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County Results
Goldwater 60-70% 70-80% 80-90% 90-100%
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Elections in Mississippi |
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The 1964 United States presidential election in Mississippi was held on November 3, 1964, as part of the 1964 United States presidential election, which was held on that day throughout all fifty states and the District of Columbia. Voters chose seven electors, or representatives to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Background
Less than 10% of Mississippi's black population were registered voters.[1] Governor Paul B. Johnson Jr. told Mississippians not to obey the Civil Rights Act.[2][3]
Over ninety percent of Mississippi's electorate viewed President Johnson as having done a bad job and 96.4 percent opposed the Civil Rights Act, compared to only 54 percent in the antebellum slave states and Oklahoma.[4] 87 percent of Mississippi voters, vis-à-vis 48 percent in the South as a whole, believed that President Johnson was failing at countering domestic Communism.[4] This reflected the widespread belief among Mississippi whites that civil rights activists were funded by communist parties.[5][6]
Campaign
Neither Governor Johnson nor any other major state or federal politician offered President Johnson any support in his statewide campaign, which was left to inexperienced Greenville lawyer Douglas Wynn.[7] Governor Johnson and four of the state's five Congressmen were silent about supporting Goldwater, though Congressman John Bell Williams supported him openly.[7]
In July, polling suggested Goldwater would receive ninety percent of Mississippi's vote,[8] but this fell to seventy in August[9] and to between sixty and sixty-five in October due to fears that he would abolish the Rural Electrification Administration.[8] By the weekend before election day, University of California political scientist Peter H. Odegard believed that Goldwater would win only Alabama[lower-alpha 1] and Mississippi.[10]
Ultimately, Goldwater won Mississippi with a 74.28 point margin of victory over Johnson, making the Magnolia State 97% more Republican than the nation and Goldwater the first Republican to win the state since Reconstruction. While Goldwater would suffer a landslide defeat to Johnson in both the national popular vote and Electoral College, his performance in Mississippi was the largest statewide percentage victory by any Republican presidential nominee.[11] Goldwater defeated Johnson by a margin comparable to what had been predicted in the earliest polls, and much greater than predicted immediately before the election. Over-representation of urban areas in polling was blamed for this discrepancy.[12] Goldwater received 90% of the white vote in the state.[13]
As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time that Claiborne, Holmes and Jefferson counties voted for a Republican presidential candidate.[14]
Goldwater was the first Republican to ever carry Alcorn, Benton, Calhoun, Choctaw, Covington, Franklin, Greene, Harrison, Humphreys, Itawamba, Jackson, Jasper, Jones, Lamar, Leake, Lee, Neshoba, Newton, Perry, Pontotoc, Prentiss, Scott, Smith, Tate, Tippah, Tishomingo, Union, Walthall, Webster and Winston Counties.[15] He was the first Republican to carry Amite, Carroll, Chickasaw, Clay, Clarke, Copiah, DeSoto, Holmes, Kemper, Lafayette, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Marion, Marshall, Montgomery, Oktibbeha, Rankin, Sunflower, and Yazoo Counties since Ulysses S. Grant in 1872;[15] to carry Lincoln County since James A. Garfield in 1880;[15] to carry Attala, Grenada, and Panola Counties since James G. Blaine in 1884;[15] and to win Coahoma, Issaquena, and Quitman Counties since Benjamin Harrison in 1888.[15]
Results
1964 United States presidential election in Mississippi[16] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | Electoral votes | |
Mississippi Republican | Barry Goldwater | 356,528 | 87.14% | 7 | |
National Democratic | Lyndon B. Johnson (incumbent) | 52,618 | 12.86% | 0 | |
Totals | 409,146 | 100.00% | 7 | ||
Voter turnout (Voting age) | 33.9% |
Results by county
County | Barry Morris Goldwater Mississippi Republican |
Lyndon Baines Johnson National Democratic |
Margin | Total votes cast | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Adams | 5,900 | 84.37% | 1,093 | 15.63% | 4,807 | 68.74% | 6,993 |
Alcorn | 3,377 | 63.79% | 1,917 | 36.21% | 1,460 | 27.58% | 5,294 |
Amite | 2,742 | 96.38% | 103 | 3.62% | 2,639 | 92.76% | 2,845 |
Attala | 4,409 | 94.37% | 263 | 5.63% | 4,146 | 88.74% | 4,672 |
Benton | 934 | 79.83% | 236 | 20.17% | 698 | 59.66% | 1,170 |
Bolivar | 4,680 | 86.49% | 731 | 13.51% | 3,949 | 72.98% | 5,411 |
Calhoun | 3,224 | 91.64% | 294 | 8.36% | 2,930 | 83.29% | 3,518 |
Carroll | 2,043 | 95.42% | 98 | 4.58% | 1,945 | 90.85% | 2,141 |
Chickasaw | 3,138 | 91.83% | 279 | 8.17% | 2,859 | 83.67% | 3,417 |
Choctaw | 2,096 | 93.32% | 150 | 6.68% | 1,946 | 86.64% | 2,246 |
Claiborne | 1,226 | 93.59% | 84 | 6.41% | 1,142 | 87.18% | 1,310 |
Clarke | 3,591 | 93.42% | 253 | 6.58% | 3,338 | 86.84% | 3,844 |
Clay | 2,848 | 92.65% | 226 | 7.35% | 2,622 | 85.30% | 3,074 |
Coahoma | 4,172 | 81.23% | 964 | 18.77% | 3,208 | 62.46% | 5,136 |
Copiah | 4,506 | 94.96% | 239 | 5.04% | 4,267 | 89.93% | 4,745 |
Covington | 3,033 | 88.55% | 392 | 11.45% | 2,641 | 77.11% | 3,425 |
DeSoto | 2,928 | 86.40% | 461 | 13.60% | 2,467 | 72.79% | 3,389 |
Forrest | 9,291 | 89.17% | 1,128 | 10.83% | 8,163 | 78.35% | 10,419 |
Franklin | 2,211 | 96.05% | 91 | 3.95% | 2,120 | 92.09% | 2,302 |
George | 2,797 | 92.04% | 242 | 7.96% | 2,555 | 84.07% | 3,039 |
Greene | 1,845 | 89.52% | 216 | 10.48% | 1,629 | 79.04% | 2,061 |
Grenada | 3,648 | 95.92% | 155 | 4.08% | 3,493 | 91.85% | 3,803 |
Hancock | 2,550 | 62.95% | 1,501 | 37.05% | 1,049 | 25.89% | 4,051 |
Harrison | 16,301 | 75.14% | 5,393 | 24.86% | 10,908 | 50.28% | 21,694 |
Hinds | 36,831 | 87.93% | 5,058 | 12.07% | 31,773 | 75.85% | 41,889 |
Holmes | 3,115 | 96.59% | 110 | 3.41% | 3,005 | 93.18% | 3,225 |
Humphreys | 1,863 | 95.69% | 84 | 4.31% | 1,779 | 91.37% | 1,947 |
Issaquena | 456 | 93.06% | 34 | 6.94% | 422 | 86.12% | 490 |
Itawamba | 2,140 | 65.50% | 1,127 | 34.50% | 1,013 | 31.01% | 3,267 |
Jackson | 11,357 | 82.73% | 2,371 | 17.27% | 8,986 | 65.46% | 13,728 |
Jasper | 2,994 | 92.69% | 236 | 7.31% | 2,758 | 85.39% | 3,230 |
Jefferson | 1,258 | 94.80% | 69 | 5.20% | 1,189 | 89.60% | 1,327 |
Jefferson Davis | 2,351 | 90.91% | 235 | 9.09% | 2,116 | 81.83% | 2,586 |
Jones | 12,123 | 85.95% | 1,981 | 14.05% | 10,142 | 71.91% | 14,104 |
Kemper | 2,185 | 91.96% | 191 | 8.04% | 1,994 | 83.92% | 2,376 |
Lafayette | 3,202 | 81.64% | 720 | 18.36% | 2,482 | 63.28% | 3,922 |
Lamar | 3,372 | 90.99% | 334 | 9.01% | 3,038 | 81.98% | 3,706 |
Lauderdale | 13,291 | 89.36% | 1,583 | 10.64% | 11,708 | 78.71% | 14,874 |
Lawrence | 2,373 | 90.95% | 236 | 9.05% | 2,137 | 81.91% | 2,609 |
Leake | 4,343 | 96.23% | 170 | 3.77% | 4,173 | 92.47% | 4,513 |
Lee | 5,165 | 68.19% | 2,409 | 31.81% | 2,756 | 36.39% | 7,574 |
Leflore | 5,589 | 93.63% | 380 | 6.37% | 5,209 | 87.27% | 5,969 |
Lincoln | 6,750 | 93.92% | 437 | 6.08% | 6,313 | 87.84% | 7,187 |
Lowndes | 6,135 | 92.01% | 533 | 7.99% | 5,602 | 84.01% | 6,668 |
Madison | 3,283 | 92.90% | 251 | 7.10% | 3,032 | 85.80% | 3,534 |
Marion | 5,469 | 91.55% | 505 | 8.45% | 4,964 | 83.09% | 5,974 |
Marshall | 2,251 | 86.78% | 343 | 13.22% | 1,908 | 73.55% | 2,594 |
Monroe | 5,627 | 85.10% | 985 | 14.90% | 4,642 | 70.21% | 6,612 |
Montgomery | 3,181 | 95.53% | 149 | 4.47% | 3,032 | 91.05% | 3,330 |
Neshoba | 5,431 | 94.88% | 293 | 5.12% | 5,138 | 89.76% | 5,724 |
Newton | 4,735 | 95.21% | 238 | 4.79% | 4,497 | 90.43% | 4,973 |
Noxubee | 1,980 | 96.59% | 70 | 3.41% | 1,910 | 93.17% | 2,050 |
Oktibbeha | 3,795 | 90.68% | 390 | 9.32% | 3,405 | 81.36% | 4,185 |
Panola | 4,002 | 90.65% | 413 | 9.35% | 3,589 | 81.29% | 4,415 |
Pearl River | 4,009 | 84.51% | 735 | 15.49% | 3,274 | 69.01% | 4,744 |
Perry | 1,775 | 86.42% | 279 | 13.58% | 1,496 | 72.83% | 2,054 |
Pike | 6,418 | 92.20% | 543 | 7.80% | 5,875 | 84.40% | 6,961 |
Pontotoc | 2,699 | 79.36% | 702 | 20.64% | 1,997 | 58.72% | 3,401 |
Prentiss | 2,289 | 69.32% | 1,013 | 30.68% | 1,276 | 38.64% | 3,302 |
Quitman | 2,065 | 86.01% | 336 | 13.99% | 1,729 | 72.01% | 2,401 |
Rankin | 7,541 | 95.78% | 332 | 4.22% | 7,209 | 91.57% | 7,873 |
Scott | 4,729 | 95.21% | 238 | 4.79% | 4,491 | 90.42% | 4,967 |
Sharkey | 1,116 | 89.71% | 128 | 10.29% | 988 | 79.42% | 1,244 |
Simpson | 4,949 | 94.81% | 271 | 5.19% | 4,678 | 89.62% | 5,220 |
Smith | 4,045 | 94.44% | 238 | 5.56% | 3,807 | 88.89% | 4,283 |
Stone | 1,776 | 90.84% | 179 | 9.16% | 1,597 | 81.69% | 1,955 |
Sunflower | 4,127 | 94.27% | 251 | 5.73% | 3,876 | 88.53% | 4,378 |
Tallahatchie | 3,126 | 92.46% | 255 | 7.54% | 2,871 | 84.92% | 3,381 |
Tate | 2,390 | 89.41% | 283 | 10.59% | 2,107 | 78.83% | 2,673 |
Tippah | 2,482 | 71.82% | 974 | 28.18% | 1,508 | 43.63% | 3,456 |
Tishomingo | 1,934 | 66.44% | 977 | 33.56% | 957 | 32.88% | 2,911 |
Tunica | 945 | 90.52% | 99 | 9.48% | 846 | 81.03% | 1,044 |
Union | 2,939 | 70.38% | 1,237 | 29.62% | 1,702 | 40.76% | 4,176 |
Walthall | 3,014 | 95.14% | 154 | 4.86% | 2,860 | 90.28% | 3,168 |
Warren | 7,409 | 81.96% | 1,631 | 18.04% | 5,778 | 63.92% | 9,040 |
Washington | 5,611 | 73.68% | 2,004 | 26.32% | 3,607 | 47.37% | 7,615 |
Wayne | 3,539 | 92.77% | 276 | 7.23% | 3,263 | 85.53% | 3,815 |
Webster | 2,884 | 92.41% | 237 | 7.59% | 2,647 | 84.81% | 3,121 |
Wilkinson | 1,473 | 93.46% | 103 | 6.54% | 1,370 | 86.93% | 1,576 |
Winston | 3,922 | 94.30% | 237 | 5.70% | 3,685 | 88.60% | 4,159 |
Yalobusha | 2,385 | 90.20% | 259 | 9.80% | 2,126 | 80.41% | 2,644 |
Yazoo | 4,801 | 95.92% | 204 | 4.08% | 4,597 | 91.85% | 5,005 |
Totals | 356,528 | 87.14% | 52,618 | 12.86% | 303,910 | 74.28% | 409,146 |
References
- ↑ Bullock, Charles S. and Gaddie, Ronald Keith; The Triumph of Voting Rights in the South, pp. 31-33 ISBN 0806185309
- ↑ Crespino, Joseph; In Search of Another Country: Mississippi and the Conservative Counterrevolution, p. 206 ISBN 0691122091
- ↑ Mitchell, Dennis J.; A New History of Mississippi; p. 453 ISBN 1617039764
- 1 2 Harris, Louis; 'Mississippi Vote Points Up Power Of Local Emotions: Johnson Job Ratings'; The New York Times, November 23, 1964, p. A2
- ↑ Asch, Chris Myers; The Senator and the Sharecropper: The Freedom Struggles of James O. Eastland and Fannie Lou Hamer, p. 190 ISBN 0807878057
- ↑ McGuire, Danielle L. and Dittmer, John; Freedom Rights: New Perspectives on the Civil Rights Movement, p. 125 ISBN 081313448X
- 1 2 'Mississippi Ousts House Democrat: Goldwater Carries the State by Crushing Plurality'; The New York Times, November 4, 1964, p. 11
- 1 2 McKee, Don; 'Governors See Barry Slipping In South as Conference Opens: Johnson Gains in Louisiana', The Washington Post, October 13, 1964, p. A@
- ↑ Manly, Chesly; 'Goldwater Landslide Seen in Mississippi: Many in Office Believe He'll Poll Seventy Percent'; Chicago Tribune, August 12, 1964, pp. 1, 6
- ↑ 'Expert Sees Barry Winning Just Ala., Miss.', The Boston Globe, November 1, 1964, p. 51
- ↑ Thomas, G. Scott; The Pursuit of the White House: A Handbook of Presidential Election Statistics and History, p. 403 ISBN 0313257957
- ↑ Burnham, Walter Dean; 'American Voting Behavior and the 1964 Election', Midwest Journal of Political Science, Vol. 12, No. 1 (Feb., 1968), p. 34
- ↑ Black & Black 1992, p. 155.
- ↑ Sullivan, Robert David; ‘How the Red and Blue Map Evolved Over the Past Century’; America Magazine in The National Catholic Review; June 29, 2016
- 1 2 3 4 5 Menendez, Albert J. (2005). The Geography of Presidential Elections in the United States, 1868-2004. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. pp. 91, 233–237. ISBN 0786422173.
- ↑ "1964 Presidential General Election Results – Mississippi". Retrieved June 9, 2016.
Notes
- ↑ In Alabama, Goldwater was opposed by a slate of unpledged Democratic electors who would not have voted for President Johnson had they carried the state.
Works cited
- Black, Earl; Black, Merle (1992). The Vital South: How Presidents Are Elected. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674941306.