1914 Arizona gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1914 Arizona gubernatorial election took place on November 3, 1914, for the post of the Governor of Arizona. The Supreme Court of Arizona ruled that there would be no statewide elections in 1912, thus extending the terms to sync up with elections on even years.[1] The Democratic nominee was incumbent governor George W. P. Hunt, his Republican opponent was the final Delegate to Congress from Arizona Territory, Ralph H. Cameron. Cameron was disadvantaged [2] by the same reason the previous Republican nominee Wells was: he had opposed statehood with the present Constitution.

Quick facts Nominee, Party ...
1914 Arizona gubernatorial election

← 1911
November 3, 1914
1916 â†’
 
Nominee George W. P. Hunt Ralph H. Cameron
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 25,226 17,602
Percentage 49.46% 34.51%

 
Nominee George U. Young J. R. Barnette
Party Progressive Socialist
Popular vote 5,206 2,973
Percentage 10.20% 5.83%

Election results by county
Hunt:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
Cameron:      40–50%

Governor before election

George W. P. Hunt
Democratic

Elected Governor

George W. P. Hunt
Democratic

Close

Two third parties also made strong challenges, the Progressives polled over 10% with nominee George Young, the final Territorial Secretary and then-mayor of Phoenix. The Socialists held around the same percentage of votes as in 1911, increasing slightly, but would peak here and never reach the same height.

George W. P. Hunt was sworn in again as governor on January 4, 1915.

Democratic primary

Candidates

  • George W. P. Hunt, incumbent governor
  • Henry A. Hughes, physician and former Democratic primary candidate for governor.

Race

As of May 1914, Hunt had still not officially declared his intention to run for re-election. By that point in time, there were already two other Democrats who had announced their intention to run for the Democratic nomination: Fred Sutter and Henry A. Hughes.[3] Sutter had been the Superior Court Judge from Cochise County from 1912 until his resignation in July 1913. When he resigned, he had stated his intention to never run for elected office again. However, in February 1914, when Democratic leaders began to float his name as a possible candidate in the Democratic primary for the governor's seat, he did not disavow those rumors.[4] By March it was reported that he would be the conservative Democratic candidate in the primary, to oppose the more liberal Hunt,[5][6] and he officially announced his candidacy by mid-March.[7] Within a month, Sutter was considered the front runner for the nomination, over the incumbent Hunt.[8][9] There were rumors that Hunt would seek the U.S. Senate seat, rather than another term as governor.[10] Sutter's official announcement that he was a candidate for governor came on May 22 in Tucson.[11] In order not to splinter the party, Sutter withdrew from the race in early July, announcing his support for Hunt.[12] When Hunt officially began his candidacy for re-election in mid-July, with the submission of a petition to put his name on the ballot, the first signature on the petition was that of Sutter.[13]

Results

More information Party, Candidate ...
Democratic primary results [14] [15]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic George W. P. Hunt (incumbent) 18,658 65.37%
Democratic Henry A. Hughes 9,885 34.63%
Total votes 28,543 100.00%
Close

General election

Results

More information Party, Candidate ...
Arizona gubernatorial election, 1914 [16]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic George W. P. Hunt (incumbent) 25,226 49.46% −2.00%
Republican Ralph Cameron 17,602 34.51% −7.90%
Progressive George U. Young 5,206 10.20% +10.20%
Socialist J. R. Barnette 2,973 5.83% +0.06%
Majority 7,624 14.95%
Total votes 51,007 100.00%
Democratic hold Swing +5.89%
Close

Results by county

More information County, George W. P. Hunt Democratic ...
County George W. P. Hunt
Democratic
Ralph Cameron
Republican
George U. Young
Progressive
J. R. Barnette
Socialist
Margin Total votes cast[16]
# % # % # % # % # %
Apache 549 62.74% 254 29.03% 58 6.63% 14 1.60% 295 33.71% 875
Cochise 4,700 56.11% 2,371 28.31% 837 9.99% 468 5.59% 2,329 27.81% 8,376
Coconino 976 48.03% 886 43.60% 122 6.00% 48 2.36% 90 4.43% 2,032
Gila 2,189 48.48% 1,552 34.37% 91 2.02% 683 15.13% 637 14.11% 4,515
Graham 1,096 51.43% 747 35.05% 105 4.93% 183 8.59% 349 16.38% 2,131
Greenlee 1,144 51.91% 830 37.66% 89 4.04% 141 6.40% 314 14.25% 2,204
Maricopa 6,223 44.60% 4,455 31.93% 2,634 18.88% 640 4.59% 1,768 12.67% 13,952
Mohave 947 63.77% 358 24.11% 27 1.82% 153 10.30% 589 39.66% 1,485
Navajo 897 51.37% 749 42.90% 51 2.92% 49 2.81% 148 8.48% 1,746
Pima 1,590 39.44% 1,892 46.94% 449 11.14% 100 2.48% -302 -7.49% 4,031
Pinal 850 46.07% 695 37.67% 240 13.01% 60 3.25% 155 8.40% 1,845
Santa Cruz 608 55.17% 439 39.84% 22 2.00% 33 2.99% 169 15.34% 1,102
Yavapai 2,137 46.42% 1,889 41.03% 321 6.97% 257 5.58% 248 5.39% 4,604
Yuma 1,320 62.59% 485 23.00% 160 7.59% 144 6.83% 835 39.59% 2,109
Totals25,22649.46%17,60234.51%5,20610.21%2,9735.83%7,62414.95%51,007
Close

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

References

Bibliography

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI