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1950 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election

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1950 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election

Summary

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FieldValue
election_name1950 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election
countryPennsylvania
typepresidential
election_date
ongoingno
previous_election1946 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election
previous_year1946
next_election1954 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election
next_year1954
image1John S. Fine (PA).jpg
nominee1John Fine
running_mate1Lloyd Wood
party1Republican Party (United States)
popular_vote11,796,119
percentage150.7%
image2Richardson Dilworth 1947 Edit.jpg
nominee2Richardson Dilworth
running_mate2Michael Musmanno
party2Democratic Party (United States)
popular_vote21,710,355
percentage248.3%
map_image1950 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election results map by county.svg
map_size260px
map_captionCounty results
titleGovernor
before_electionJim Duff
before_partyRepublican Party (United States)
after_electionJohn S. Fine
after_partyRepublican Party (United States)

Fine:
Dilworth:

The 1950 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election was held on November 7. For the twenty-second time in twenty-five elections, the Republican candidate was victorious, but by a much smaller than usual margin. Superior Court Judge John S. Fine defeated Democrat Richardson Dilworth, the City Controller of Philadelphia. This election marked the last time until 2022 that a political party would win three consecutive gubernatorial elections in Pennsylvania.

Democratic primary

Candidates

Results

Democratic primary results

|center]]

Republican primary

Candidates

  • John Fine, Superior Court Judge (from Luzerne County)
  • Jay Cooke, veteran of World War I and World War II and candidate for U.S. Senate in 1940 (from Montgomery County)
  • Charles Scott Williams, Lycoming County judge

Results

Republican primary results

|center]]

Major party candidates

Democratic

  • Richardson Dilworth, Philadelphia City Controller
    • running mate: Michael Musmanno, Court of Common Pleas Judge (from Allegheny County)

Republican

  • John Fine, Superior Court Judge (from Luzerne County)
    • running mate: Lloyd Wood, State Senator (from Montgomery County)

Campaign

Despite the popularity of outgoing governor (and 1950 U.S. Senate candidate) Jim Duff and the low approval ratings of President Harry Truman, Democrats came into the election with a cautiously optimistic outlook. In Dilworth, they had selected a charismatic candidate with a strong reputation as a reformer after serving as a key figure in the Democratic overthrow of Philadelphia's corrupt Republican political machine. Furthermore, although Republicans held registration advantages throughout the state, many voters were ambivalent toward their policies due to a 1949–50 recession that impacted crucial heavy industries.

In contrast to the energetic Dilworth, the Republican nominee Fine was somewhat uncomfortable in the public eye, after having spent his career as a backroom power player and party boss. Fine had once been a close associate of progressive Governor Gifford Pinchot and had spent the previous twenty years as Northeastern Pennsylvania 's key political figure. Fine represented the consistency of the long-dominant state political machine and, although he was somewhat more conservative than the outgoing governor, was chosen as Duff's hand-picked successor to hold steady a Republican ship that was on cruise control.

The election was marked by a variety of brutal personal attacks. First, Fine was forced to wage a contentious primary battle. Jay Cooke, a wealthy Philadelphia banker, mobilized the arch-conservative business wing of the party, while Charles Williams, a Lycoming County Common Pleas Judge, led a small but vocal group of anti-machine Republicans. Although Fine won by twenty points over Cooke, the party had difficulty healing their wounds in the general election. In the fall, Fine and Dilworth further toned up the rhetoric. The Philadelphia Democrat portrayed his opponent as a crony who oversaw a Tammany Hall-style patronage system and asserted that Fine's agenda would "roll back the Twentieth Century." Fine fired back by painting Dilworth as a candidate who would be soft on communism and allow subversives to penetrate state government; he even went so far as to compare state Democrats to a "psychiatric problem." https://books.google.com/books?id=6SpJJmkNDFEC&q=fine

On Election Day, Fine carried the gubernatorial ticket by about two points, despite Governor Duff's large win in the Senate race. Although Fine ran well in heavily Republican Central Pennsylvania and limited Dilworth's advantage in the Democratic stronghold of metropolitan Pittsburgh, he lost by a slim margin his home base in the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre area. Furthermore, Dilworth gained 42% of the vote in Philadelphia's four suburban counties, despite only 17% of area residents holding Democratic voter registration.https://books.google.com/books?id=1J_9q-lIWRkC&q=fine&pg=PA112

Results

Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, 1950PartyCandidateRunning mateVotesPercentage
RepublicanJohn FineLloyd Wood1,796,11950.74%
DemocraticRichardson DilworthMichael Musmanno1,710,35548.31%
ProhibitionRichard Blews12,2820.35%
G.I.'s Against CommunismReggie Naugle7,7150.22%
ProgressiveTom Fitzpatrick6,0970.17%
SocialistRobert Wilson5,0050.14%
IndependentGeorge Taylor1,6450.05%
Totals3,540,029100.00%

Notes

References

References

  1. (February 22, 1942). "Clarence Bowers, Reading, Asks Governor Nomination". Youngstown Vindicator.
  2. (March 12, 1946). "Third Party Enters State Slate". The News-Dispatch.
  3. (1952). "The 1951-1952 Pennsylvania Manual". Pennsylvania Bureau of Publications.
  4. (February 2, 1950). "Charles Scott Williams Pledges To Serve All People, Avoid Any Alliance With Power Groups". The Clinton County Times.
  5. (2006). "Pennsylvania Elections: Statewide Contests from 1950-2004".
  6. (November 2010). "Pennsylvania Politics Today and Yesterday: The Tolerable Accommodation".
  7. ''The Pennsylvania Manual'', p. 728.
  8. ''The Pennsylvania Manual'', p. 727.
Wikipedia Source

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