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United States gubernatorial elections were held in 1946, in 34 states, concurrent with the House and Senate elections, on November 5, 1946. Elections took place on September 9 in Maine.
In Idaho, the governor was elected to a 4-year term for the first time, instead of a 2-year term. In New Jersey, this was the last election on a 3-year cycle, before switching to a 4-year term for governors from 1949.
Results
State | Incumbent | Party | Status | Opposing candidates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alabama | Chauncey Sparks | Democratic | Term-limited, Democratic victory | Jim Folsom (Democratic) 88.67% Lyman Ward (Republican) 11.33% [1] |
Arizona | Sidney Preston Osborn | Democratic | Re-elected, 60.10% | Bruce Brockett (Republican) 39.90% [2] |
Arkansas | Benjamin Travis Laney | Democratic | Re-elected, 84.14% | W. T. Mills (Republican) 15.86% [3] |
California | Earl Warren | Republican[4] | Re-elected, 91.64% | Henry R. Schmidt (Prohibition) 7.06% Archie Brown (write-in) (Communist) 0.88% James Roosevelt (write-in) (Democratic) 0.13% Robert W. Kenny (Independent) 0.06% Albert Clark (Independent) 0.03% [5] |
Colorado | John Charles Vivian | Republican | Retired, Democratic victory | William Lee Knous (Democratic) 52.11% Leon E. Lavington (Republican) 47.89% [6] |
Connecticut | Raymond E. Baldwin | Republican | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | James L. McConaughy (Republican) 54.38% Charles Wilbert Snow (Democratic) 40.41% Jasper McLevy (Socialist) 4.72% Herman N. Simon (Socialist Labor) 0.50% [7] |
Georgia | Ellis Arnall | Democratic | Term-limited, Democratic victory | Eugene Talmadge (Democratic) 98.54% Herman Talmadge (write-in) (Democratic) 0.46% James V. Carmichael (write-in) (Democratic) 0.46% D. Talmadge Bowers (write-in) (Independent) 0.44% Ellis Arnall (write-in) (Democratic) 0.08% Scattering 0.01% [8] (Democratic primary results) Eugene Talmadge 42.96% (244) James V. Carmichael 45.30% (144) Eurith D. Rivers 10.04% (22) Hoke O’Kelley 1.70% [9] |
Idaho | Arnold Williams | Democratic | Defeated, 43.63% | C. A. Robins (Republican) 56.37% [10] |
Iowa | Robert D. Blue | Republican | Re-elected, 57.40% | Frank Miles (Democratic) 42.14% E. P. Gabriel (Prohibition) 0.46% [11] |
Kansas | Andrew Frank Schoeppel | Republican | Retired, Republican victory | Frank Carlson (Republican) 53.50% Harry Hines Woodring (Democratic) 44.02% David C. White (Prohibition) 2.17% Harry Graber (Socialist) 0.32% [12] |
Maine | Horace Hildreth | Republican | Re-elected, 61.31% | F. Davis Clark (Democratic) 38.69% [13] |
Maryland | Herbert O'Conor | Democratic | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Democratic victory | William Preston Lane Jr. (Democratic) 54.73% Theodore McKeldin (Republican) 45.27% [14] |
Massachusetts | Maurice J. Tobin | Democratic | Defeated, 45.31% | Robert F. Bradford (Republican) 54.12% Horace I. Hillis (Socialist Labor) 0.42% Guy S. Williams (Prohibition) 0.14% [15] |
Michigan | Harry Kelly | Republican | Retired, Republican victory | Kim Sigler (Republican) 60.28% Murray Van Wagoner (Democratic) 38.70% Gordon Phillips (Prohibition) 0.72% James Sim (Socialist Labor) 0.30% [16] |
Minnesota | Edward John Thye | Republican | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | Luther Youngdahl (Republican) 58.96% Harold H. Barker (DFL) 39.71% Rudolph Gustafson (Industrial Government) 1.33% [17] |
Nebraska | Dwight Griswold | Republican | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | Val Peterson (Republican) 65.51% Frank Sorrell (Democratic) 34.49% [18] |
Nevada | Vail M. Pittman | Democratic | Re-elected, 57.42% | Melvin E. Jepson (Republican) 42.58% [19] |
New Hampshire | Charles M. Dale | Republican | Re-elected, 63.14% | F. Clyde Keefe (Democratic) 36.86% [20] |
New Jersey | Walter Evans Edge | Republican | Term-limited, Republican victory | Alfred E. Driscoll (Republican) 57.08% Lewis G. Hansen (Democratic) 41.42% Alan Kohlman (Socialist Workers) 0.69% Lawrence Mahan (Communist) 0.29% Rubye Smith (Socialist) 0.16% Robert L. Gittings (Independent) 0.15% George E. Bopp (Socialist Labor) 0.10% John Binns (Prohibition) 0.10% [21] |
New Mexico | John J. Dempsey | Democratic | Retired to run for U.S. Senate, Republican victory | Thomas J. Mabry (Democratic) 52.70% Edward L. Safford (Republican) 47.30% [22] |
New York | Thomas E. Dewey | Republican | Re-elected, 56.92% | James M. Mead (Democratic) 43.08% [23] |
North Dakota | Fred G. Aandahl | Republican | Re-elected, 68.88% | Quentin Burdick (Democratic) 31.12% [24] |
Ohio | Frank Lausche | Democratic | Defeated, 48.88% | Thomas J. Herbert (Republican) 50.64% Arla A. Albaugh (Socialist Labor) 0.49% [25] |
Oklahoma | Robert S. Kerr | Democratic | Term-limited, Democratic victory | Roy J. Turner (Democratic) 52.47% Olney F. Flynn (Republican) 45.98% Mildred “Mickey” Harrell (Independent) 1.45% R. M. Funk (Independent) 0.05% Bruno H. Miller (Independent) 0.05% [26] |
Oregon | Earl Snell | Republican | Re-elected, 69.06% | Carl C. Donaugh (Democratic) 30.94% [27] |
Pennsylvania | Edward Martin | Republican | Term-limited, Republican victory | James H. Duff (Republican) 58.53% John S. Rice (Democratic) 40.68% James Killip (Prohibition) 0.44% George S. Taylor (Socialist Labor) 0.34% [28] |
Rhode Island | John Pastore | Democratic | Re-elected, 54.27% | John G. Murphy (Republican) 45.73% [29] |
South Carolina | Ransome Judson Williams | Democratic | Defeated in Democratic primary, Democratic victory | Strom Thurmond (Democratic) unopposed [30] (Democratic primary run-off results) Strom Thurmond 56.95% James C. McLeod 43.05% [31] |
South Dakota | Merrell Q. Sharpe | Republican | Defeated in Republican primary, Republican victory | George Theodore Mickelson (Republican) 67.16% Richard Haeder (Democratic) 32.84% [32] |
Tennessee | Jim Nance McCord | Democratic | Re-elected, 65.35% | W. O. Lowe (Republican) 31.91% John Randolph Neal Jr. (Independent) 2.74% [33] |
Texas | Coke R. Stevenson | Democratic | Retired, Democratic victory | Beauford H. Jester (Democratic) 91.23% Eugene Nolte (Republican) 8.77% [34] |
Vermont | Mortimer R. Proctor | Republican | Defeated in Republican primary, Republican victory | Ernest W. Gibson Jr. (Republican) 80.30% Berthold C. Coburn (Democratic) 19.57% Scattering 0.14% [35] |
Wisconsin | Walter Samuel Goodland | Republican | Re-elected, 59.78% | Daniel Hoan (Democratic) 39.07% Walter H. Uphoff (Socialist) 0.87% Sigmund Eisenscher (Communist) 0.18% Jerry Kenyon (Socialist Labor) 0.09% Scattering 0.02% [36] |
Wyoming | Lester C. Hunt | Democratic | Re-elected, 52.88% | Earl Wright (Republican) 47.12% [37] |
Notes
- ^ Charles Wilbert Snow (D) succeeded Connecticut Governor Raymond E. Baldwin (R) who resigned to take a seat in the U.S. Senate in December 1946.
References
- ^ "AL Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "AZ Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "AR Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ Warren also won the Democratic nomination by cross-filing
- ^ "CA Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "CO Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "CT Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "GA Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "GA Governor, 1946 – D Primary". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "ID Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "IA Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "KS Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "ME Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "MD Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "MA Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "MI Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "MN Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "NE Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "NV Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "NH Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "NJ Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "NM Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "NY Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "ND Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "OH Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "OK Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "OR Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "PA Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "RI Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "SC Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "SC Governor, 1948 – D Runoff". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "SD Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "TN Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "TX Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "VT Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "WI Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- ^ "WY Governor, 1946". Our Campaigns. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
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