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1894 United States elections

Democratic gain      Democratic hold      Republican gain      Republican hold


Column 1
← 1892          1893          1894          1895          1896 → Midterm elections
November 6
Grover Cleveland (Democratic)
54th
Republican gain
30 of 88 seats
Republican +4
Results of the elections:     Democratic hold     Republican gain      Republican hold     Populist gain      Legislature failed to elect
Republican gain
All 356 voting seats
Republican +110
Map of 1894 house races     Democratic gain      Republican gain     Democratic hold      Republican hold     Populist gain      Populist hold      Silver hold
28
Republican +7
1894 gubernatorial election results
     Democratic gain      Democratic hold
     Republican gain      Republican hold

     Populist gain      Silver gain |

Elections were held on November 6, 1894, and elected the members of the 54th United States Congress. These were mid-term elections during Democratic President Grover Cleveland's second non-consecutive term. The Republican landslide of 1894 marked a realigning election In American politics as the nation moved from the Third Party System that had focused on issues of civil war and reconstruction, and entered the Fourth Party System, known as the Progressive Era, which focused on middle class reforms.

The Democrats suffered a landslide defeat in the House, losing over 100 seats to the Republicans in the single largest swing in the history of the House. The Democrats also lost four seats in the Senate, thus resulting in the President's party completely losing control of both houses of Congress, the first time this ever happened in a midterm election.

The Democratic Party losses can be traced largely to the Panic of 1893 and the ineffective party leadership of Cleveland. Republicans effectively used the issues of the tariff, bimetallism, and the Cuban War of Independence against Cleveland. The Democrats suffered huge defeats outside the South (almost ninety percent of Northeastern and Midwestern House Democrats lost re-election), and the Democratic Party underwent a major turnover in party leadership. With the defeat of many Bourbon Democrats, William Jennings Bryan took the party in a more populist direction starting with the 1896 elections.

  • 1894 United States House of Representatives elections

  • 1894–95 United States Senate elections

  • 1894 Nebraska gubernatorial election

  • 1894 South Carolina gubernatorial election

  • 1894 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election

  • 1892 United States presidential election

  • 1892 United States House of Representatives elections

  • 1892–93 United States Senate elections

  • Jensen, Richard J. (1971). The Winning of the Midwest: Social and Political Conflict, 1888-1896. U of Chicago Press. p. 209ff. ISBN 9780226398259.

  • Lewis, J. Eugene. "The Tennessee Gubernatorial Campaign and Election of 1894." Tennessee Historical Quarterly (1954): 99–126. in JSTOR

  • McCormick, Richard L. From Realignment to Reform: Political Change in New York State 1893-1910 (1981).

  • Petersen, Eric Falk. "The End of an Era: California's Gubernatorial Election of 1894." Pacific Historical Review 38.2 (1969): 141–156. in JSTOR

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