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Elections in Massachusetts |
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Massachusettsportal |
The 1944 United States Senate special election in Massachusetts was held on November 7, 1944. Republican Governor Leverett Saltonstall was elected to finish the term of Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., who had resigned from the Senate to serve in World War II.
Primary elections were held on July 10; Saltonstall was unopposed for the Republican nomination, while John H. Corcoran won a highly competitive race for the Democratic nomination, in which all four candidates came from Boston or Cambridge.
Incumbent Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. resigned from the Senate on February 3, 1944, to return to active duty in the U.S. Army during World War II.
Despite initial reporting that Governor Leverett Saltonstall would resign so that Lieutenant Governor Horace T. Cahill could appoint him to the vacant seat, he chose not to. [1] Instead, on February 8, Saltonstall appointed Sinclair Weeks, whom Lodge had narrowly defeated at the party convention in 1936.
A special election was scheduled on November 7, concurrent with the regularly scheduled elections to state and national office.
Governor Saltonstall was unopposed for the Republican nomination.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | John H. Corcoran | 62,537 | 33.90% | |
Democratic | Joseph Lee | 47,514 | 25.76% | |
Democratic | Richard M. Russell | 47,080 | 25.52% | |
Democratic | Joseph A. Langone Jr. | 27,317 | 14.82% | |
Total votes | 184,448 | 100.00% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Leverett Saltonstall | 1,228,754 | 64.29% | 11.85 | |
Democratic | John H. Corcoran | 667,086 | 34.90% | 11.71 | |
Socialist Labor | Bernard G. Kelly | 12,296 | 0.64% | 0.29 | |
Prohibition | E. Tallmadge Root | 3,269 | 0.17% | 0.09 | |
Total votes | 1,911,405 | 100.00% |
Though he was entitled to be seated immediately upon the certification of the election, Saltonstall did not take office until January 4, 1945, when his term as Governor ended.
Leverett Atholville Saltonstall was an American lawyer and politician from Massachusetts. He served three two-year terms as the 55th Governor of Massachusetts, and for more than twenty years as a United States senator (1945–1967). Saltonstall was internationalist in foreign policy and moderate on domestic policy, serving as a well-liked mediating force in the Republican Party. He was the only member of the Republican Senate leadership to vote for the censure of Joseph McCarthy.
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