United States House of Representatives elections, 1914
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The U.S. House election, 1914 was an election for the United States House of Representatives in 1914 which occurred in the middle of President Woodrow Wilson's first term.
‹ 1912 1916 › | ||||
United States House of Representatives elections, 1914 All 435 seats to the United States House of Representatives |
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November 3, 1914 | ||||
Leader | Champ Clark | James Mann | ||
Party | Democratic | Republican | ||
Leader's seat | Missouri-9th | Illinois-2nd | ||
Last election | 291 seats | 134 seats | ||
Seats won | 230 | 196 | ||
Seat change | -61 | +62 | ||
The opposition Republican Party had recovered from the split they underwent during the 1912 presidential election, and they made large gains in seats from the Democratic Party, but did not gain a majority. The growing economy, lead to pro-business beliefs taking precedence, and allowed the Republicans to regain many districts. Many former Progressives rejoined the Republican Party, but a number of the most liberal members of the House remained under this banner. Congressman Carl Vinson D-Georgia, who would set the since broken record for longest continuous tenure in the House, was elected to his first full term in this election.
[edit] Overall results
Party | Total Seats (change) | Seat percentage | |
---|---|---|---|
Democratic Party | 230 | -61 | 52.8% |
Republican Party | 196 | +62 | 45.0% |
Progressive Party | 6 | -3 | 1.3% |
Prohibition Party | 1 | +1 | 0.2% |
Socialist Party | 1 | +1 | 0.2% |
Independent | 1 | +0 | 0.2% |
Totals | 435 | +0 | 100.0% |
[edit] California
District | Incumbent | Party | Elected | Status | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
California 1 | William Kent | Independent |
|
Running | William Kent (I) 48.1% Edward H. Hart (R) 38.3% O. F. Meldon (D) 10.8% Henry P. Stipp (Proh.) 2.8% |
California 2 | John E. Raker | Democratic |
|
Running | John E. Raker (D) 64.7% James T. Matlock (R) 31.2% W. P. Fassett (Proh.) 4.1% |
California 3 | Charles F. Curry | Republican |
|
Running | Charles F. Curry (R) 85% David T. Ross (S) 8.7% Edwin F. Van Vlear (Proh.) 6.3% |
California 4 | Julius Kahn | Republican |
|
Running | Julius Kahn (R) 69.1% Henry Colombat (D) 22.8% Allen K. Gifford (S) 6.6% J. C. Westenberg (Proh.) 1.5% |
California 5 | John I. Nolan | Republican |
|
Running | John I. Nolan (R) 83.3% Mads Peter Christensen (S) 11.4% Frederick Head (Proh.) 5.3% |
California 6 | Joseph R. Knowland | Republican |
|
Running for Senate | John A. Elston (P) 44.4% George H. Derrick (R) 37.7% Howard H. Caldwell (S) 13.9% Harlow E. Wolcott (Proh.) 3.9% |
California 7 | Denver S. Church | Democratic |
|
Running | Denver S. Church (D) 49.9% A. M. Drew (R) 31.8% Harry M. McKee (S) 9.9% Don A. Allen (Proh.) 8.3% |
California 8 | Everis A. Hayes | Republican |
|
Running | Everis A. Hayes (R) 49.1% Lewis Dan Bohnett (P) 45.3% Joseph Merritt Horton (Proh.) 5.6% |
California 9 | Charles W. Bell | Prog. Republican |
|
Running | Charles H. Randall (Proh.) 30.9% Charles W. Bell (P) 30.3% Frank C. Roberts (R) 27.7% Henry A. Hart (S) 11.1% |
California 10 | William Stephens | Progressive |
|
Running | William Stephens (P) 38.4% Henry Z. Osborne (R) 28.9% Nathan Newby (D) 15.5% Ralph L. Criswell (S) 13% Henry Clay Needham (Proh.) 4.3% |
California 11 | William Kettner | Democratic |
|
Running | William Kettner (D) 52.7% James Carson Needham (R) 27.9% James S. Edwards (Proh.) 12.7% Casper Bauer (S) 6.7% |
[edit] See also
Preceded by 1912 |
U.S. House elections | Succeeded by 1916 |
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