The 1928 United States presidential election in Louisiana took place on November 6, 1928, as part of the wider United States presidential election. Voters chose ten representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Ever since the passage of a new constitution in 1898, Louisiana had been a one-party state dominated by the Democratic Party. The Republican Party became moribund due to the disenfranchisement of Black voters and the complete absence of other support bases, as Louisiana lacked upland or German refugee whites opposed to secession.[1] Despite this single-party dominance, non-partisan tendencies remained strong among wealthy sugar planters in Acadiana and within the business elite of New Orleans.[2]
Following disfranchisement, the stateโs politics became dominated by a coalition of the New Orleansโbased Choctaw Club of Louisiana and Black Beltplanters.[3] Opposition began to emerge with the Socialist Party in the lumbering parishes of the northern hills and Imperial Calcasieu in the late 1900s, and more seriously with the Progressive movement, chiefly in the southern sugar-growing parishes, in the 1910s. Conflicts with President Wilsonโs Underwoood-Simmons Act[4] allowed ProgressiveWhitmell P. Martin[a] to be elected to the Third Congressional District in 1914, and in 1920 the racially less hardline[5] Acadiana region turned to Republican candidate Warren G. Harding[6] over disagreements on foreign policy and the Nineteenth Amendment.[7] Continued opposition to the Choctaw Club would elect former Progressive John M. Parker as governor at the beginning of 1920; however, Parker did not deliver his promised reforms, and Choctaw control returned temporarily with the 1924 election of Henry L. Fuqua.[8]
Louisianaโs delegates to the Democratic National Convention largely backed Catholic New York GovernorAl Smith, who was opposed in the remainder of the South for his religion and opposition to Prohibition.[9] At the same time, the state Republican Partyโlike those of Mississippi and South Carolina, entirely a vehicle for Federal patronageโwas undergoing a "lily white" takeover from Walter Cohenโs black-and-tan faction, although blacks were not expelled from the party as occurred in Alabama, North Carolina, and Virginia.[10]
Unlike in the Upper South, Louisiana Democrats were controlled by fears that the Republican nominee, former Secretary of CommerceHerbert Hoover, supported racial equality.[9] Although in the Protestant north and Florida Parishes there was opposition to Smithโs religion and views on Prohibition, this was overshadowed by the desire for loyalty to the one-party system as an instrument of white supremacy,[11] a viewpoint supported by newly-elected Governor Huey Long.[9] Moreover, identification with Smithโs Catholicism was strong in Acadiana, where commitment to white supremacy was less intense.[12]
Consequently Smith and Arkansas Senator Joseph T. Robinson won Louisiana with 76.29 percent of the popular vote, to 23.70 percent for Hoover and Senate Majority LeaderCharles Curtis of Kansas. Only in two parishesโLivingston and Washington, both proximate to the deeply anti-Catholic Mississippi Pine Belt and Florida panhandleโdid Hoover pass forty percent of the vote, while in many Acadian parishes Hoover underperformed Calvin Coolidge by over thirty points. Louisiana was Smith's third strongest state in the election, after South Carolina and neighboring Mississippi.[13]
Results
1928 United States presidential election in Louisiana[14]
^Phillips, Kevin P. (November 23, 2014). The Emerging Republican Majority. Princeton University Press. pp. 208, 210. ISBN9780691163246.
^Schott, Matthew J. (Summer 1979). "Progressives against Democracy: Electoral Reform in Louisiana, 1894-1921". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 20 (3): 247โ260.
^Wall, Bennett H.; Rodriguez, John C. (January 28, 2014). Louisiana: A History. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 274โ275. ISBN978-1118619292.
^Collin, Richard H. (Winter 1971). "Theodore Roosevelt's Visit to New Orleans and the Progressive Campaign of 1914". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 12 (1): 5โ19.
^Howard, Perry H. (1954). "A New Look at Reconstruction". Political Tendencies in Louisiana, 1812-1952; An Ecological Analysis of Voting Behavior (Thesis). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. pp. 112โ113. OCLC8115.
^Phillips. The Emerging Republican Majority, p. 268
^ abcWingo, Barbara C. (Autumn 1977). "The 1928 Presidential Election in Louisiana". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 18 (4). Louisiana Historical Association: 405โ435.