1932 United States presidential election (ARC): Difference between revisions

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{{wp|Newton Baker|Baker}}, who initially led with a near-landslide majority, saw his lead gradually erode as {{wp|Charles Curtis (ARC)|Curtis}}, in a break from his boss's previous policies, promised interventionist and largely popular measures meant to tackle the ongoing economic crisis. On Election Day, {{wp|Charles Curtis (ARC)|Curtis}} swept most of the states in the North and also picked up a number of states in the Midwest, allowing him to secure a narrow victory with 272 electoral votes to {{wp|Newton Baker|Baker}}'s 259, in what was considered one of the greatest upsets in {{wp|American}} political history.
{{wp|Newton Baker|Baker}}, who initially led with a near-landslide majority, saw his lead gradually erode as {{wp|Charles Curtis (ARC)|Curtis}}, in a break from his boss's previous policies, promised interventionist and largely popular measures meant to tackle the ongoing economic crisis. On Election Day, {{wp|Charles Curtis (ARC)|Curtis}} swept most of the states in the North and also picked up a number of states in the Midwest, allowing him to secure a narrow victory with 272 electoral votes to {{wp|Newton Baker|Baker}}'s 259, in what was considered one of the greatest upsets in {{wp|American}} political history.


Most significantly, this election marks the first and only time of {{wp|Charles Curtis (ARC)|Charles Curtis}}'s presidential run, as he would later pass away on February 8, 1936, just nine months short of the subsequent {{wp|1932 United States presidential election (ARC)|1936 presidential election}}.
Most significantly, this election marks the first and only time of {{wp|Charles Curtis (ARC)|Charles Curtis}}'s presidential run, as he would later pass away on February 8, 1936, just nine months short of the subsequent {{wp|1936 United States presidential election (ARC)|1936 presidential election}}, which his vice-president, {{wp|Joseph I. France}}, contested and won, before also later dying in office in 1939, unable to contest the following {{wp|1940 United States presidential election (ARC)|1940 presidential election}}.

Revision as of 10:11, 6 October 2022

1932 United States presidential election

← 1928 November 8, 1932 (1932-11-08) 1936 →

All 531 electoral votes of the Electoral College
266 electoral votes needed to win
Opinion polls
Turnout53.2% Decrease 3.7 pp
  Charles Curtis-portrait.jpg Newton Baker, Bain bw photo portrait.jpg
Nominee Charles Curtis Newton Baker
Party Republican Democratic
Home state Kansas Ohio
Running mate Joseph I. France Albert Ritchie
Electoral vote 272 259
States carried 20 30
Popular vote 19,696,256 19,550,279
Percentage 48.8% 48.4%

Election1932II.png
Presidential election results map. red denotes states won by Curtis/France, and Blue denotes those won by Baker/Ritchie. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.

President before election

Herbert Hoover
Republican

Elected President

Charles Curtis
Republican

The 1932 United States presidential election was the 37th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 1932. Taking place against the backdrop of the Great Depression, Vice President Charles Curtis successfully defeated his Democratic opponent, former United States Secretary of War, Newton Baker.

As a result of disastrous economic conditions caused by the Great Depression, incumbent President Herbert Hoover, despite facing little opposition in the Republican Party, chose not to run for a second term as president, allowing his deputy, Vice President Charles Curtis to run as the Republican candidate instead. Meanwhile, on the Democratic side, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York, initially a leading candidate for the party nomination, was defeated by former United States Secretary of War, Newton Baker, who had managed to unite a vast number of different factions within the party, while promising to bring an end the Great Depression.

Baker, who initially led with a near-landslide majority, saw his lead gradually erode as Curtis, in a break from his boss's previous policies, promised interventionist and largely popular measures meant to tackle the ongoing economic crisis. On Election Day, Curtis swept most of the states in the North and also picked up a number of states in the Midwest, allowing him to secure a narrow victory with 272 electoral votes to Baker's 259, in what was considered one of the greatest upsets in American political history.

Most significantly, this election marks the first and only time of Charles Curtis's presidential run, as he would later pass away on February 8, 1936, just nine months short of the subsequent 1936 presidential election, which his vice-president, Joseph I. France, contested and won, before also later dying in office in 1939, unable to contest the following 1940 presidential election.