List of elections featuring Warren G. Harding as a candidate
Electoral history of Warren G. Harding, who served as the 29th president of the United States (1921-1923);[1] a U.S. senator from Ohio (1915-1921);[2] and the 28th lieutenant governor of Ohio (1904-1906).[3]
President Warren G. Harding
Ohio gubernatorial races (1903-1910)
United States Senate election (1914)
Presidential elections (1916-1920)
1916 Republican National Convention
Source - [7]
1920 United States presidential election
1920 Republican National Convention
1920 Republican presidential balloting
|
Ballot
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10[a]
|
10[b]
|
Harding
|
65.5
|
59.0
|
58.5
|
61.5
|
78.0
|
89.0
|
105.0
|
133.0
|
374.5
|
644.7
|
692.2
|
Wood
|
287.5
|
289.5
|
303.0
|
314.5
|
299.0
|
311.5
|
312.0
|
299.0
|
249.0
|
181.5
|
156.0
|
Lowden
|
211.5
|
259.5
|
282.5
|
289.0
|
303.0
|
311.5
|
311.5
|
307.0
|
121.5
|
28.0
|
11.0
|
H. Johnson
|
133.5
|
146.0
|
148.0
|
140.5
|
133.5
|
110.0
|
99.5
|
87.0
|
82.0
|
80.8
|
80.8
|
Sproul
|
84.0
|
78.5
|
79.5
|
79.5
|
82.5
|
77.0
|
76.0
|
76.0
|
78.0
|
0
|
0
|
W.M. Butler
|
69.5
|
41.0
|
25.0
|
20.0
|
4.0
|
4.0
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
Coolidge
|
34.0
|
32.0
|
27.0
|
25.0
|
29.0
|
28.0
|
28.0
|
30.0
|
28.0
|
5.0
|
5.0
|
La Follette
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
22.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
24.0
|
Pritchard
|
21.0
|
10.0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Poindexter
|
20.0
|
15.0
|
15.0
|
15.0
|
15.0
|
15.0
|
15.0
|
15.0
|
14.0
|
2.0
|
0
|
Sutherland
|
17.0
|
15.0
|
9.0
|
3.0
|
1.0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
Hoover
|
5.5
|
5.5
|
5.5
|
5.0
|
6.0
|
5.0
|
4.0
|
5.0
|
6.0
|
10.5
|
9.5
|
Scattering
|
11.0
|
9.0
|
7.0
|
9.0
|
9.0
|
9.0
|
6.0
|
6.0
|
5.0
|
5.5
|
3.5
|
- ^ before shifts
- ^ after shifts
First Presidential Ballot
Second Presidential Ballot
Third Presidential Ballot
Fourth Presidential Ballot
Fifth Presidential Ballot
Sixth Presidential Ballot
Seventh Presidential Ballot
Eighth Presidential Ballot
Ninth Presidential Ballot
Tenth Presidential Ballot
Before Shifts
Tenth Presidential Ballot
After Shifts
Presidential election
1920 Presidential election electoral college result.
Electoral results
Presidential candidate
|
Party
|
Home state
|
Popular vote
|
Electoral vote
|
Running mate
|
Count
|
Percentage
|
Vice-presidential candidate
|
Home state
|
Electoral vote
|
Warren Gamaliel Harding
|
Republican
|
Ohio
|
16,144,093
|
60.32%
|
404
|
John Calvin Coolidge Jr.
|
Massachusetts
|
404
|
James Middleton Cox
|
Democratic
|
Ohio
|
9,139,661
|
34.15%
|
127
|
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
|
New York
|
127
|
Eugene Victor Debs
|
Socialist
|
Indiana
|
913,693
|
3.41%
|
0
|
Seymour Stedman
|
Illinois
|
0
|
Parley Parker Christensen
|
Farmer-Labor
|
Illinois
|
265,398
|
0.99%
|
0
|
Maximillian S. Hayes
|
Ohio
|
0
|
Aaron Sherman Watkins
|
Prohibition
|
Indiana
|
188,787
|
0.71%
|
0
|
David Leigh Colvin
|
New York
|
0
|
James Edward Ferguson Jr.
|
American
|
Texas
|
47,968
|
0.18%
|
0
|
William J. Hough
|
New York
|
0
|
William Wesley Cox
|
Socialist Labor
|
Missouri
|
31,084
|
0.12%
|
0
|
August Gillhaus
|
New York
|
0
|
Robert Colvin Macauley
|
Single Tax
|
Pennsylvania
|
5,750
|
0.02%
|
0
|
Richard C. Barnum
|
Ohio
|
0
|
Other
|
28,746
|
0.11%
|
—
|
Other
|
—
|
Total
|
26,765,180
|
100%
|
531
|
|
531
|
Needed to win
|
266
|
|
266
|
Sources and references
- ^ "Warren G. Harding". The White House. Archived from the original on 2020-12-12. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
- ^ "Warren G. Harding". HISTORY. Archived from the original on 2021-04-24. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
- ^ "Warren G. Harding | Facts, Accomplishments, & Biography". Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 2021-04-28. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
- ^ Dean, John W. (2004). Warren G. Harding (1. ed.). New York: Times Books. pp. 34–37. ISBN 0805069569.
1914 harding hogan.
- ^ Hart, George L (1916). Official Report of the Proceedings of the Sixteenth Republican National Convention: Held in Chicago, Illinois, June 7, 8, 9 and 10, 1916, Resulting in the Nomination of Charles Evans Hughes, of New York, for President and the Nomination of Charles Warren Fairbanks, of Indiana, for Vice-president. Tenny Press.
Work cited