1924 United States presidential election in Wisconsin

The 1924 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 4, 1924 as part of the 1924 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.

1924 United States presidential election in Wisconsin

← 1920November 4, 19241928 →
 
NomineeRobert M. La FolletteCalvin CoolidgeJohn W. Davis
PartyIndependentRepublicanDemocratic
AllianceProgressive
Home stateWisconsinMassachusettsWest Virginia
Running mateBurton K. WheelerCharles G. DawesCharles W. Bryan
Electoral vote1300
Popular vote453,678311,61468,115
Percentage53.96%37.06%8.10%

County Results

President before election

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

Elected President

Calvin Coolidge
Republican

Wisconsin had since the decline of the Populist movement been substantially a one-party state dominated by the Republican Party.[1] The Democratic Party became entirely uncompetitive outside certain German Catholic counties adjoining Lake Michigan as the upper classes, along with the majority of workers who followed them, completely fled from William Jennings Bryan's agrarian and free silver sympathies.[2] As Democratic strength weakened severely after 1894 – although the state did develop a strong Socialist Party to provide opposition to the GOP – Wisconsin developed the direct Republican primary in 1903 and this ultimately created competition between the "League" under Robert M. La Follette, and the conservative "Regular" faction.[3]

The beginning of the 1910s would see a minor Democratic revival as many La Follette progressives endorsed Woodrow Wilson,[4] but this flirtation would not be long-lasting as Wilson's "Anglophile" foreign policies were severely opposed by Wisconsin's largely German- and Scandinavian-American populace.[5] The 1918 mid-term elections saw the Midwestern farming community largely desert the Democratic Party due to supposed preferential treatment of Southern farmers:[6] Democratic seats in the Midwest fell from thirty-four to seventeen,[7] and in 1920 Wisconsin's status as a one-party Republican state was solidified as James M. Cox won less than a sixth of the state's presidential vote and Democrats claimed only four state legislative seats, all but one of which would be lost in 1922.

At the same time, the Republican Party both at the state and national levels was severely divided between an ascendant conservative faction and a progressive faction, whose leader was Wisconsin's own veteran senator Robert M. La Follette.[8] After a fierce debate the Democratic Party nominated former Congressman John W. Davis of West Virginia,[9] who although West Virginia was a border state whose limited African-American population had not been disenfranchised as happened in all former Confederate States,[10] shared the extreme social conservatism of Southern Democrats of the time. Davis supported poll taxes, opposed women's suffrage, and believed in strictly limited government with no expansion in nonmilitary fields.[11]

The conservatism of the major-party nominees made La Follette mount a third-party challenge, which he had planned even beforehand.[12] Wisconsin's Senator was formally nominated on July 4 by the "Conference for Progressive Political Action" and developed a platform dedicated to eliminating child labor and American interference in Latin American political affairs, along with a formal denunciation of the Ku Klux Klan.[13] La Follette also proposed major judicial reforms including amendments allowing congress to override judicial review and to re-enact laws declared unconstitutional.[14] La Follette also called for election of federal judges for ten-year terms.[15]

At the beginning of the campaign in July, La Follette listed nine states as "in" for him, including Wisconsin.[16] Although early opinion polls showed La Follette attracting large numbers of those German and Scandinavian-Americans who completely deserted Cox in 1920,[17] newer polls later in the fall showed Wisconsin as the only state La Follette was certain to carry.[18] These later polls proved correct, with La Follette carrying Wisconsin with 53.96 percent of the popular vote, but winning no other state.[19]

La Follette carried 62 of Wisconsin's 72 counties, with Coolidge gaining majorities only in the heavily Yankee and pro-establishment counties bordering Illinois, in Pepin County on the western border, and in Marinette and Florence Counties bordering Michigan. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time a third-party presidential candidate has carried a state outside the former Confederacy.[a] This was the first presidential election in which a Republican won the White House without carrying Wisconsin, a feat which would only occur 3 more times (in 1988, 2000, and 2004)

Results

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1924 United States presidential election in Wisconsin[20]
PartyCandidateVotesPercentageElectoral votes
IndependentRobert M. La Follette453,67853.96%13
RepublicanCalvin Coolidge (incumbent)311,61437.06%0
DemocraticJohn W. Davis68,1158.10%0
IndependentWilliam Z. Foster3,7730.45%0
ProhibitionHerman Faris2,9180.35%0
IndependentFrank Tetes Johns4580.05%0
IndependentWilliam J. Wallace2700.03%0
Totals840,826100.00%13

Results by county

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1924 United States presidential election in Wisconsin by county[21]
CountyJohn Calvin Coolidge
Republican
John William Davis
Democratic
Robert Marion La Follette, Sr.
Independent
Various candidates
Other parties
Margin[b]Total votes cast
#%#%#%#%#%
Adams77928.99%1736.44%1,72464.16%110.41%-945-35.17%2,687
Ashland2,27232.44%4496.41%4,20460.02%791.13%-1,932-27.58%7,004
Barron2,70329.44%3774.11%6,01065.47%900.98%-3,307-36.02%9,180
Bayfield1,67536.41%2054.46%2,60156.54%1192.59%-926-20.13%4,600
Brown7,61137.90%2,32811.59%10,02449.92%1170.58%-2,413-12.02%20,080
Buffalo1,32433.05%1764.39%2,47461.76%320.80%-1,150-28.71%4,006
Burnett95830.34%762.41%2,08866.12%361.14%-1,130-35.78%3,158
Calumet93818.59%56911.28%3,50369.42%360.71%-2,565-50.83%5,046
Chippewa5,13541.72%5604.55%6,51752.95%960.78%-1,382-11.23%12,308
Clark3,13031.27%5525.51%6,20862.02%1201.20%-3,078-30.75%10,010
Columbia4,72440.41%9077.76%5,96851.05%910.78%-1,244-10.64%11,690
Crawford1,68729.82%93616.54%2,97752.62%581.03%-1,290-22.80%5,658
Dane12,28031.32%2,0815.31%24,59562.73%2520.64%-12,315-31.41%39,208
Dodge5,16730.45%2,01911.90%9,61056.63%1751.03%-4,443-26.18%16,971
Door1,89138.56%2354.79%2,71555.36%631.28%-824-16.80%4,904
Douglas5,88739.14%6384.24%8,25554.89%2591.72%-2,368-15.75%15,039
Dunn3,17740.13%2843.59%4,38555.39%700.88%-1,208-15.26%7,916
Eau Claire5,14946.46%6295.68%5,22247.12%830.75%-73-0.66%11,083
Florence59450.21%494.14%52344.21%171.44%716.00%1,183
Fond du Lac8,51641.62%2,22210.86%9,57646.80%1460.71%-1,060-5.18%20,460
Forest1,10440.74%29911.03%1,25946.46%481.77%-155-5.72%2,710
Grant5,71440.33%1,51810.71%6,82548.17%1120.79%-1,111-7.84%14,169
Green2,92235.07%4235.08%4,88558.64%1011.21%-1,963-23.56%8,331
Green Lake1,98837.45%1,09020.53%2,18741.19%440.83%-199-3.75%5,309
Iowa3,29140.07%6898.39%4,13350.32%1001.22%-842-10.25%8,213
Iron1,05840.17%843.19%1,40053.15%923.49%-342-12.98%2,634
Jackson1,66232.24%2554.95%3,16761.44%711.38%-1,505-29.19%5,155
Jefferson4,25031.22%1,37410.09%7,88557.93%1020.75%-3,635-26.71%13,611
Juneau1,91731.10%4036.54%3,78561.40%590.96%-1,868-30.30%6,164
Kenosha10,34155.45%1,5178.13%6,69535.90%960.51%3,64619.55%18,649
Kewaunee1,01823.90%3959.27%2,80465.82%431.01%-1,786-41.92%4,260
La Crosse5,73332.49%1,2527.09%10,54359.74%1190.67%-4,810-27.26%17,647
Lafayette2,67134.69%1,26516.43%3,68147.81%821.07%-1,010-13.12%7,699
Langlade2,57235.98%92612.95%3,57850.05%731.02%-1,006-14.07%7,149
Lincoln1,85726.84%5037.27%4,46564.54%931.34%-2,608-37.70%6,918
Manitowoc4,82829.54%1,5999.78%9,81460.04%1040.64%-4,986-30.50%16,345
Marathon5,57729.22%1,1095.81%12,19363.88%2091.09%-6,616-34.66%19,088
Marinette4,91154.68%5716.36%3,41137.98%880.98%1,50016.70%8,981
Marquette1,10931.19%58716.51%1,82051.18%401.12%-711-19.99%3,556
Milwaukee50,73034.27%14,5109.80%81,69755.19%1,0920.74%-30,967-20.92%148,029
Monroe2,66126.70%4284.30%6,74767.71%1291.29%-4,086-41.00%9,965
Oconto2,56233.12%6027.78%4,50658.25%650.84%-1,944-25.13%7,735
Oneida1,76933.07%3246.06%3,19659.74%611.14%-1,427-26.67%5,350
Outagamie6,42635.39%1,2556.91%10,35757.03%1220.67%-3,931-21.65%18,160
Ozaukee1,01520.71%59212.08%3,26466.61%290.59%-2,249-45.90%4,900
Pepin1,22655.88%2069.39%73733.59%251.14%48922.29%2,194
Pierce2,78840.97%2984.38%3,66153.80%580.85%-873-12.83%6,805
Polk2,79337.57%3174.26%4,25157.18%730.98%-1,458-19.61%7,434
Portage2,85427.76%2,01019.55%5,34752.01%690.67%-2,493-24.25%10,280
Price1,75432.81%3236.04%3,15158.94%1182.21%-1,397-26.13%5,346
Racine13,04050.21%1,4635.63%11,29843.51%1680.65%1,7426.71%25,969
Richland2,66942.11%89814.17%2,66041.97%1111.75%90.14%6,338
Rock14,81560.92%1,4535.97%7,92332.58%1290.53%6,89228.34%24,320
Rusk1,93239.11%2725.51%2,67754.19%591.19%-745-15.08%4,940
St. Croix3,60039.68%7187.91%4,69351.72%620.68%-1,093-12.05%9,073
Sauk3,93535.60%5555.02%6,40057.91%1621.47%-2,465-22.30%11,052
Sawyer99037.53%1355.12%1,48756.37%260.99%-497-18.84%2,638
Shawano2,06323.01%4715.25%6,33770.69%941.05%-4,274-47.67%8,965
Sheboygan6,97434.56%1,3506.69%11,71458.04%1430.71%-4,740-23.49%20,181
Taylor1,38929.49%1853.93%3,07965.37%571.21%-1,690-35.88%4,710
Trempealeau2,08331.26%3735.60%4,14862.24%600.90%-2,065-30.99%6,664
Vernon2,67030.41%4064.62%5,59963.78%1041.18%-2,929-33.36%8,779
Vilas87342.11%1195.74%1,03850.07%432.07%-165-7.96%2,073
Walworth7,48457.22%1,1628.88%4,33533.14%990.76%3,14924.07%13,080
Washburn1,42238.91%1584.32%2,04355.90%320.88%-621-16.99%3,655
Washington1,98724.44%98012.05%5,08162.49%831.02%-3,094-38.05%8,131
Waukesha7,02645.45%1,96512.71%6,34841.06%1200.78%6784.39%15,459
Waupaca3,65433.89%6656.17%6,39559.32%670.62%-2,741-25.42%10,781
Waushara1,60235.43%2495.51%2,60657.63%651.44%-1,004-22.20%4,522
Winnebago11,23948.70%1,8017.80%9,89142.86%1470.64%1,3485.84%23,078
Wood3,46930.32%5484.79%7,30363.83%1221.07%-3,834-33.51%11,442
Totals311,61437.06%68,1158.10%453,67853.96%7,4190.88%-142,064-16.90%840,826

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Due to conflicts over black civil rights and to their disenfranchisement, third-party "states' rights" candidates carried four Confederate states in 1948, two in 1960 and five in 1968.
  2. ^ Because La Follette carried Wisconsin, and Coolidge was the top major party candidate in the state and in every county, all margins given are Coolidge vote minus La Follette vote and all percentage margins Coolidge percentage minus La Follette percentage.

References

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