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Elections in Wisconsin |
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The 1920 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Wisconsin had ever since the decline of the Populist movement been substantially a one-party state dominated by the Republican Party. [1] The Democratic Party became entirely uncompetitive outside certain German Catholic counties adjoining Lake Michigan as the upper classes, along with the majority of workers who followed them, completely fled from William Jennings Bryan's agrarian and free silver sympathies. [2] As Democratic strength weakened severely after 1894 – although the state did develop a strong Socialist Party to provide opposition to the GOP – Wisconsin developed the direct Republican primary in 1903 and this ultimately created competition between the "League" under Robert M. La Follette, and the conservative "Regular" faction. [3]
The beginning of the 1910s would see a minor Democratic revival as many La Follette progressives endorsed Woodrow Wilson, [4] but this flirtation would not be long-lasting as Wilson's "Anglophile" foreign policies were severely opposed by Wisconsin's largely German- and Scandinavian-American populace. [5] The 1918 mid-term elections saw the Midwestern farming community largely desert the Democratic Party due to supposed preferential treatment of Southern farmers: [6] Democratic seats in the Midwest fell from thirty-four to seventeen, [7] whilst Scandinavian-Americans were also vigorously opposed to entering the war. [8] Furthermore, Democratic fear of Communism seen in the Palmer Raids and "Red Scare" led to ultimate nominee James M. Cox, then Governor of Ohio, to ban German-language instruction in public schools in 1919. [7] Still more critical for German-Americans was the view that outgoing President Woodrow Wilson was deliberately trying to punish Germany and Austria for starting the war, especially via his disregard for the United Kingdom's continuing blockade of Germany. [9] Stressing Harding's German ancestry, the German press drummed up the view that
a vote for Harding is a vote against the persecutions suffered by German-Americans during the war. [10]
As the campaign began after the Republican Party had nominated U.S. Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio and the Democratic Party former Ohio governor James M. Cox, a further blow to the Democrats came when the national economy suffered a major downturn following the wartime boom, resulting in plummeting agricultural prices that were especially problematic in the Midwest. [11] Whereas Cox travelled throughout the nation apart from the "Solid South" during September, [12] Harding, despite having four times the budget, campaigned from his home in Marion, Ohio.
A poll by the giant Rexall drug store chain – which in 1916 had been accurate enough to predict Wilson's razor-thin wins in New Hampshire and California [13] – suggested Harding would win 382 electoral votes, [14] and at the end of October, although no more opinion polls had been published, most observers were even more convinced that the Republicans would take complete control of all branches of government. [15] Polls were similarly confident in Wisconsin, despite forecasts of a big vote for imprisoned fifth-time Socialist nominee Eugene V. Debs. [16] Expectations of a landslide were fully realized: whereas Charles Evans Hughes had carried Wisconsin by only 6.59 points in 1916, Harding won this arch-isolationist state by a nine-to-two majority. Wisconsin would prove to be Harding's fourth strongest state in the 1920 election terms of popular vote percentage after North Dakota, Vermont and Michigan. [17] Wisconsin would prove Cox's weakest state in the largest landslide loss in United States presidential election history, and Debs' strongest state in his last campaign for the presidency. [17] Despite Debs' substantial vote, Harding carried all Wisconsin's counties with absolute majorities, becoming the only candidate to ever win every single Wisconsin county in a presidential election, and Cox cracked twenty-three percent of the vote in just three counties. This would be the last time a Republican presidential candidate carried Iron County until Richard Nixon in 1972. [18]
Party | Pledged to | Elector | Votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Mrs. Theodore Youmans | 498,576 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Z. G. Simmons | 497,664 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | John Turner | 497,243 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Myron E. Keats | 497,099 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Sam Blum | 496,920 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Max Sell | 496,875 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | William Mauthe | 496,821 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | James T. Drought | 496,786 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | John Fitzgibbons | 496,677 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Anton Kuckuk | 496,661 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | David A. Bogue | 496,509 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | Mrs. Al C. Anderson | 496,236 | |
Republican Party | Warren G. Harding | John T. Murphy | 496,161 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | John C. Karel | 113,422 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | Anthony Szczerbinski | 113,298 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | Charles Mulberger | 113,236 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | Mrs. A. Tupper | 113,196 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | M. K. Reilly | 113,119 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | Vilas W. Whaley | 113,118 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | John W. Hogan | 112,962 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | H. A. Pfeffer | 112,790 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | John P. Diener | 112,765 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | Henry E. Fitch | 112,742 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | Earl Y. Sangster | 112,730 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | M. R. Strouse | 112,619 | |
Democratic Party | James M. Cox | John O'Day | 112,531 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Cora Wuethrick | 80,635 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Casimir Kowalski | 80,629 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Richard Holtz | 80,601 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Mrs. E. T. Melms | 80,597 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Louis Pauls | 80,555 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | John G. Justen | 80,554 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | R. W. Koehn | 80,554 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Mrs. John H. Sims | 80,541 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Fred Heath | 80,513 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | G. P. Haus | 80,495 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Mrs. Frank Hilger | 80,481 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | Ray M. Empey | 53,101 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | F. E. Withrow | 52,213 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | J. Verchota | 27,886 | |
Socialist Party | Eugene V. Debs | A. C. Krueger | 27,069 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Marcia A. B. Smith | 8,647 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | David W. Emerson | 8,529 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Francis Baker | 8,517 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Peter T. James | 8,498 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Frank E. Cummings | 8,470 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Joseph V. Collins | 8,467 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Benjamin F. Skiff | 8,466 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | August F. Fehlandt | 8,445 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Walter R. Drought | 8,431 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | John H. Malloch | 8,425 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | William R. Nethercut | 8,425 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Lily Shimmin | 8,413 | |
Prohibition Party | Aaron S. Watkins | Ole H. Caspers | 8,408 | |
Write-in | Scattering | 82 | ||
Votes cast [lower-alpha 2] | 701,362 |
County [19] [20] | Warren G. Harding Republican | James M. Cox Democratic | Eugene V. Debs Socialist | Aaron S. Watkins Prohibition | Margin | Total votes cast [lower-alpha 3] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Adams | 1,528 | 75.42% | 392 | 19.35% | 60 | 2.96% | 27 | 1.335% | 1,136 | 56.07% | 2,026 [lower-alpha 4] |
Ashland | 4,005 | 70.94% | 1,081 | 19.15% | 497 | 8.80% | 63 | 1.12% | 2,924 | 51.79% | 5,646 |
Barron | 6,887 | 84.09% | 742 | 9.06% | 336 | 4.10% | 211 | 2.58% | 6,145 | 75.03% | 8,190 [lower-alpha 5] |
Bayfield | 2,536 | 73.34% | 589 | 17.03% | 257 | 7.43% | 76 | 2.20% | 1,947 | 56.30% | 3,458 |
Brown | 8,845 | 61.66% | 3,877 | 27.03% | 1,501 | 10.46% | 122 | 0.85% | 4,968 | 34.63% | 14,345 |
Buffalo | 3,082 | 85.40% | 299 | 8.28% | 172 | 4.77% | 56 | 1.55% | 2,783 | 77.11% | 3,609 |
Burnett | 2,025 | 79.57% | 187 | 7.35% | 275 | 10.81% | 58 | 2.28% | 1,750 [lower-alpha 6] | 68.76% | 2,545 |
Calumet | 3,730 | 78.26% | 586 | 12.30% | 415 | 8.71% | 35 | 0.73% | 3,144 | 65.97% | 4,766 |
Chippewa | 6,750 | 82.57% | 1,103 | 13.49% | 186 | 2.28% | 136 | 1.66% | 5,647 | 69.08% | 8,175 |
Clark | 6,246 | 79.74% | 745 | 9.51% | 692 | 8.83% | 150 | 1.91% | 5,501 | 70.23% | 7,833 |
Columbia | 7,394 | 83.25% | 1,201 | 13.52% | 157 | 1.77% | 130 | 1.46% | 6,193 | 69.73% | 8,882 |
Crawford | 3,600 | 74.27% | 1,112 | 22.94% | 70 | 1.44% | 64 | 1.32% | 2,488 | 51.33% | 4,847 [lower-alpha 7] |
Dane | 22,842 | 77.46% | 4,879 | 16.55% | 1,277 | 4.33% | 490 | 1.66% | 17,963 | 60.92% | 29,488 |
Dodge | 11,354 | 77.46% | 2,293 | 15.64% | 865 | 5.90% | 146 | 1.00% | 9,061 | 61.82% | 14,658 |
Door | 3,817 | 88.34% | 385 | 8.91% | 76 | 1.76% | 43 | 1.00% | 3,432 | 79.43% | 4,321 |
Douglas | 7,250 | 67.53% | 2,111 | 19.66% | 1,271 | 11.84% | 104 | 0.97% | 5,139 | 47.87% | 10,736 |
Dunn | 5,596 | 87.81% | 491 | 7.70% | 170 | 2.67% | 113 | 1.77% | 5,105 | 80.10% | 6,373 [lower-alpha 8] |
Eau Claire | 7,856 | 81.62% | 1,193 | 12.39% | 351 | 3.65% | 225 | 2.34% | 6,663 | 69.23% | 9,625 |
Florence | 912 | 86.86% | 98 [lower-alpha 9] | 9.33% | 30 | 2.86% | 10 | 0.95% | 814 | 77.52% | 1,050 |
Fond du Lac | 12,543 | 74.58% | 3,409 | 20.27% | 695 | 4.13% | 172 | 1.02% | 9,134 | 54.31% | 16,819 |
Forest | 1,429 | 75.13% | 379 | 19.93% | 72 | 3.79% | 22 | 1.16% | 1,050 | 55.21% | 1,902 |
Grant | 9,638 | 80.92% | 1,971 | 16.55% | 119 | 1.00% | 183 | 1.54% | 7,667 | 64.37% | 11,911 |
Green | 5,466 | 84.68% | 633 | 9.81% | 109 | 1.69% | 247 | 3.83% | 4,833 | 74.87% | 6,455 |
Green Lake | 3,457 | 75.45% | 890 | 19.42% | 179 | 3.91% | 54 | 1.18% | 2,567 | 56.02% | 4,582 [lower-alpha 10] |
Iowa | 5,428 | 81.42% | 942 | 14.13% | 67 | 1.00% | 230 | 3.45% | 4,486 | 67.29% | 6,667 |
Iron | 1,714 | 77.70% | 268 | 12.15% | 179 | 8.11% | 45 | 2.04% | 1,446 | 65.55% | 2,206 |
Jackson | 3,652 | 85.93% | 410 | 9.65% | 106 | 2.49% | 82 | 1.93% | 3,242 | 76.28% | 4,250 |
Jefferson | 8,865 | 80.38% | 1,844 | 16.72% | 203 | 1.84% | 117 | 1.06% | 7,021 | 63.66% | 11,029 |
Juneau | 4,385 | 81.22% | 774 | 14.34% | 174 | 3.22% | 66 | 1.22% | 3,611 | 66.88% | 5,399 |
Kenosha | 9,791 | 77.81% | 1,724 | 13.70% | 990 | 7.87% | 79 | 0.63% | 8,067 | 64.11% | 12,584 |
Kewaunee | 2,622 | 78.81% | 598 | 17.97% | 97 | 2.92% | 9 | 0.27% | 2,024 | 60.84% | 3,327 [lower-alpha 7] |
La Crosse | 10,067 | 73.96% | 2,588 | 19.01% | 606 | 4.45% | 350 | 2.57% | 7,479 | 54.94% | 13,612 [lower-alpha 7] |
Lafayette | 4,893 | 76.11% | 1,357 | 21.11% | 45 | 0.70% | 134 | 2.08% | 3,536 | 55.00% | 6,429 |
Langlade | 4,059 | 68.65% | 1,619 | 27.38% | 189 | 3.20% | 46 | 0.78% | 2,440 | 41.27% | 5,913 |
Lincoln | 3,713 | 72.11% | 838 | 16.28% | 542 | 10.53% | 56 | 1.09% | 2,875 | 55.84% | 5,149 |
Manitowoc | 8,378 | 61.70% | 2,018 | 14.86% | 3,116 | 22.95% | 67 | 0.49% | 5,262 [lower-alpha 6] | 38.75% | 13,579 |
Marathon | 11,356 | 65.53% | 2,133 | 12.31% | 3,709 | 21.40% | 131 | 0.76% | 7,647 [lower-alpha 6] | 44.13% | 17,329 |
Marinette | 6,138 | 75.55% | 1,314 | 16.17% | 584 | 7.19% | 88 | 1.08% | 4,824 | 59.38% | 8,124 |
Marquette | 2,436 | 76.01% | 687 | 21.44% | 42 | 1.31% | 31 | 0.97% | 1,749 | 54.57% | 3,205 [lower-alpha 11] |
Milwaukee | 73,410 | 51.58% | 25,464 | 17.89% | 42,914 | 30.16% | 523 | 0.37% | 30,496 [lower-alpha 6] | 21.43% | 142,311 |
Monroe | 6,784 | 83.15% | 978 [lower-alpha 9] | 11.99% | 206 | 2.52% | 178 | 2.18% | 5,806 | 71.16% | 8,159 [lower-alpha 12] |
Oconto | 4,735 | 78.16% | 1,030 | 17.00% | 234 | 3.86% | 59 | 0.97% | 3,705 | 61.16% | 6,058 |
Oneida | 2,424 | 64.93% | 833 | 22.31% | 426 | 11.41% | 50 | 1.34% | 1,591 | 42.62% | 3,733 |
Outagamie | 11,140 | 74.69% | 3,121 | 20.93% | 510 | 3.42% | 144 | 0.97% | 8,019 | 53.76% | 14,915 |
Ozaukee | 3,523 | 75.60% | 835 | 17.92% | 279 | 5.99% | 23 | 0.49% | 2,688 | 57.68% | 4,660 |
Pepin | 1,817 | 84.91% | 265 | 12.38% | 36 | 1.68% | 22 | 1.03% | 1,552 | 72.52% | 2,140 |
Pierce | 4,441 | 82.62% | 644 | 11.98% | 167 | 3.11% | 123 | 2.29% | 3,797 | 70.64% | 5,375 |
Polk | 4,796 | 80.47% | 752 | 12.62% | 303 | 5.08% | 109 | 1.83% | 4,044 | 67.85% | 5,960 |
Portage | 5,527 | 65.39% | 2,656 | 31.42% | 199 | 2.35% | 70 | 0.83% | 2,871 | 33.97% | 8,452 |
Price | 2,990 | 74.23% | 551 | 13.68% | 441 | 10.95% | 46 | 1.14% | 2,439 | 60.55% | 4,028 |
Racine | 14,406 | 71.95% | 3,650 | 18.23% | 1,714 | 8.56% | 251 | 1.25% | 10,756 | 53.72% | 20,021 |
Richland | 3,862 [lower-alpha 13] | 76.63% | 917 | 18.19% | 82 | 1.63% | 179 | 3.55% | 2,945 | 58.43% | 5,040 |
Rock | 16,152 | 83.53% | 2,447 | 12.65% | 421 | 2.18% | 317 | 1.64% | 13,705 | 70.87% | 19,337 |
Rusk | 2,609 | 77.53% | 441 | 13.11% | 231 | 6.86% | 81 | 2.41% | 2,168 | 64.43% | 3,365 [lower-alpha 8] |
Sauk | 8,074 | 84.79% | 946 | 9.93% | 216 | 2.27% | 286 | 3.00% | 7,128 | 74.86% | 9,522 |
Sawyer | 1,668 | 79.28% | 302 | 14.35% | 98 | 4.66% | 36 | 1.71% | 1,366 | 64.92% | 2,104 |
Shawano | 5,836 | 73.64% | 525 | 6.62% | 1,496 | 18.88% | 68 | 0.86% | 4,340 [lower-alpha 6] | 54.76% | 7,925 |
Sheboygan | 11,994 | 68.95% | 1,895 | 10.89% | 3,416 | 19.64% | 91 | 0.52% | 8,578 [lower-alpha 6] | 49.31% | 17,396 |
St. Croix | 5,601 | 73.34% | 1,638 | 21.45% | 263 | 3.44% | 135 | 1.77% | 3,963 | 51.89% | 7,637 |
Taylor | 2,707 | 72.71% | 282 | 7.57% | 685 | 18.40% | 49 [lower-alpha 14] | 1.32% | 2,022 [lower-alpha 6] | 54.31% | 3,723 |
Trempealeau | 4,748 | 84.05% | 718 | 12.71% | 70 | 1.24% | 100 | 1.77% | 4,030 | 71.50% | 5,649 [lower-alpha 12] |
Vernon | 5,694 | 86.00% | 629 | 9.50% | 98 | 1.48% | 200 | 3.02% | 5,065 | 76.50% | 6,621 |
Vilas | 903 | 66.06% | 255 | 18.65% | 185 | 13.53% | 24 | 1.76% | 648 | 47.40% | 1,367 |
Walworth | 8,437 | 80.68% | 1,631 | 15.60% | 151 | 1.44% | 239 | 2.29% | 6,806 | 65.08% | 10,458 |
Washburn | 2,023 | 78.26% | 352 | 13.62% | 150 | 5.80% | 60 | 2.32% | 1,671 | 64.64% | 2,585 |
Washington | 5,949 | 76.78% | 1,328 | 17.14% | 421 | 5.43% | 50 | 0.65% | 4,621 | 59.64% | 7,748 |
Waukesha | 8,665 | 71.63% | 2,759 | 22.81% | 487 | 4.03% | 186 | 1.54% | 5,906 | 48.82% | 12,097 |
Waupaca | 8,302 | 83.04% | 888 | 8.88% | 697 | 6.97% | 110 | 1.10% | 7,414 | 74.16% | 9,997 |
Waushara | 4,176 | 85.17% | 482 | 9.83% | 196 | 4.00% | 49 | 1.00% | 3,694 | 75.34% | 4,903 |
Winnebago | 12,035 | 69.52% | 3,397 | 19.62% | 1,697 | 9.80% | 179 | 1.03% | 8,638 | 49.90% | 17,311 [lower-alpha 8] |
Wood | 6,863 | 70.60% | 1,051 | 10.81% | 1,665 | 17.13% | 142 | 1.46% | 5,198 [lower-alpha 6] | 53.47% | 9,721 |
Totals | 498,576 | 71.09% | 113,422 | 16.17% | 80,635 | 11.50% | 8,647 | 1.23% | 385,154 | 54.92% | 701,362 |
The 1920 United States presidential election was the 34th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 2, 1920. In the first election held after the end of the First World War, and the first election after the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment which gave equal votes to men and women, Republican senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio defeated Democratic governor James M. Cox of Ohio. It was the third presidential election in which both major party candidates were registered in the same home state. The others have been in 1860, 1904, 1940, 1944, and 2016, and the last time that the state was not New York. It was the first presidential election to have its results broadcast by radio.
The 1920 United States presidential election in New Mexico took place on November 2, 1920. All contemporary forty-eight States were part of the 1920 United States presidential election. Voters chose three electors to represent them in the Electoral College, which voted for President and Vice President.
The 1920 United States presidential election in New York took place on November 2, 1920. All contemporary 48 states were part of the 1920 United States presidential election. Voters chose 45 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Massachusetts took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election, which was held throughout all contemporary 48 states. Voters chose 18 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Alabama took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 general election, in which all 48 states participated. Alabama voters chose twelve electors to represent them in the Electoral College via popular vote pitting Democratic nominee James M. Cox and his running mate, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin Roosevelt, against Republican challenger U.S. Senator Warren G. Harding and his running mate, Governor Calvin Coolidge.
The 1920 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 2, 1920. All contemporary 48 states were part of the 1920 United States presidential election. Voters chose 14 electors to the Electoral College, which selected the president and vice president.
The 1908 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 3, 1908 as part of the 1908 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1912 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 5, 1912 as part of the 1912 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1916 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 7, 1916 as part of the 1916 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1924 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 4, 1924, as part of the 1924 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Wisconsin had since the decline of the Populist movement been substantially a one-party state dominated by the Republican Party. The Democratic Party became entirely uncompetitive outside certain German Catholic counties adjoining Lake Michigan as the upper classes, along with the majority of workers who followed them, completely fled from William Jennings Bryan's agrarian and free silver sympathies. As Democratic strength weakened severely after 1894 – although the state did develop a strong Socialist Party to provide opposition to the GOP – Wisconsin developed the direct Republican primary in 1903 and this ultimately created competition between the "League" under Robert M. La Follette, and the conservative "Regular" faction.
The 1928 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 6, 1928 as part of the 1928 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1932 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 8, 1932 as part of the 1932 United States presidential election. State voters chose 12 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1936 United States presidential election in Wisconsin was held on November 3, 1936 as part of the 1936 United States presidential election. State voters chose 12 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Minnesota took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election in which all contemporary forty-eight states participated. Voters chose 12 electors, or representatives to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. This election marks the last time a candidate for president won every county in Minnesota.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Florida, was held on November 2, 1920. Voters chose six representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for the president and vice-president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Wyoming took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election. State voters chose three representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Michigan took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election. Voters chose 15 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in South Dakota took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election in which all contemporary forty-eight states participated. Voters chose five electors, or representatives to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Idaho took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election. State voters chose four representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
The 1920 United States presidential election in Oklahoma took place on November 2, 1920, as part of the 1920 United States presidential election which was held throughout all contemporary 48 states. Voters chose ten representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.