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Winner Take Nothing
(TIME, April 27, 1936) -- In Illinois last week was fought the first 1936
Presidential primary in which one Republican candidate faced another Republican
candidate faced another Republican candidate on the same ballot. The result:
In votes: 480,000 for Publisher William Franklin Knox; 410,000 for
Senator William Edgar Borah.
In delegates to the Republican national Convention: at least 35 for
Knox; perhaps 22 for Borah.
In public opinion: a substantial set-back for Knox; a fair- to-middling
victory for Borah.
This discrepancy between the numerical and the moral outcome of the Illinois
Republican primary was accounted for by the difference in what the two
candidates invested in the campaign. Publisher Knox invested long and careful
preparation as a Favorite Son candidate, the virtually unanimous support of
every local Republican organization in the State, the influence of his own great
Chicago Daily News, about $25,000 in cash and an elaborate speaking campaign
over a period of weeks. Senator Borah invested five days, six speeches and one
visit to his younger sister, Mrs. Mattie Rinard, and his birthplace at
Fairfield, Ill. (Of the original four Borah boys and six Borah girls only three
survive. Sadie Borah Mabry, a widow in St. Louis, is 72. Mattie Borah Rinard,
69, lost her stockman husband 18 years ago, lives on in Fairfield in her own
seven-room house, with a small income and one boarder, Miss Trula Scott, deputy
county clerk. A third sister, Alice Borah Heidinger died last month, aged
86.)
In return for his efforts, Frank Knox got a majority of 110,000 votes in Cook
County. Senator Borah got a majority of nearly 40,000 in the rest of the State,
carried ten out of 15 downstate Congressional districts, swept the county where
he was born, 3,500-to-350. Whether Mr. Borah will get all the 22 delegates to
which he is nominally entitled is another matter, for the primary is only
advisory. Elected at the same time, nearly all the delegates to the convention
are personally rated as Knox men. If they follow precedent, however, thy will
vote for Borah at least on the first ballot before switching to Knox. The real
Borah victory came from the fact that the septuagenarian Senator was able to
boast: "Frank Knox carried Chicago, but I carried Illinois."
Biggest primary victory by far went to Franklin Roosevelt. While Republicans
Knox and Borah together polled only 900,000, the President, opposed in the
Democratic primary, rolled up 1,300,000 votes. In this he was partly aided by
the fact that the red-hot attraction of Illinois' primary was the fight for the
Democratic nomination for Governor, which drew an unusual number of Democratic
voters to the polls.
Same day that Illinois voted her Presidential preferences Nebraska did like
wise, and again, as far as the national ticket was concerned, the winner was
loser. Senator Borah, lone Republican candidate on the ballot, swept to victory,
but of the Republicans who went to Nebraska's polls only a few more than half
bothered to mark a cross for Borah. And for every five who marked a cross for
Borah, one other Republican laboriously wrote in the name of Governor Alfred
Mossman Landon of Kansas, who had not even entered in Nebraska. Again, as in
Illinois, the result of the Presidential primary was only advisory, and a slate
of uninstructed delegates mostly favorable to Landon was elected. President
Roosevelt polled two-thirds again as many votes as Borah and Landon
combined.
Said Democratic Boss Farley with satisfaction: "The primaries indicated the
apathetic attitude of Republican voters toward the candidates who aspire for the
party's Presidential nomination."
May 25, 1936 REPUBLICANS "I Am Not a Candidate"
This week, passing through Chicago on his way home to Stanford University
from a campaign trip in the East, Herbert Hoover paused to issue a statement,
his first on the subject of his candidacy for 1936. Excerpt:
"It should be evident by this time that I am not a candidate. I have stated
many times that I have no interest but to get these critical issues before the
country. I have rigidly prevented my friends from setting up any organization
and from presenting my name in any primary or to any state convention, and not a
single delegate from California or any other state is pledged to me. That should
end such discussion.
"And get one thing straight. I am not opposing any of the candidates. My
concern is with principles."
All Even
Month ago the voters of Illinois smacked the face of Publisher William
Franklin Knox by giving Senator William Edgar Borah a majority in the
Presidential preference vote everywhere except in Cook County. Fortnight ago the
voters of California rapped the knuckles of Kansas' Governor Alfred Mossman
Larden by electing a slate of uninstructed delegates to the Republican National
Convention. Last week the voters of Ohio made it all even between the three
active Republican candidates by boxing the ears of Senator Borah.
There was a time when the Idaho Senator hoped to win 20 of Ohio's 52
convention delegates. His entrance into Ohio was made for the specific purpose
of thwarting regular Republicans' plans to name a favorite son, and thus to
deliver Ohio's bargaining power intact at the Cleveland convention. Old
Guardsmen went right ahead and picked as their favorite son Robert Alphonso Taft
of Cincinnati, elder son of the late Chief Justice. Candidate Borah stumped
vigorously in the northern portion of the State, made a loud noise against
false-front candidacies. Candidate Taft canvassed the State like a bona fide
candidate, although Ohio freely figured that his delegates really stood for
Governor Landon, Publisher Knox and Senator Vandenberg.
Last week Candidate Taft's eight delegates-at-large pulled nearly 2-to-1
ahead of Candidate Borah's in the Statewide vote. Senator Borah elected two
district delegates in Akron, one each in Cleveland, Youngstown and Steubenville.
Mr. Taft carried off the other 47 of Ohio's 52 votes. In fact the earnest,
high-minded lawyer-son of the 27th President of the U.S. made such a
surprisingly good showing that romantic journalists began to circulate rumors to
the effect that Mr. Taft, instead of being just a hopeless Favorite Son, might
make a satisfactory Dark- Horse at Cleveland.
One phenomenon of the Ohio primary was that Senator Borah's great & good
friend Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth actively opposed him. For the first time
in her long political life the eldest child of Roosevelt I stood for election
and Ohio gave her some 278,000 votes of approval. Mrs. Longworth has attended
six Republican national Conventions, as an interested spectator. Next month at
Cleveland she will attend her seventh, as an Ohio delegate-at-large favoring the
nomination of Robert Alphonso Taft.
-- In West Virginia Senator Borah last week played hardly a happier role
than he did in Ohio. In a Statewide Presidential primary poll he swept all
before him, his only opponent being one Leo J. Chassee of Milwaukee, Wis. This
was no great triumph, however, because: 1) Franklin D. Roosevelt polled nearly
three votes to Borah's one; 2) the name of Alfred Mossman Landon was reported
written in on many a Republican ballot, but since West Virginia law does not
recognize write-ins, the Landon votes were not counted; 3) in the election of
the State's 16 delegates to the Republican Convention, 15 were for Governor
Landon and one was doubtful. The only sure Borah vote from West Virginia at
Cleveland will be that of the Senator's national campaign manager, onetime
Representative Carl Bachmann.
-- In Oregon's primary Senator Borah had his one triumph of the week.
His slate of ten delegates was elected unopposed. In the Presidential preference
primary he also won unopposed. Of more significance was the fact that in that
harmless popularity contest he polled 5,000 more votes than Franklin Roosevelt
polled in the Democratic Presidential preference primary.
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