U.S. presidential election, 1920 |
| Presidential Candidate |
Electoral Vote |
Popular Vote |
Pct |
Party |
Running Mate
(Electoral Votes) |
| Warren Gamaliel Harding of Ohio (W) |
404 |
16,152,200 |
60.6 |
Republican |
John Calvin Coolidge, Jr. of Massachusetts (404) |
| James Middleton Cox of Ohio |
127 |
9,147,353 |
34.3 |
Democrat |
Franklin Delano Roosevelt of New York (127) |
| Other(including Eugene Debs) |
|
|
5.1 |
|
| Total |
|
|
100.0% |
|
| Other elections: 1908, 1912, 1916, 1920, 1924, 1928, 1932 |
| Source: U.S. Office of the Federal Register
|
By 1920, World War I was over. The
wartime boom had collapsed. Diplomats and politicians were arguing over peace treaties and the question of America's entry into
the League of Nations. Overseas there were wars and revolutions;
at home there were strikes, riots and a growing fear of radicals and terrorists. Disillusionment was in the air.
The giants who had dominated the political scene for a generation were gone -- Theodore Roosevelt died in 1919 and Woodrow Wilson was a broken invalid living in seclusion. Even so, the presidential election of 1920
continued the debate between the nationalistic activism of Roosevelt's presidency and the global idealism of Wilson's
administration.
On June 8, 1920, the Republican National Convention meeting in Chicago nominated Warren G. Harding, an Ohio newspaper editor and United States Senator, to run for president with Calvin Coolidge, governor of Massachusetts, as his running mate. Harding campaigned as advocating, in his own phrase, "A Return to
Normalcy" after the trying times of the World War. The Democrats, meeting in San Francisco, nominated another newspaper editor from Ohio, Governor James M. Cox, as their presidential candidate, and thirty-seven-year-old
Undersecretary of the Navy Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, a distant cousin of the late president Roosevelt, for vice president.
On election night--November 2, 1920--for the first time commercial radio broadcast
coverage of election returns. Announcers at KDKA AM, Pittsburgh, read telegraph ticker results over the air as
they came in. This single station (with few competitors on the airwaves) could be heard over most of the Eastern United States by
the small percentage of the population that had radio receivers.
This was the first election in which women were allowed to vote, following the passage of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution.
Socialist Party candidate Eugene V. Debs received 913,664 popular votes (3.4%), despite the fact that he
was in prison at the time (for advocating non-compliance with the draft in World War I).
P. P. Christensen of
the Farmer-Labor Party took 265,229 votes (1.0%), while Prohibition Party candidate Aaron S. Watkins came in fifth with 189,339 votes (0.7%), the poorest showing for the
Prohibition party since 1884; as the Eighteenth Amendment starting Prohibition had passed the previous year, this single-issue party seemed less relevant.
Tennessee's vote for Warren G. Harding marked the first time since the end of
Reconstruction that one of the 11 states of the Confederacy had voted for a Republican.
President Warren G. Harding died in office on August 2, 1923. He was succeeded by Calvin Coolidge.
Source: Library of Congress
See also: President of the United
States, U.S. presidential election,
1920, History of the United States (1918-1945)
|