The 1912 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 5, 1912. All contemporary 48 states were part of the 1912 United States presidential election. Voters chose 14 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.
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County Results
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New Jersey was won by the Democratic nominees, Governor Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey and his running mate Governor Thomas R. Marshall of Indiana. Wilson and Marshall defeated the Progressive Party nominees, former President Theodore Roosevelt of New York and his running mate Governor Hiram Johnson of California, and the Republican nominees, incumbent President William Howard Taft of Ohio and his running mate incumbent Vice President James S. Sherman of New York. Wilson carried New Jersey with a bare plurality of 41.20 percent of the vote to Roosevelt's 33.60 percent, a victory margin of 7.60 percent. Taft came in third place with 20.53 percent.[1] Coming in a distant fourth was Socialist candidate Eugene V. Debs, who took 3.69 percent.
Like much of the Northeast, New Jersey in this era was a staunchly Republican state, having not given a majority of the vote to a Democratic presidential candidate since 1892. In his initial 1908 election campaign, Taft had carried New Jersey by a comfortable 57–39 margin. However, in 1912, the Republican Party was split as former Republican President Theodore Roosevelt ran as a third party candidate against incumbent Republican President William Howard Taft, splitting the Republican voter base, and allowing Wilson to win many states with pluralities. Despite being the sitting Governor of New Jersey, Wilson only managed to earn 41 percent of the vote in his home state, but with the GOP split, this would prove to be enough to win New Jersey's electoral votes. Were Taft and Roosevelt voters united behind a single Republican candidate, the GOP would have received 54.13 percent of the vote. Although it was Wilson's home state and he had served as governor there, the results in 1912 made the state about 6% more Progressive than the nation. Wilson became the only candidate in the 1912 election to carry both his home state (New Jersey) and his birth state (Virginia).
Results
edit1912 United States presidential election in New Jersey | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | Electoral votes | |
Democratic | Woodrow Wilson | 178,289 | 41.20% | 14 | |
Progressive | Theodore Roosevelt | 145,410 | 33.60% | 0 | |
Republican | William Howard Taft (incumbent) | 88,835 | 20.53% | 0 | |
Socialist | Eugene V. Debs | 15,948 | 3.69% | 0 | |
Prohibition | Eugene W. Chafin | 2,936 | 0.68% | 0 | |
Socialist Labor | Arthur E. Reimer | 1,321 | 0.31% | 0 | |
Totals | 432,739 | 100.0% | 14 |
Results by county
editCounty | Woodrow Wilson Democratic |
William Howard Taft Republican |
Theodore Roosevelt Progressive "Bull Moose" |
Eugene Debs Socialist |
Eugene Chafin Prohibition |
Arthur Reimer Socialist Labor |
Margin[a] | Total votes cast[2] | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Atlantic | 4,885 | 34.99% | 4,422 | 31.67% | 4,245 | 30.40% | 220 | 1.58% | 153 | 1.10% | 38 | 0.27% | 463[b] | 3.32% | 13,963 |
Bergen | 9,978 | 40.12% | 5,087 | 20.46% | 8,594 | 34.56% | 947 | 3.81% | 175 | 0.70% | 87 | 0.35% | 1,384 | 5.57% | 24,868 |
Burlington | 5,592 | 39.93% | 3,967 | 28.33% | 3,973 | 28.37% | 220 | 1.57% | 225 | 1.61% | 27 | 0.19% | 1,619 | 11.56% | 14,004 |
Camden | 10,812 | 36.64% | 7,911 | 26.81% | 8,718 | 29.54% | 1,744 | 5.91% | 263 | 0.89% | 63 | 0.21% | 2,094 | 7.10% | 29,511 |
Cape May | 2,124 | 42.24% | 909 | 18.08% | 1,847 | 36.73% | 66 | 1.31% | 73 | 1.45% | 10 | 0.20% | 277 | 5.51% | 5,029 |
Cumberland | 3,858 | 37.01% | 1,895 | 18.18% | 4,097 | 39.30% | 303 | 2.91% | 248 | 2.38% | 23 | 0.22% | -239 | -2.29% | 10,424 |
Essex | 26,250 | 32.57% | 16,994 | 21.08% | 33,627 | 41.72% | 3,320 | 4.12% | 167 | 0.21% | 243 | 0.30% | -7,377 | -9.15% | 80,601 |
Gloucester | 3,364 | 38.29% | 1,856 | 21.12% | 3,108 | 35.37% | 206 | 2.34% | 232 | 2.64% | 20 | 0.23% | 256 | 2.91% | 8,786 |
Hudson | 40,517 | 52.55% | 8,763 | 11.37% | 24,156 | 31.33% | 3,169 | 4.11% | 143 | 0.19% | 356 | 0.46% | 16,361 | 21.22% | 77,104 |
Hunterdon | 4,103 | 53.37% | 1,970 | 25.62% | 1,470 | 19.12% | 51 | 0.66% | 74 | 0.96% | 20 | 0.26% | 2,133[b] | 27.74% | 7,688 |
Mercer | 7,773 | 36.80% | 5,676 | 26.88% | 6,907 | 32.70% | 586 | 2.77% | 105 | 0.50% | 73 | 0.35% | 866 | 4.10% | 21,120 |
Middlesex | 8,186 | 44.49% | 4,743 | 25.78% | 5,061 | 27.51% | 250 | 1.36% | 111 | 0.60% | 48 | 0.26% | 3,125 | 16.98% | 18,399 |
Monmouth | 9,799 | 48.55% | 3,683 | 18.25% | 6,305 | 31.24% | 232 | 1.15% | 126 | 0.62% | 37 | 0.18% | 3,494 | 17.31% | 20,182 |
Morris | 5,628 | 40.07% | 3,329 | 23.70% | 4,440 | 31.61% | 413 | 2.94% | 216 | 1.54% | 20 | 0.14% | 1,188 | 8.46% | 14,046 |
Ocean | 1,858 | 37.61% | 919 | 18.60% | 2,055 | 41.60% | 44 | 0.89% | 46 | 0.93% | 18 | 0.36% | -197 | -3.99% | 4,940 |
Passaic | 10,810 | 35.41% | 5,349 | 17.52% | 11,701 | 38.32% | 2,374 | 7.78% | 89 | 0.29% | 208 | 0.68% | -891 | -2.92% | 30,531 |
Salem | 2,745 | 45.14% | 1,803 | 29.65% | 1,374 | 22.59% | 80 | 1.32% | 68 | 1.12% | 11 | 0.18% | 942[b] | 15.49% | 6,081 |
Somerset | 3,146 | 42.50% | 2,068 | 27.94% | 2,059 | 27.82% | 46 | 0.62% | 66 | 0.89% | 17 | 0.23% | 1,078[b] | 14.56% | 7,402 |
Sussex | 2,852 | 53.10% | 890 | 16.57% | 1,506 | 28.04% | 49 | 0.91% | 71 | 1.32% | 3 | 0.06% | 1,346 | 25.06% | 5,371 |
Union | 9,695 | 38.54% | 5,421 | 21.55% | 8,429 | 33.51% | 1,484 | 5.90% | 82 | 0.33% | 45 | 0.18% | 1,266 | 5.03% | 25,156 |
Warren | 4,663 | 55.14% | 1,411 | 16.68% | 2,007 | 23.73% | 144 | 1.70% | 203 | 2.40% | 29 | 0.34% | 2,656 | 31.41% | 8,457 |
Totals | 178,289 | 41.20% | 88,835 | 20.53% | 145,410 | 33.60% | 15,948 | 3.69% | 2,936 | 0.68% | 1,321 | 0.31% | 32,879 | 7.60% | 432,739 |
Analysis
editOn the county-level map, Wilson carried 17 of the state's 21 counties, although seven with pluralities between forty and fifty percent of the vote, and six with pluralities of less than forty percent. Wilson won majorities only in urban Hudson County and the three rural counties in western North Jersey, Warren, Sussex, and Hunterdon, which had long been non-Yankee Democratic enclaves in the otherwise Republican Northeast.[3] Warren and Hunterdon had never voted Republican as of 1912, and Sussex only for William McKinley in 1896.[4]
As Roosevelt and his Bull Moose Party finished a strong second ahead of incumbent Republican Taft in the state, the remaining four counties went to Roosevelt. Roosevelt won urban Essex County along with Ocean County with pluralities between 40 and 50% of the vote, while winning Passaic County and Cumberland County with pluralities of less than 40% of the vote. The latter two counties voted for a non-Republican for the first time since 1856. Taft finished a weak third place in the state for an incumbent president and official Republican nominee, and failed to win a single county in New Jersey, the first of two times that a Republican did so, along with 1964. This was the first time since the Republican Party's founding that Ocean County did not vote for a Republican. Monmouth County voted Democratic for the first time since 1884, Burlington since 1876, Camden and Cape May since 1860, Mercer and Atlantic since 1856, and Gloucester for the first time ever.
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Because Roosevelt finished second behind Wilson in New Jersey as a whole, all margins given are Wilson vote minus Roosevelt vote and percentage margins Wilson percentage minus Roosevelt percentage unless otherwise noted.
- ^ a b c d In this county where Taft did run second ahead of Roosevelt, margin given is Wilson vote minus Taft vote and percentage margin Wilson percentage minus Taft percentage.
References
edit- ^ "1912 Presidential General Election Results – New Jersey". Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
- ^ New Jersey Department of Law and Public Safety Division of Elections; Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey (1913) p. 641
- ^ Phillips, Kevin P.; The Emerging Republican Majority, pp. 121-134 ISBN 978-0-691-16324-6
- ^ Menendez, Albert J.; The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004, pp. 258-259 ISBN 0786422173