McAdoo or Smith able to break the deadlock, on the 103rd ballot the exhausted convention turned to John W. Davis, an obscure former Congressman from West Virginia and Ambassador to Great Britain, as a compromise candidate. The disarray prompted Will Rogers's famous quip: "I'm not a member of any organized political party, I'm a Democrat!"
Charles W. Bryan, William Jennings Bryan's brother and the Governor of Nebraska, was nominated for Vice President, in order to gain the support of the party's rural voters who still saw Bryan as their leader.
Progressive Party

Senator Robert M. La Follette, Sr., who had left the Republican Party and formed his own political party, the Progressive Party, in Wisconsin, was so upset over both political parties choosing conservative candidates that he decided to run as a third-party candidate to give liberals from both parties an alternative. He thus accepted the presidential nomination of the United States Progressive Party. Long a champion of labor unions, and an ardent foe of Big Business, La Follette was a fiery orator who had dominated Wisconsin's political scene for more than two decades. Backed by radical farmers, the AFL labor unions, and Socialists, LaFollette ran on a platform of nationalizing cigarette factories and other large industries. He also strongly supported increased taxation on the wealthy and the right of collective bargaining for factory workers. Despite a strong showing in labor strongholds and winning over 16% of the national popular vote, he carried only his home state of Wisconsin in the electoral college.

General election


The Fall Campaign

With the disastrous Democratic Convention having badly divided the Democrats, there was little doubt that Coolidge would win the election. His campaign slogan, "Keep Cool with Coolidge", was highly popular. Davis carried only the traditionally Democratic Solid South and Oklahoma; due to liberal Democrats voting for La Follette, Davis lost the popular vote to Coolidge by 25 percentage points. The Republicans did so well that they carried New York City, a feat they have not repeated since.
Results

'Source (Popular Vote):'
'Source (Electoral Vote):'

See also



President of the United States

United States Senate election, 1924

History of the United States (1918-1945)

Progressive Era

References



★ Hicks, John Donald. ''Republican Ascendancy 1921-1933'' (1955)

★ K. C. MacKay, ''The Progressive Movement of 1924'' (1947)

★ Donald R. McCoy, ''Calvin Coolidge: The Quiet President'' (1967)

★ Murray, Robert K. ''The 103rd Ballot: Democrats and Disaster in Madison Square Garden'' (1976),

★ Nancy C. Unger. ''Fighting Bob LaFollette: The Righteous Reformer'' (2000)

External links



1924 popular vote by counties

Navigation



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