1916 United States elections

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

1916 United States elections
electoral votes won by each candidate.
Senate elections
Overall controlDemocratic hold
Seats contested35 of 96 seats
(32 Class 1 seats + 3 special elections)
Net seat changeRepublican +2[1]


1916 United States Senate special election in Indiana1916 United States Senate special election in Maine1916 United States Senate special election in Arkansas1916 United States Senate election in Arizona1916 United States Senate election in California1916 United States Senate election in Connecticut1916 United States Senate election in Delaware1916 United States Senate election in Florida1916 United States Senate election in Indiana1916 United States Senate election in Maine1916 United States Senate election in Maryland1916 United States Senate election in Massachusetts1916 United States Senate election in Michigan1916 United States Senate election in Minnesota1916 United States Senate election in Mississippi1916 United States Senate election in Missouri1916 United States Senate election in Montana1916 United States Senate election in Nebraska1916 United States Senate election in Nevada1916 United States Senate election in New Jersey1916 United States Senate election in New Mexico1916 United States Senate election in New York1916 United States Senate election in North Dakota1916 United States Senate election in Ohio1916 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania1916 United States Senate election in Rhode Island1916 United States Senate election in Tennessee1916 United States Senate election in Texas1916 United States Senate election in Utah1916 United States Senate election in Vermont1916 United States Senate election in Virginia1916 United States Senate election in Washington1916 United States Senate election in West Virginia1916 United States Senate election in Wisconsin1916 United States Senate election in Wyoming
1916 Senate results

  Democratic gain   Democratic hold

  Republican gain   Republican hold
House elections
Overall controlDemocratic hold[2]
Seats contestedAll 435 voting members
Net seat changeRepublican +19
1916 House of Representatives results
Gubernatorial elections
Seats contested36
Net seat changeRepublican +2
1916 Rhode Island gubernatorial election1916 Illinois gubernatorial election1916 Wisconsin gubernatorial election1916 Iowa gubernatorial election1916 Arkansas gubernatorial election1916 Kansas gubernatorial election1916 Texas gubernatorial election1916 New Mexico gubernatorial election1916 Arizona gubernatorial election1916 Florida gubernatorial election1916 Massachusetts gubernatorial election1916 Michigan gubernatorial election1916 Nebraska gubernatorial election1916 South Dakota gubernatorial election1916 Minnesota gubernatorial election1916 Maine gubernatorial election1916 Colorado gubernatorial election1916 Ohio gubernatorial election1916 Tennessee gubernatorial election1916 Connecticut gubernatorial election1916 Idaho gubernatorial election1916 Georgia gubernatorial election1916 New York gubernatorial election1916 South Carolina gubernatorial election1916 New Jersey gubernatorial election1916 Delaware gubernatorial election1916 Indiana gubernatorial election1916 Missouri gubernatorial election1916 Montana gubernatorial election1916 New Hampshire gubernatorial election1916 North Carolina gubernatorial election1916 North Dakota gubernatorial election1916 Utah gubernatorial election1916 Vermont gubernatorial election1916 Washington gubernatorial election1916 West Virginia gubernatorial election
1916 gubernatorial election results

  Democratic gain   Democratic hold
  Republican gain   Republican hold

  Prohibition gain

The 1916 United States elections elected the members of the 65th United States Congress. The election occurred during the Fourth Party System, six months before the United States entered World War I. Unlike 1912, the Democrats did not benefit from a split in the Republican Party, but the Democrats still retained the presidency and the majority in the Senate. Democrats lost the majority in the House, but retained control of the chamber.

Supreme Court Justice Charles Evans Hughes, in the presidential election.[3] Hughes won the Republican nomination on the third ballot of the 1916 Republican National Convention, defeating several other candidates. Republicans won several Northern states, but Wilson's success in the rest of the country gave him a small margin in the electoral college and the popular vote. Wilson's win made him the first sitting Democratic president to win re-election since Andrew Jackson. Wilson's running mate, Thomas R. Marshall, was the first sitting vice president to win re-election since John C. Calhoun
.

Republicans made moderate gains in the House, gaining a narrow plurality.[4] However, Democrat Champ Clark won re-election as Speaker of the House.

In the second Senate election since the ratification of the 17th Amendment, Republicans made minor gains, but Democrats retained a solid majority.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Republicans picked up one seat in the regularly-scheduled elections and an additional seat in the special elections.
  2. ^ Democrats lost their House majority in the 1916 elections, but the party retained control of the House through a coalition with minor parties.
  3. ^ "1916 Presidential Election". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  4. ^ "Party Divisions of the House of Representatives". United States House of Representatives. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  5. ^ "Party Division in the Senate, 1789-Present". United States Senate. Retrieved 25 June 2014.