1952 United States presidential election in New Mexico
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County Results
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Elections in New Mexico |
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The 1952 United States presidential election in New Mexico took place on November 4, 1952. All 48 States were part of the 1952 United States presidential election. State voters chose four electors to represent them in the Electoral College, which voted for President and Vice President.
New Mexico was won by World War II hero and supreme allied commander Dwight D. Eisenhower by a wide 11 percentage point margin. Running against Eisenhower was Governor of Illinois Adlai Stevenson, who carried only the majority of the American South during his two runs for the presidency.[2] Starting with this election, Valencia County would back the national winner in every election until 2020.
This was the last election in which voters in New Mexico chose presidential electors directly. Starting in 1956, the state adopted the modern "short ballot" where voters could only choose between the actual candidates' names, with the understanding that a vote for a candidate was a vote for their party's entire slate of electors.
Results
[edit]Party | Pledged to | Elector | Votes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican Party | Dwight D. Eisenhower | Mrs. Luis E. Armijo | 132,170 | |
Republican Party | Dwight D. Eisenhower | Louis A. McRae | 131,515 | |
Republican Party | Dwight D. Eisenhower | C. C. Bacon | 131,112 | |
Republican Party | Dwight D. Eisenhower | W. Fields Walker | 131,110 | |
Democratic Party | Adlai Stevenson II | Mike F. Apodaca | 105,661 | |
Democratic Party | Adlai Stevenson II | W. W. Nichols | 105,435 | |
Democratic Party | Adlai Stevenson II | Mary J. Sweeney | 105,386 | |
Democratic Party | Adlai Stevenson II | Alice Woolston | 104,914 | |
Prohibition Party | Stuart Hamblen | Lewis A. Myers | 297 | |
Prohibition Party | Stuart Hamblen | Luther B. Mitchell | 287 | |
Prohibition Party | Stuart Hamblen | Sadie E. Evans | 273 | |
Prohibition Party | Stuart Hamblen | Mrs. Forrest E. Wilson | 271 | |
Progressive Party | Vincent Hallinan | Vincente B. Becerra | 225 | |
Christian Nationalist Party | Douglas MacArthur | Everyl G. Gore | 220 | |
Christian Nationalist Party | Douglas MacArthur | Florence Porterfield | 217 | |
Christian Nationalist Party | Douglas MacArthur | Oralee Porter | 215 | |
Christian Nationalist Party | Douglas MacArthur | J. Earl Syling | 215 | |
Progressive Party | Vincent Hallinan | Virginia L. Chacon | 212 | |
Progressive Party | Vincent Hallinan | Ruth S. Young | 212 | |
Progressive Party | Vincent Hallinan | Helen Mallery | 199 | |
Socialist Labor Party | Eric Hass | Paris W. Linam | 35 | |
Socialist Labor Party | Eric Hass | Jeannete Reynolds | 34 | |
Socialist Labor Party | Eric Hass | James William Peach | 34 | |
Socialist Labor Party | Eric Hass | Dallas Reynolds | 32 | |
Votes cast[a] | 238,608 |
Results by county
[edit]County | Dwight D. Eisenhower Republican |
Adlai Stevenson Democratic |
Various candidates Other parties |
Margin | Total votes cast | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | % | # | % | # | % | # | % | ||
Bernalillo | 33,964 | 59.38% | 23,164 | 40.50% | 72 | 0.12% | 10,800 | 18.88% | 57,200 |
Catron | 741 | 61.49% | 464 | 38.51% | 0 | 0.00% | 277 | 22.98% | 1,205 |
Chaves | 7,018 | 63.92% | 3,880 | 35.34% | 81 | 0.74% | 3,138 | 28.58% | 10,979 |
Colfax | 3,397 | 51.58% | 3,184 | 48.34% | 5 | 0.08% | 213 | 3.24% | 6,586 |
Curry | 5,023 | 59.38% | 3,422 | 40.45% | 14 | 0.17% | 1,601 | 18.93% | 8,459 |
De Baca | 782 | 57.25% | 581 | 42.53% | 3 | 0.22% | 201 | 14.72% | 1,366 |
Dona Ana | 5,902 | 56.33% | 4,556 | 43.48% | 20 | 0.19% | 1,346 | 12.85% | 10,478 |
Eddy | 6,041 | 44.45% | 7,495 | 55.15% | 55 | 0.40% | -1,454 | -10.70% | 13,591 |
Grant | 3,421 | 43.18% | 4,315 | 54.47% | 186 | 2.35% | -894 | -11.29% | 7,922 |
Guadalupe | 1,575 | 53.90% | 1,347 | 46.10% | 0 | 0.00% | 228 | 7.80% | 2,922 |
Harding | 760 | 63.49% | 436 | 36.42% | 1 | 0.09% | 324 | 27.07% | 1,197 |
Hidalgo | 781 | 50.58% | 757 | 49.03% | 6 | 0.39% | 24 | 1.55% | 1,544 |
Lea | 4,738 | 47.52% | 5,204 | 52.19% | 29 | 0.29% | -466 | -4.67% | 9,971 |
Lincoln | 2,004 | 64.52% | 1,095 | 35.25% | 7 | 0.23% | 909 | 29.27% | 3,106 |
Los Alamos | 2,226 | 49.30% | 2,281 | 50.52% | 8 | 0.18% | -55 | -1.22% | 4,515 |
Luna | 1,729 | 55.86% | 1,332 | 43.04% | 34 | 1.10% | 397 | 12.82% | 3,095 |
McKinley | 3,091 | 49.80% | 3,097 | 49.90% | 19 | 0.30% | -6 | -0.10% | 6,207 |
Mora | 1,849 | 56.61% | 1,413 | 43.26% | 4 | 0.13% | 436 | 13.35% | 3,266 |
Otero | 2,456 | 53.16% | 2,162 | 46.80% | 2 | 0.04% | 294 | 6.36% | 4,620 |
Quay | 2,711 | 53.00% | 2,375 | 46.43% | 29 | 0.57% | 336 | 6.57% | 5,115 |
Rio Arriba | 4,336 | 48.69% | 4,564 | 51.25% | 5 | 0.06% | -228 | -2.56% | 8,905 |
Roosevelt | 3,030 | 56.74% | 2,298 | 43.03% | 12 | 0.23% | 732 | 13.71% | 5,340 |
San Juan | 3,864 | 69.73% | 1,659 | 29.94% | 18 | 0.33% | 2,205 | 39.79% | 5,541 |
San Miguel | 5,360 | 54.59% | 4,451 | 45.34% | 7 | 0.07% | 909 | 9.25% | 9,818 |
Sandoval | 1,795 | 52.06% | 1,647 | 47.77% | 6 | 0.17% | 148 | 4.29% | 3,448 |
Santa Fe | 9,011 | 56.62% | 6,786 | 42.64% | 119 | 0.74% | 2,225 | 13.98% | 15,916 |
Sierra | 2,033 | 63.61% | 1,158 | 36.23% | 5 | 0.16% | 875 | 27.38% | 3,196 |
Socorro | 2,224 | 55.52% | 1,777 | 44.36% | 5 | 0.12% | 447 | 11.16% | 4,006 |
Taos | 2,763 | 48.94% | 2,877 | 50.96% | 6 | 0.10% | -114 | -2.02% | 5,646 |
Torrance | 1,747 | 54.99% | 1,422 | 44.76% | 8 | 0.25% | 325 | 10.23% | 3,177 |
Union | 1,988 | 63.39% | 1,142 | 36.42% | 6 | 0.19% | 846 | 26.97% | 3,136 |
Valencia | 3,810 | 53.47% | 3,310 | 46.46% | 5 | 0.07% | 500 | 7.01% | 7,125 |
Totals | 132,170 | 55.39% | 105,661 | 44.28% | 777 | 0.33% | 26,509 | 11.11% | 238,608 |
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
[edit]- Bernalillo
- Catron
- Chaves
- Colfax
- Curry
- De Baca
- Doña Ana
- Harding
- Hidalgo
- Luna
- Otero
- Quay
- Roosevelt
- San Miguel
- Sandoval
- Sierra
- Union
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Based on totals for highest elector on each ticket
References
[edit]- ^ "U.S. presidential election, 1952". Facts on File. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 24, 2013.
Eisenhower, born in Texas, considered a resident of New York, and headquartered at the time in Paris, finally decided to run for the Republican nomination
- ^ "1952 Presidential General Election Results - New Mexico". Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved February 14, 2018.
- ^ New Mexico State Records Center & Archives, Canvass of Returns of General Election Held November 4, 1952 - State of New Mexico
- ^ New Mexico Secretary of State. Official Returns of the 1952 Elections. Santa Fe, New Mexico. p. 1.
- ^ New Mexico Secretary of State. New Mexico Election Returns 1911-1969. Santa Fe, New Mexico.