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・ United States presidential election in Rhode Island, 1832
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・ United States presidential election in New York, 1932
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United States presidential election in New York, 1964
・ United States presidential election in New York, 1968
・ United States presidential election in New York, 1972
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・ United States presidential election in New York, 1980
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・ United States presidential election in New York, 2000
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・ United States presidential election in New York, 2008
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・ United States presidential election in North Carolina, 1824
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United States presidential election in New York, 1964 : ウィキペディア英語版
United States presidential election in New York, 1964
(詳細はthe District of Columbia, were part of the 1964 United States presidential election. New York voters chose forty three electors to the Electoral College, which selected the President and Vice President.
New York was won by incumbent Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson, who was running against Republican Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona. Johnson ran with Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, and Goldwater ran with Representative William E. Miller of New York.
Johnson carried the state in a historic landslide, taking 68.56% of the vote to Goldwater's 31.31%, a victory margin of 37.25%. This is the only election in history in which a Democratic presidential candidate carried every single county in the state of New York. Johnson not only dominated traditionally Democratic cities like New York City, Albany, and Buffalo, but also swept every county in traditionally Republican upstate New York as well as Long Island; many of these counties had never voted for a Democratic presidential nominee prior to 1964. This result also made Johnson one of only 3 presidential candidates of either party who have been able to sweep every county in New York State, the others being Republicans Warren G. Harding in 1920 and Calvin Coolidge in 1924.
New York weighed in for this election as 15% more Democratic than the national average.
The presidential election of 1964 was a very partisan election for New York, with almost 99.9% of the electorate voting for either the Republican Party or the Democratic Party.
Lyndon Johnson carried all 5 boroughs of New York City, the first presidential candidate to do so since the landslide re-election of Franklin Roosevelt in 1936. In the borough of Manhattan, Johnson broke 80% of the vote, the first presidential candidate ever to do so. Brooklyn and the Bronx voted over 70% Democratic. Traditionally Republican Queens, narrowly carried by John F. Kennedy in 1960, gave over 60% of the vote to Johnson. Even Staten Island voted Democratic, the only occasion it would do so between 1936 and 1996. Overall, New York City gave LBJ about 73% of the vote, a citywide vote share no candidate would surpass until Bill Clinton's 77% in the 1996 election.
Johnson won the election in New York with a powerful 37 point sweep-out landslide. The staunch conservative Barry Goldwater was widely seen in the liberal Northeastern United States as a right-wing extremist; he had voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Johnson campaign portrayed him as a warmonger who as president would provoke a nuclear war. Thus Goldwater performed especially weakly in liberal northeastern states like New York, and for the first time in history, a Democratic presidential candidate swept every Northeastern state in 1964. Not only did Johnson win every Northeastern state, but he won all of them with landslides of over 60% of the vote, including New York, which weighed in as the fifth most Democratic state in the nation.
However the results of this election in New York are typical of President Johnson's almost universal popularity across the United States at the time. The only region of the United States that did not send electors for Johnson were Arizona (Goldwater's home state), and several states in the Deep South. 1964 was the first election where the South showed a trend towards independent identification with the Republican Party, largely because of Johnson's views on racial integration.〔Kornacki, Steve (February 3, 2011) (The "Southern Strategy," fulfilled ), ''Salon.com''〕 Johnson's Civil Rights Act had solidified integration which had already been happening in New York for the better part of fifty years by the 1964 election. Johnson's socially liberal and racially tolerant political position largely increased Johnson's popularity in New York, in contrast to the highly conservative Goldwater who had opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Johnson's 68.56% of the vote remains the highest vote share any presidential candidate of either party has ever received in New York State. His 37.25% victory margin also remains the widest margin by which any Democratic presidential candidate has ever won New York State, and the second-widest margin by which any candidate of either party has ever carried the state, only beaten narrowly by Republican Warren G. Harding's 37.61% margin in the 1920 Republican landslide.
==Results==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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