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1914 California gubernatorial election

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1914 California gubernatorial election

← 1910 November 3, 1914 1918 →
 
Nominee Hiram Johnson John D. Fredericks
Party Progressive Republican
Popular vote 460,495 271,990
Percentage 49.69% 29.35%

 
Nominee John B. Curtin Noble A. Richardson
Party Democratic Socialist
Popular vote 116,121 50,716
Percentage 12.53% 5.47%

County results
Johnson:      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%
Fredericks:      30–40%      40–50%

Governor before election

Hiram Johnson
Progressive

Elected Governor

Hiram Johnson
Progressive

The 1914 California gubernatorial election was held on November 3, 1914. The election saw Hiram Johnson re-elected in 1914 as governor of California on the Progressive Party ticket, nearly tripling his vote total from the 1910 California gubernatorial election.

Johnson was first elected governor in 1910 as a member of the Republican Party. Dissatisfaction with the conservatism of the William Howard Taft administration led many Republicans to join former President Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive Party. Johnson then ran as the Progressive Party's vice-presidential nominee in the 1912 presidential election. Despite losing the election, and winning California by fewer than 200 votes, Johnson was supremely popular in California.

Hiram Johnson became the first governor of California to be reelected since John Bigler in 1853, although he would not serve out his second term, resigning in 1917 to assume the United States Senate seat he had won in 1916. This was the first gubernatorial election in which Kern County, Glenn County, Lake County,[a] and Madera County did not back the Democratic candidate. It was also the first gubernatorial election since 1855 in which Colusa County, Mariposa County, and Merced County were not carried by a Democrat. This election ushered in a four decade period of Republican dominance in the state's gubernatorial races that was only interrupted once in 1938.

Progressive Party primary

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Early in 1914, it was not immediately clear if Hiram Johnson would run for reelection as governor, run for the upcoming senate seat, or retire from public office.[1] On January 6, 1914 Johnson announced that he would indeed run for reelection under the banner of the Bull Moose Party.[2] Following this announcement, Hiram Johnson and other members of the Bull Moose Party began a massive voter registration campaign, to get potential voters to register as Progressives.[3]

Johnson officially kicked off his campaign in Los Angeles, where he gave a speech to a large crowd at the Simpson Auditorium.[4] There was no party competition against the popular Hiram Johnson, as he ran for governor unopposed and secured his nomination on August 26, 1914.[5]

Advertisement telling Republican voters to switch to the Progressive Party

Republican primary

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Early in the year, John D. Fredericks announced that he was willing to run for governor, but qualified the statement by stating that he was willing to acquiesce to another qualified candidate.[6] The Republican party would fight an uphill battle due to losing the popular Hiram Johnson to the Progressive party. Republican stalwarts met at Santa Barbara in February of 1914, to discuss their strategy for the upcoming elections. Phillip A. Stanton and Leroy Wright lead the meeting, which was sponsored by Rudolph Spreckels.[7]

Fredericks would spend over 14,000 dollars on his primary campaign, a considerably large amount compared to his primary opponents. 12,000 of those dollars were contributed from outside sources.[8]

General election campaign

[edit]

While the campaigns were traveling across the state to appeal to the voters, there were efforts behind the scenes to stop several candidates from appearing on the general election ballots entirely due to a quirk in the laws regarding California's primary system.

The state Attorney General Ulysses S. Webb, was asked by Frank C. Jordan, the Secretary of State to clarify whether candidates can be on the November ballot, if they lose a primary election. Webb ruled that

"If a registered Progressive, seeking Republican and Democratic nominations, obtains the Progressive nomination, his name will go on the ballot, according to Webb's ruling, even though be loses the Republican and Democratic nominations. On the other hand, if he should lose the Progressive and gain both of the other nominations, he is out of the running and cannot even be an independent candidate.[9]"

As a result, members of the Republican Party threatened to file suit against the State if they allowed any progressive to run in the general election if they lost another party's primary, as the law indicated, "a candidate losing any party nomination shall not get on the November ballot."[10]

This greatly concerned members of the Progressive Party, many of whom cross-filed as Republicans, such as John Eshleman and Friend W. Richardson.[11]

General election results

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1914 California gubernatorial election[12]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Hiram W. Johnson (incumbent) 460,495 49.69% +3.75%
Republican John D. Fredericks 271,990 29.35% −16.59%
Democratic John B. Curtin 116,121 12.53% −27.61%
Socialist Noble A. Richardson 50,716 5.47% −6.92%
Prohibition Clinton P. Moore 27,345 2.95% +1.45%
Scattering 22 0.00%
Majority 188,505 20.34%
Total votes 926,689 100.00%
Progressive hold Swing +14.55%

Results by county

[edit]
County Hiram W. Johnson
Progressive
John D. Fredericks
Republican
John B. Curtin
Democratic
Noble A. Richardson
Socialist
Clinton P. Moore
Prohibition
Scattering
Write-in
Margin Total votes cast[12]
# % # % # % # % # % # % # %
Alameda 47,320 53.73% 25,612 29.08% 7,968 9.05% 5,800 6.59% 1,378 1.56% 0 0.00% 21,708 24.65% 88,078
Alpine 31 32.63% 42 44.21% 17 17.89% 4 4.21% 1 1.05% 0 0.00% -11 -11.58% 95
Amador 1,311 37.88% 1,041 30.08% 929 26.84% 105 3.03% 75 2.17% 0 0.00% 270 7.80% 3,461
Butte 6,209 48.82% 3,357 26.39% 1,898 14.92% 729 5.73% 525 4.13% 1 0.01% 2,852 22.42% 12,719
Calaveras 1,291 36.85% 990 28.26% 935 26.69% 208 5.94% 79 2.26% 0 0.00% 301 8.59% 3,503
Colusa 1,229 34.34% 866 24.20% 1,208 33.75% 140 3.91% 136 3.80% 0 0.00% 21[b] 0.59% 3,579
Contra Costa 6,966 54.86% 3,050 24.02% 1,657 13.05% 865 6.81% 160 1.26% 0 0.00% 3,916 30.84% 12,698
Del Norte 493 43.44% 355 31.28% 168 14.80% 81 7.14% 38 3.35% 0 0.00% 138 12.16% 1,135
El Dorado 1.155 36.74% 992 31.55% 743 23.63% 187 5.95% 66 2.10% 1 0.03% 163 5.18% 3,144
Fresno 14,095 50.81% 4,964 17.90% 5,566 20.07% 2,085 7.52% 1,029 3.71% 0 0.00% 8,529[b] 30.75% 27,739
Glenn 1,529 43.31% 1,080 30.59% 633 17.93% 137 3.88% 147 4.16% 4 0.11% 449 12.72% 3,530
Humboldt 6,202 52.87% 3,696 31.51% 830 7.08% 869 7.41% 133 1.13% 0 0.00% 2,506 21.36% 11,730
Imperial 3,461 55.13% 1,255 19.99% 873 13.91% 437 6.96% 252 4.01% 0 0.00% 2,206 35.14% 6,278
Inyo 876 40.07% 601 27.49% 258 11.80% 378 17.29% 73 3.34% 0 0.00% 275 12.58% 2,186
Kern 7,590 48.84% 3,807 24.49% 3,178 20.45% 771 4.96% 196 1.26% 0 0.00% 3,783 24.34% 15,542
Kings 1,862 32.38% 2,092 36.38% 1,133 19.70% 353 6.14% 311 5.41% 0 0.00% -230 -4.00% 5,751
Lake 612 24.33% 900 35.79% 587 23.34% 283 11.25% 133 5.29% 0 0.00% -288 -11.45% 2,515
Lassen 1,133 45.93% 602 24.40% 400 16.21% 217 8.80% 115 4.66% 0 0.00% 531 21.52% 2,467
Los Angeles 119,824 53.58% 65,484 29.28% 18,331 8.20% 11,129 4.98% 8,879 3.97% 5 0.00% 54,340 24.30% 223,652
Madera 1,358 38.83% 712 20.36% 1,093 31.26% 203 5.80% 131 3.75% 0 0.00% 265[b] 7.58% 3,497
Marin 4,065 48.04% 3,071 36.29% 871 10.29% 412 4.87% 43 0.51% 0 0.00% 994 11.75% 8,462
Mariposa 638 41.70% 229 14.97% 557 36.41% 59 3.86% 47 3.07% 0 0.00% 81[b] 5.29% 1,530
Mendocino 3,087 38.45% 2,681 33.39% 1,585 19.74% 504 6.28% 172 2.14% 0 0.00% 406 5.06% 8,029
Merced 2,297 39.45% 1,402 24.08% 1,470 25.25% 406 6.97% 247 4.24% 0 0.00% 827[b] 14.20% 5,822
Modoc 930 40.75% 532 23.31% 609 26.69% 137 6.00% 74 3.24% 0 0.00% 321 14.07% 2,282
Mono 187 41.74% 123 27.46% 71 15.85% 54 12.05% 13 2.90% 0 0.00% 64 14.29% 448
Monterey 3,531 43.67% 2,697 33.36% 1,313 16.24% 273 3.38% 271 3.35% 0 0.00% 834 10.32% 8,085
Napa 3,234 41.13% 3,077 39.13% 1,098 13.96% 316 4.02% 138 1.76% 0 0.00% 157 2.00% 7,863
Nevada 2,830 53.70% 949 18.01% 1,101 20.89% 295 5.60% 95 1.80% 0 0.00% 1,729[b] 32.81% 5,270
Orange 7,304 41.72% 6,096 34.82% 2.184 12.47% 815 4.66% 1,109 6.33% 0 0.00% 1,208 6.90% 17,508
Placer 3,846 59.03% 1,416 21.73% 705 10.82% 375 5.76% 173 2.66% 0 0.00% 2,430 37.30% 6,515
Plumas 1,042 52.36% 527 26.48% 232 11.66% 156 7.84% 33 1.66% 0 0.00% 515 25.88% 1,990
Riverside 6,337 48.87% 4,026 31.05% 1,146 8.84% 754 5.81% 705 5.44% 0 0.00% 2,311 17.82% 12,968
Sacramento 16,954 58.00% 8,661 29.63% 2,284 7.81% 965 3.30% 367 1.26% 0 0.00% 8,293 28.37% 29,231
San Benito 1,234 40.77% 1,184 39.11% 454 15.00% 101 3.34% 54 1.78% 0 0.00% 50 1.65% 3,027
San Bernardino 8,787 41.07% 7,634 35.68% 2,096 9.80% 1,367 6.39% 1,510 7.06% 0 0.00% 1,153 5.39% 21,394
San Diego 14,152 40.49% 14,365 41.10% 2,864 8.19% 1,879 5.38% 1,694 4.85% 1 0.00% -213 -0.61% 34,955
San Francisco 72,257 54.70% 36,606 27.71% 16,167 12.24% 6,346 4.80% 723 0.55% 4 0.00% 35,651 26.99% 132,103
San Joaquin 8,898 44.48% 5,759 28.79% 3,848 19.24% 805 4.02% 694 3.47% 0 0.00% 3,139 15.69% 20,004
San Luis Obispo 3,303 48.48% 1,890 27.74% 982 14.41% 457 6.71% 181 2.66% 0 0.00% 1,413 20.74% 6,813
San Mateo 5,208 54.76% 2,839 29.85% 1,002 10.54% 392 4.12% 69 0.73% 0 0.00% 2,369 24.91% 9,510
Santa Barbara 3,952 42.42% 2,760 29.63% 1,675 17.98% 547 5.87% 382 4.10% 0 0.00% 1,192 12.80% 9,316
Santa Clara 14,267 47.05% 10,792 35.59% 3,337 11.01% 1,108 3.65% 813 2.68% 4 0.01% 3,475 11.46% 30,321
Santa Cruz 4,232 45.23% 2,814 30.07% 1,417 15.14% 540 5.77% 354 3.78% 0 0.00% 1,418 15.15% 9,357
Shasta 2,711 45.68% 1,567 26.40% 811 13.66% 640 10.78% 206 3.47% 0 0.00% 1,144 19.28% 5,935
Sierra 568 46.33% 410 33.44% 149 12.15% 72 5.87% 27 2.20% 0 0.00% 158 12.89% 1,226
Siskiyou 2,663 41.66% 1,747 27.33% 1,342 20.99% 483 7.56% 157 2.46% 0 0.00% 916 14.33% 6,392
Solano 5,467 51.05% 2,837 26.49% 1,679 15.68% 544 5.08% 183 1.71% 0 0.00% 2,630 24.56% 10,710
Sonoma 7,693 40.36% 6,945 36.44% 2,967 15.57% 1,030 5.40% 426 2.23% 0 0.00% 748 3.92% 19,061
Stanislaus 5,245 43.74% 2,201 18.36% 2,530 21.10% 876 7.31% 1,138 9.49% 0 0.00% 2,715[b] 22.64% 11,990
Sutter 1,083 34.33% 1,463 46.37% 397 12.58% 97 3.07% 114 3.61% 1 0.03% -380 -12.04% 3,155
Tehama 2,108 41.29% 1,229 24.07% 1,084 21.23% 394 7.72% 290 5.68% 0 0.00% 879 17.22% 5,105
Trinity 650 41.94% 399 25.74% 267 17.23% 211 13.61% 23 1.48% 0 0.00% 251 16.19% 1,550
Tulare 6,480 42.56% 3,479 22.85% 3,349 22.00% 1,369 8.99% 547 3.59% 0 0.00% 3,001 19.71% 15,224
Tuolumne 1,385 39.25% 490 13.88% 1,309 37.09% 301 8.53% 44 1.25% 0 0.00% 76[b] 2.15% 3,529
Ventura 2,787 41.58% 2,649 39.53% 824 12.29% 295 4.40% 146 2.18% 1 0.01% 138 2.06% 6,702
Yolo 2,383 39.51% 1,913 31.71% 1,353 22.43% 231 3.83% 152 2.52% 0 0.00% 470 7.79% 6,032
Yuba 2,153 54.15% 1,033 25.98% 587 14.76% 129 3.24% 74 1.86% 0 0.00% 1,120 28.17% 3,976
Total 460,495 49.69% 271,990 29.35% 116,121 12.53% 50,716 5.47% 27,345 2.95% 22 0.00% 188,505 20.34% 926,689

Counties that flipped from Democratic to Progressive

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Counties that flipped from Progressive to Republican

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Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican

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Notes

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  1. ^ Lake County was carried by the Southern Democratic candidate in 1861
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Margin over Curtain

References

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  1. ^ "AUGURY OF SUCCESS". Napa Weekly Journal. January 2, 1914. Retrieved October 15, 2024.
  2. ^ "Johnson Out for Re-election FIGURES SHOW S.F. GAIN". San Francisco Call. January 6, 1914.
  3. ^ "Governor Johnson is going after the voters". Salinas Index Journal. January 3, 1914. Retrieved October 19, 2024.
  4. ^ "JOHNSON FIRES THE FIRST GUN". Healdsburg Tribune. February 19, 1914. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
  5. ^ "CURTIN, JOHNSON, FREDERICKS WILL HEAD LEADING TICKETS Race is Close Between Conley and Angellotti.— Phelan, Heney and Knowland for United States Senate.— Maddux and Ferguson for State Senate.— Ellis Wins Nomination for Member of Assembly". Livingston Chronicle. August 29, 1914. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
  6. ^ "FREDERICKS IS WILLING Los Angeles Attorney Says He Is Ready to Make Republican Race for Governor". Riverside Daily Press. January 8, 1914. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
  7. ^ "OLD GUARD CONTROLS AT SANTA BARBARA Leroy Wright and Phil Stanton Are Managing Republican Conference. Program Will Evidently Suit General Otis of Times Fine". Riverside Daily Press. February 7, 1914. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
  8. ^ "FREDERICKS SPENT $14,896 TO GET G. O. P. NOMINATION Los Angeles Candidate Files Expense Account That Heads the Idst". San Mateo Leader. September 17, 1914. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
  9. ^ "A MUDDLE OF THE PRIMARY LAW". Chico Record. August 20, 1914. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
  10. ^ "A MUDDLE OF THE PRIMARY LAW". Chico Record. August 20, 1914. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
  11. ^ "BULL MOOSE MAY LOSE CANDIDATES Primary Law May Bar From November Election Those Defeated in Any Party Fight. REPUBLICANS TO TEST LAW Courts Will Be Asked for Mandamus Writs to Keep Names Off Final Ballot". Sacramento Daily Union. August 15, 1914. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
  12. ^ a b California Secretary of State. Statement of Vote at the General Election held November 3, 1914 in the State of California. Sacramento, California: State Printing Office. p. 8. Retrieved July 18, 2024.