1972 Illinois gubernatorial election

Summary

The 1972 Illinois gubernatorial election was held in Illinois on November 7, 1972.[1] Incumbent first-term Republican governor Richard B. Ogilvie lost reelection in an upset to the Democratic nominee, Dan Walker.

1972 Illinois gubernatorial election

← 1968 (Gov)
1968 (Lt. Gov)
November 7, 1972 1976 →
Turnout75.28% Decrease 4.11 pp
 
Nominee Dan Walker Richard B. Ogilvie
Party Democratic Republican
Running mate Neil Hartigan James D. Nowlan
Popular vote 2,371,303 2,293,809
Percentage 50.7% 49.0%

County results
Walker:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
Ogilvie:      50–60%      60–70%

Governor before election

Richard B. Ogilvie
Republican

Elected Governor

Dan Walker
Democratic

This was the first election in which each party's nominee for lieutenant governor of Illinois ran on a ticket with the gubernatorial nominee for the general election. Previously, there had been two separate elections for the two offices. This would be the last election of the 20th century in which a Democrat won the governorship of Illinois, with all seven remaining elections of that century being won by Republican nominees.

Election information edit

This was the first gubernatorial elections in which gubernatorial and lieutenant gubernatorial candidates were elected on a ticket in the general election, per the 1970 Constitution of Illinois.

The election coincided with those for federal offices (United States President, Senate, and House) and those for other state offices.[1] The election was part of the 1972 Illinois elections. Walker was the last Democrat to be elected governor of Illinois until Rod Blagojevich in 2002.

The primaries were held on March 21, 1972.[1]

Turnout edit

Turnout in the primaries saw 36.09% in the gubernatorial primaries, with a total of 2,015,694 votes cast, and 30.46% in the lieutenant gubernatorial primary, with 1,701,418 votes cast.[1]

Turnout during the general election was 75.28%, with 4,679,043 votes cast.[1]

Democratic primaries edit

Governor edit

In an upset, Dan Walker won a close primary against then-Lt. Governor Paul Simon. Paul Simon had been the candidate slated by the state party.

 
County map of the 1972 Illinois Democratic gubernatorial primary
Walker:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%
Simon:      50-60%      60-70%      70-80%      80-90%
1972 Democratic gubernatorial primary, Illinois[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Daniel Walker 735,193 51.41 N/A
Democratic Paul Simon 694,900 48.59 N/A
Write-in Others 24 0.00 N/A
Majority 40,923 2.82
Total votes 1,430,117

Lieutenant governor edit

Neil Hartigan, the candidate slated by the state party, defeated Carbondale mayor Neal Eckert, Walker's declared preferred running-mate.

Democratic lieutenant gubernatorial primary[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Neil F. Hartigan 802,449 65.37
Democratic Neal E. Eckert 425,021 34.63
Write-in Others 16 0.00
Total votes 1,227,486 100

Republican primary edit

Governor edit

Ogilvie won renomination easily. His main rival, John M. Mathis was a favorite son of the Peoria area, and fared poorly elsewhere.

1972 Republican gubernatorial primary, Illinois[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Richard B. Ogilvie (incumbent) 442,323 75.54 N/A
Republican John M. Mathis 143,053 24.43 N/A
Write-in Others 201 0.03 N/A
Majority 299,270 51.11
Total votes 585,577

Lieutenant governor edit

James D. Nowlan won the Republican primary for Lieutenant Governor, running unopposed.

Republican lieutenant gubernatorial primary[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican James D. Nowlan 473,916 100
Write-in Others 16 0.00
Total votes 473,932 100

General election edit

1972 gubernatorial election, Illinois[1]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Daniel Walker/Neil F. Hartigan 2,371,303 50.68 +2.31
Republican Richard B. Ogilvie (incumbent)/James D. Nowlan 2,293,809 49.02 -2.19
Socialist Labor George LaForest/Stanley L. Prorok 7,966 0.17 -0.26
Communist Ishmael Flory/Theodore Pearson 4,592 0.10 N/A
Write-in Others 1,373 0.03 N/A
Majority 77,494 1.66 -1.18
Total votes 4,679,043
Democratic gain from Republican Swing

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "OFFICIAL VOTE Cast at the GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 7, 1972 JUDICIAL PRIMARY ELECTION GENERAL PRIMARY, MARCH, 21, 1972" (PDF). Illinois State Board of Elections. Retrieved June 26, 2020.[permanent dead link]