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Revision as of 16:02, 8 January 2025

1962 New York gubernatorial election

← 1958 November 6, 1962 1966 →
 
Nominee Nelson Rockefeller Robert Morgenthau
Party Republican Democratic
Alliance Liberal
Running mate Malcolm Wilson John J. Burns
Popular vote 3,081,587 2,552,418
Percentage 53.1% 44.0%

County results
Rockefeller:      40-50%      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Morgenthau:      50-60%

Governor before election

Nelson Rockefeller
Republican

Elected Governor

Nelson Rockefeller
Republican

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The 1962 New York gubernatorial election was held on November 8, 1962 to elect the Governor and Lieutenant Governor of New York. Incumbent Republican governor Nelson Rockefeller won re-election to a second term in office over U.S. Attorney Robert Morgenthau.

Democratic nomination

Candidates

Withdrew

Campaign

Robert Morgenthau began exploring campaign only thirty-three days before the Democratic convention, when President John F. Kennedy and mayor of New York City Robert F. Wagner Jr. met in Washington. With only two weeks before the convention, Morgenthau publicly acknowledged his candidacy and resigned as United States Attorney to actively campaign. Wagner staked his political prestige on the Morgenthau campaign.

Results

The Democratic state convention met in Syracuse from September 16 to 18. The convention opened with a keynote speech from mayor Wagner, who attacked Governor Rockefeller as a reactionary and compared him to Barry Goldwater. Other speakers attacking Rockefeller included former governors Herbert H. Lehman and W. Averell Harriman, who called Rockefeller a "part-time governor" more interested in being President in 1964. The convention delegates nominated Morgenthau for governor on the unanimously on the second ballot, after he fell seven votes short on the first ballot.

At the opening of the convention, Morgenthau appeared likely to win a first-ballot majority with the support of both the Bronx, where party boss Charles A. Buckley announced he would lead at least 106 of the 110 delegates to support Morgenthau, and Brooklyn, which abandoned favorite son Abraham Beame on the first ballot. Buckley's endorsement was considered particularly decisive, since Wagner had supported a primary challenge to Buckley earlier in 1962 and sought to unseat him as Bronx party boss.

However, when the roll was called, Morgenthau's base of support in Manhattan and Westchester County was less solid than expected, and the first ballot left him seven votes short. In Manhattan, reformist delegates had voted for Samuels or Stratton, while in Westchester, O'Connor had captured fifteen of the forty-five delegates.

1962 New York Democratic convention, first ballot
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Robert Morgenthau 563 49.47%
Democratic Frank D. O'Connor 375 32.95%
Democratic Samuel S. Stratton 103 9.05%
Democratic Howard J. Samuels 74 6.50%
Democratic James A. Farley 22 1.93%
Democratic Abraham Beame (withdrawn) 1 0.09%
Total votes 1,138 100.00%

After the second ballot showed Morgenthau making inroads in Queen, O'Connors base, support for O'Connor collapsed. Morgenthau ultimately won fifty delegates in Queens before the vote was made unanimous.

Aftermath

The Liberal Party met on September 19 and endorsed the Democratic ticket.

General election

Candidates

  • Richard Garza, restaurant employee, seaman, and candidate for Mayor of New York City in 1961 (Socialist Workers)
  • Eric Hass, perennial candidate (Socialist Labor)
  • David H. Jaquith, industrialist (Conservative)
  • Robert Morgenthau, U.S Attorney for the Southern District of New York (Democratic and Liberal)
  • Nelson Rockefeller, incumbent Governor since 1959 (Republican)

Results

1962 New York gubernatorial election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Nelson Rockefeller (incumbent) 3,081,587 53.08% Decrease 2.06
Democratic Robert Morgenthau 2,309,743 39.78% Decrease 0.25
Liberal Robert Morgenthau 242,675 4.18% Decrease 0.10
Total Robert Morgenthau 2,552,418 43.96% Decrease 0.35
Conservative David H. Jaquith 141,877 2.44% N/A
Socialist Workers Richard Garza 19,968 0.34% N/A
Socialist Labor Eric Hass 9,762 0.17% N/A
Total votes 5,805,612 100.00%

References

  1. ^ MORGENTHAU NOMINATED TO OPPOSE ROCKEFELLER; VICTOR ON SECOND BALLOT in NYT on September 18, 1962 (subscription required)
  2. DEMOCRATS NAME DUDLEY, A NEGRO, TO STATE TICKET; DONOVAN TO OPPOSE JAVITS; LEVITT IS CHOSEN in NYT on September 19, 1962 (subscription required)

Works cited

(1960 ←)   1962 United States elections   (→ 1964)
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