To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

1932 Florida gubernatorial election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1932 Florida gubernatorial election

← 1928 November 8, 1932 1936 →
 
Nominee David Sholtz William J. Howey
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 186,270 93,323
Percentage 66.62% 33.38%

Sholtz
  50–60%
  60–70%
  70–80%
  80–90%


Governor before election

Doyle E. Carlton
Democratic

Elected Governor

David Sholtz
Democratic

The 1932 Florida gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 1932. Democratic nominee David Sholtz defeated Republican nominee William J. Howey with 66.62% of the vote.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    13 224
    367
    272 562
    373
    6 356
  • The Coming Wave? 2018 Midterm Election Panel With: Robert Reich, Janet Napolitano and Henry Brady
  • How We Win the Civil War: Remarks by Author Steve Phillips
  • The American Presidential Election of 1876
  • Voting In Germany (1930-1939)
  • Finally, It’s Over: The 2016 Election and Its Aftermath

Transcription

Primary elections

Primary elections were held on June 7, 1932.[1]

Democratic primary

During the Democratic primary, the campaign platforms for several candidates are known. David Sholtz would run on a campaign involving: increasing government services, giving back pay for teachers, making school terms 9 months log, free textbook for school students, creating a workers' compensation law, increasing bank regulation and providing more funding for public welfare. Carl Maples would pitch himself as being someone who supported a localized self-government.[2] Former governor Cary A. Hardee would emphasize his record when he was governor while running in the primaries. Another former governor, John W. Martin would emphasize that he led to many roads being paved in Florida and would promise that if elected for a second nonconsecutive term as governor he would give: "a dollar in his pocket and a smile on his face."[3]

Many political observers believed that former governors John W. Martin and Cary A. Hardee would face off against each other in a runoff race.[3]

Candidates

Endorsements

David Sholtz
U.S. Senators

Results

Democratic Primary Runoff by county
  Sholtz
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  •   80–90%
  Martin
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
Democratic primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic John W. Martin 66,940 24.19
Democratic David Sholtz 55,406 20.02
Democratic Cary A. Hardee 50,427 18.22
Democratic Stafford Caldwell 44,938 16.24
Democratic Charles W. Durrance 36,291 13.12
Democratic T. S. Hart 9,525 3.44
Democratic Arthur Gomez 9,244 3.34
Democratic J. Thomas Watson 3,949 1.43
Total votes 276,720 100.00
Democratic primary runoff results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic David Sholtz 173,540 62.80
Democratic John W. Martin 102,805 37.20
Total votes 276,345 100.00

Runoff Results by county

General election

William J. Howey ran on a similar campaign platform to 1928. During his 1932 platform he promised to reduce the amount of circuit courts, replace county school boards with appointed superintendents and give parole to prisoners after serving 1/3 of their sentence. He supported refinancing the state's bonds at lower interest rates. As a way to pay off the state's debts, he proposed stopping all road construction and diverting the funds instead to paying off the state's debts. Howey was in favor of giving more legal rights to women and was fond of the benefits of having a two party system in the state. The Republicans favored abolishing the poll tax in the state while the Democrats were against this as they saw this as a major blow to white supremacy in the state.[7]

Candidates

Results

1932 Florida gubernatorial election[8]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic David Sholtz 186,270 66.62%
Republican William J. Howey 93,323 33.38%
Majority 92,947
Turnout
Democratic hold Swing

Results by county

County[9] David Sholtz
Democratic
William J. Howey
Republican
Total votes
# % # %
Alachua 3,099 67.92% 1,464 32.08% 4,563
Baker 1,019 75.76% 326 24.24% 1,345
Bay 2,493 79.50% 643 20.50% 3,136
Bradford 1,217 79.65% 311 20.35% 1,528
Brevard 1,606 54.76% 1,327 45.24% 2,933
Broward 3,173 61.34% 2,000 38.66% 5,173
Calhoun 1,049 72.44% 399 27.56% 1,448
Charlotte 835 60.20% 552 39.80% 1,387
Citrus 1,081 77.60% 312 22.40% 1,393
Clay 1,082 58.52% 767 41.48% 1,849
Collier 373 80.91% 88 19.09% 461
Columbia 2,213 82.39% 473 17.61% 2,686
Dade 16,530 59.88% 11,077 40.12% 27,607
DeSoto 1,504 67.69% 718 32.31% 2,222
Dixie 1,002 84.56% 183 15.44% 1,185
Duval 15,949 62.77% 9,460 37.23% 25,409
Escambia 5,441 68.70% 2,479 31.30% 7,920
Flagler 415 71.43% 166 28.57% 581
Franklin 893 83.61% 175 16.39% 1,068
Gadsden 1,660 82.71% 347 17.29% 2,007
Gilchrist 629 72.80% 235 27.20% 864
Glades 448 62.14% 273 37.86% 721
Gulf 567 83.14% 115 16.86% 682
Hamilton 867 69.36% 383 30.64% 1,250
Hardee 2,200 69.38% 971 30.62% 3,171
Hendry 624 72.64% 235 27.36% 859
Hernando 975 70.14% 415 29.86% 1,390
Highlands 1,539 66.22% 785 33.78% 2,324
Hillsborough 17,962 73.55% 6,460 26.45% 24,422
Holmes 2,384 75.44% 776 24.56% 3,160
Indian River 1,033 59.27% 710 40.73% 1,743
Jackson 4,127 77.30% 1,212 22.70% 5,339
Jefferson 1,287 87.25% 188 12.75% 1,475
Lafayette 826 86.40% 130 13.60% 956
Lake 2,601 51.35% 2,464 48.65% 5,065
Lee 2,381 66.34% 1,208 33.66% 3,589
Leon 2,656 81.70% 595 18.30% 3,251
Levy 1,418 79.40% 368 20.60% 1,786
Liberty 584 82.14% 127 17.86% 711
Madison 1,484 80.17% 367 19.83% 1,851
Manatee 2,834 65.25% 1,509 34.75% 4,343
Marion 2,385 57.32% 1,776 42.68% 4,161
Martin 700 58.53% 496 41.47% 1,196
Monroe 2,648 87.11% 392 12.89% 3,040
Nassau 907 59.91% 607 40.09% 1,514
Okaloosa 1,841 79.15% 485 20.85% 2,326
Okeechobee 717 78.79% 193 21.21% 910
Orange 4,859 56.61% 3,725 43.39% 8,584
Osceola 1,467 55.40% 1,181 44.60% 2,648
Palm Beach 7,732 65.04% 4,156 34.96% 11,888
Pasco 2,217 64.43% 1,224 35.57% 3,441
Pinellas 9,787 57.83% 7,138 42.17% 16,925
Polk 8,785 66.66% 4,393 33.34% 13,178
Putnam 1,894 57.73% 1,387 42.27% 3,281
Santa Rosa 2,318 73.08% 854 26.92% 3,172
Sarasota 1,839 67.61% 881 32.39% 2,720
Seminole 2,008 63.10% 1,174 36.90% 3,182
St. Johns 3,043 66.07% 1,563 33.93% 4,606
St. Lucie 1,479 73.55% 532 26.45% 2,011
Sumter 1,523 65.25% 811 34.75% 2,334
Suwannee 1,758 77.31% 516 22.69% 2,274
Taylor 1,134 73.21% 415 26.79% 1,549
Union 846 83.60% 166 16.40% 1,012
Volusia 7,197 59.44% 4,910 40.56% 12,107
Wakulla 913 84.85% 163 15.15% 1,076
Walton 2,238 80.13% 555 19.87% 2,793
Washington 1,975 70.23% 837 29.77% 2,812
Total 186,270 66.62% 93,323 33.38% 279,593

References

  1. ^ a b c The Florida Handbook. 1987. ISBN 9780961600006. Retrieved May 19, 2020.
  2. ^ Evans, Jon S. (2011). "Weathering the Storm: Florida Politics during the Administration of Spessard L. Holland in World War II (thesis)". Florida State University Libraries. Archived from the original on August 6, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Cox, Merlin G. (1964) "David Sholtz: New Deal Governor of Florida," Florida Historical Quarterly: Vol. 43 : No. 2 , Article 5.
  4. ^ "Journal of the Senate" (PDF). Florida Senate. April 4, 1933.
  5. ^ Lambright, E. D. (June 18, 1932). "Senator Fletcher Endorse Sholtz; Predicts Victory". The Tampa Tribune. p. 1. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  6. ^ Gray, R. A. (n.d.). (rep.). Tabulation of Official Vote Florida Primary Elections : Democratic and Republican (Vol. 1932, p. 16).
  7. ^ Hughes, Jr., Melvin (January 1988). "WILLIAM J. HOWEY AND HIS FLORIDA DREAMS". The Florida Historical Quarterly. LXVI (3) – via University of Central Florida Digital Library.
  8. ^ McGovern, Bernie (2007). Florida Almanac 2007-2008. ISBN 9781455604418. Retrieved May 19, 2020.
  9. ^ Gray, R. A. (1932). (rep.). Report of the Secretary of State of the State of Florida (Vol. 1931–1932, p. 309). Tallahassee, FL: Rose Ptg. Co.
This page was last edited on 10 March 2024, at 00:05
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.