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County results Townsend: 50–60% | |||||||||||||||||
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Elections in Delaware |
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The 1916 Delaware gubernatorial election was held on November 7, 1916. Incumbent Republican Governor Charles R. Miller declined to run for re-election. At the time, the Republican Party was in the middle of a schism that had first developed during the 1912 presidential election. [1] However, the schism did not affect the gubernatorial nomination; though there were rumors that the state party convention might seek to nominate Governor Miller for a second term, [2] former State Representative John G. Townsend Jr. was seen as the frontrunner heading into the convention. [3] He received the nomination without much difficulty [4] and the Republican Party solidified around him its gubernatorial nominee. [1] The Democratic Party nominated former Secretary of State James H. Hughes, and both Townsend and Hughes advanced to the general election.
Though President Woodrow Wilson had won Delaware in 1912 with a plurality, he narrowly lost it this year. Though the gubernatorial race was still close, Townsend outperformed Republican presidential nominee Charles Evans Hughes and defeated Hughes by a five-point margin, winning 52% of the vote to Hughes's 47%.
Both Townsend and Hughes would later serve in the United States Senate, and they would serve together as Delaware's two U.S Senators from 1937 to 1941. Townsend served from 1929 to 1941, while Hughes served from 1937 to 1943.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
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Republican | John G. Townsend Jr. | 26,673 | 52.08% | +5.13% | |
Democratic | James H. Hughes | 24,053 | 46.96% | +2.66% | |
Socialist | Frank A. Houck | 490 | 0.96% | -0.19% | |
Majority | 2,620 | 5.12% | +2.46% | ||
Turnout | 51,216 | 100.00% | |||
Republican hold | |||||
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The 1896 Delaware gubernatorial election was held on November 3, 1896. Shortly after his victory in the 1894 gubernatorial election, Republican Governor Joshua H. Marvil died. State Senate Speaker William T. Watson, a Democrat, became Governor and a new election for a full four-year term was scheduled in 1896. Though Watson was considered a potential candidate for re-election, the Democratic convention instead nominated Ebe W. Tunnell, the 1894 nominee for Governor; despite his protests that he would decline the nomination, Tunnell ultimately accepted it.
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