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1974 Massachusetts gubernatorial election

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1974 Massachusetts gubernatorial election

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FieldValue
election_name1974 Massachusetts gubernatorial election
countryMassachusetts
typepresidential
ongoingno
previous_election1970 Massachusetts gubernatorial election
previous_year1970
next_election1978 Massachusetts gubernatorial election
next_year1978
election_dateNovember 5, 1974
turnout74.64% 0.53
image1Michael S. Dukakis official gubernatorial portrait photograph, 1975.jpeg
image_sizex150px
nominee1Michael Dukakis
party1Democratic Party (United States)
running_mate1Thomas O'Neill III
popular_vote1992,284
percentage153.50%
image2Image:Governor Francis Sargent (cropped).jpg
nominee2Francis Sargent
party2Republican Party (United States)
running_mate2Donald Dwight
popular_vote2784,353
percentage242.29%
map_image{{switcher
default1
map_size250px
map_captionDukakis:
titleGovernor
before_electionFrancis Sargent
before_partyRepublican Party (United States)
after_electionMichael Dukakis
after_partyDemocratic Party (United States)

|[[File:1974_Massachusetts_gubernatorial_election_results_map_by_county.svg|300px]] |County results |[[File:1974 Massachusetts Gubernatorial Election by Municipality.svg|300px|]] |Municipality results

Sargent:

The 1974 Massachusetts gubernatorial election was held on November 5, 1974. Michael Dukakis was elected to a four-year term, from January 2, 1975 until January 4, 1979. He defeated incumbent Governor of Massachusetts Francis W. Sargent in the general election.

Primary elections were held on September 10. In the Republican primary, Sargent defeated a challenge from former Commerce Commissioner Carroll Sheehan. In the Democratic primary, former State Representative Michael Dukakis defeated Attorney General Robert H. Quinn.

The election was dominated by the Watergate scandal and resignation of President Richard Nixon on August 8 and the Boston desegregation busing crisis, including Sargent's May 10 decision to block repeal of the 1965 Racial Imbalance Act and the June 21 court ruling in Morgan v. Hennigan, in which federal judge W. Arthur Garrity Jr. found mandated desegregation busing in Boston schools.

As of , this is the most recent year in which the incumbent governor of Massachusetts lost the general election and the earliest gubernatorial election in Massachusetts to feature a gubernatorial candidate (Michael Dukakis) who is still alive today.

Republican primary

Governor

Candidates

  • Francis Sargent, incumbent governor
  • Carroll Sheehan, former State Commerce Commissioner

Campaign

In February 1974, Sheehan announced that he would challenge Sargent for the Republican nomination for governor. Sheehan blamed Sargent for high taxes and dirty and dangerous streets. He referred to the Sargent administration as "administrative experimenters and social tinkerers", singling out Secretary of Human Services Peter C. Goldmark, Jr. and former Corrections Commissioner John Boone. Although there was a large anti-Sargent sentiment, Sheehan was unable to translate it into support for his candidacy. After he publicly claimed Governor's Councilor Raymond Fontana would run on his ticket, Fontana declined to join the race.

At the Republican Convention on June 1, Sheehan had a surprisingly strong showing, gaining 32.5% of the convention votes.

Although Sargent held a large lead in the polls in late August, the Governor believed that there was a chance that he could lose the Republican primary and he requested that state party chairman William Barnstead call a special meeting of the Republican State Committee so he and Sheehan could debate before them and have one of them receive the party's endorsement. Barnstead declined to call the special meeting "for the convenience of the Governor" and said that any debate between Sargent and Sheehan should be held publicly. The Republican State Committee hosted a public debate on September 5 without any endorsement. The debate was televised by WCVB-TV.

Results

Lieutenant governor

Incumbent lieutenant governor Donald R. Dwight was unopposed in the Republican Primary.

Democratic primary

Governor

Candidates

  • Michael Dukakis, former state representative from Brookline and nominee for lieutenant governor in 1970
  • Robert H. Quinn, attorney general

Results

Primary results by municipality

Lieutenant governor

Candidates

  • Thomas P. O'Neill III, state representative and son of U.S. Representative Tip O'Neill
  • Christopher A. Iannella, Boston City Councillor
  • Eva Hester, Democratic National Committeewoman
  • John P. Lynch, Hampden County Register of Deeds and candidate for U.S. Senate in 1972
  • Thomas Martin Sullivan, resident of Randolph

Results

General election

Dukakis defeated Sargent by 207,931 votes. It was the first gubernatorial victory for the Massachusetts Democratic Party since 1962.

(Thomas P. O'Neill III) (Donald R. Dwight) (incumbent) (Nicholas J. Greco) (Ollie Bivins)

Results by county

1974 United States gubernatorial election in Massachusetts (by county)CountyDukakis %Dukakis #Sargent %Sargent #Others %Others #Total #
Barnstable39.9%19,36254.7%26,5395.4%2,64148,542
Berkshire54.2%26,94740.4%20,1055.4%2,68249,734
Bristol62.6%91,83932.1%47,0555.4%7,876146,770
Dukes36.4%1,34659.1%2,1894.5%1673,702
Essex52.1%117,81542.6%96,4755.3%12,056226,346
Franklin53.2%11,66641.5%9,0875.3%1,16821,921
Hampden63.6%84,22230.9%40,9785.5%7,257132,457
Hampshire59.2%24,05133.7%13,6917.1%2,88940,631
Middlesex51.0%243,91444.2%211,5114.8%22,938478,363
Nantucket36.2%53758.4%8655.4%801,482
Norfolk48.1%110,70145.4%104,3756.5%14,859229,935
Plymouth46.7%54,78144.9%52,7388.4%9,811117,330
Suffolk45.6%85,34339.3%73,49115.1%28,208187,042
Worcester56.5%119,82040.2%85,2543.4%7,152212,226

Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic

  • Berkshire
  • Essex
  • Franklin
  • Middlesex
  • Norfolk
  • Plymouth
  • Suffolk
  • Worcester

Notes

References

References

  1. "Massachusetts Election Statistics 1974".
  2. "Massachusetts Election Statistics 1974".
  3. "Massachusetts Election Statistics 1974".
  4. "1970 Governor General Election".
  5. "PD43+ » Search Elections".
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