1952 United States presidential election in New Mexico
1952 United States presidential election in New Mexico
County Results
Eisenhower
50-60%
60-70%
Stevenson
40-50%
50-60%
The 1952 United States presidential election in New Mexico took place on November 4, 1952. All 48 States were part of the 1952 United States presidential election . State voters chose four electors to represent them in the Electoral College , which voted for President and Vice President .
New Mexico was won by World War II hero and supreme allied commander Dwight D. Eisenhower by a wide 11 percentage point margin. Running against Eisenhower was Governor of Illinois Adlai Stevenson , who carried only the majority of the American South during his two runs for the presidency.[ 2] Starting with this election, Valencia County would back the national winner in every election until 2020 .
This was the last election in which voters in New Mexico chose presidential electors directly. Starting in 1956 , the state adopted the modern "short ballot" where voters could only choose between the actual candidates' names, with the understanding that a vote for a candidate was a vote for their party's entire slate of electors.
Results
Results by county
County
Dwight D. Eisenhower Republican
Adlai Stevenson Democratic
Various candidates Other parties
Margin
Total votes cast
#
%
#
%
#
%
#
%
Bernalillo
33,964
59.38%
23,164
40.50%
72
0.12%
10,800
18.88%
57,200
Catron
741
61.49%
464
38.51%
0
0.00%
277
22.98%
1,205
Chaves
7,018
63.92%
3,880
35.34%
81
0.74%
3,138
28.58%
10,979
Colfax
3,397
51.58%
3,184
48.34%
5
0.08%
213
3.24%
6,586
Curry
5,023
59.38%
3,422
40.45%
14
0.17%
1,601
18.93%
8,459
De Baca
782
57.25%
581
42.53%
3
0.22%
201
14.72%
1,366
Dona Ana
5,902
56.33%
4,556
43.48%
20
0.19%
1,346
12.85%
10,478
Eddy
6,041
44.45%
7,495
55.15%
55
0.40%
-1,454
-10.70%
13,591
Grant
3,421
43.18%
4,315
54.47%
186
2.35%
-894
-11.29%
7,922
Guadalupe
1,575
53.90%
1,347
46.10%
0
0.00%
228
7.80%
2,922
Harding
760
63.49%
436
36.42%
1
0.09%
324
27.07%
1,197
Hidalgo
781
50.58%
757
49.03%
6
0.39%
24
1.55%
1,544
Lea
4,738
47.52%
5,204
52.19%
29
0.29%
-466
-4.67%
9,971
Lincoln
2,004
64.52%
1,095
35.25%
7
0.23%
909
29.27%
3,106
Los Alamos
2,226
49.30%
2,281
50.52%
8
0.18%
-55
-1.22%
4,515
Luna
1,729
55.86%
1,332
43.04%
34
1.10%
397
12.82%
3,095
McKinley
3,091
49.80%
3,097
49.90%
19
0.30%
-6
-0.10%
6,207
Mora
1,849
56.61%
1,413
43.26%
4
0.13%
436
13.35%
3,266
Otero
2,456
53.16%
2,162
46.80%
2
0.04%
294
6.36%
4,620
Quay
2,711
53.00%
2,375
46.43%
29
0.57%
336
6.57%
5,115
Rio Arriba
4,336
48.69%
4,564
51.25%
5
0.06%
-228
-2.56%
8,905
Roosevelt
3,030
56.74%
2,298
43.03%
12
0.23%
732
13.71%
5,340
San Juan
3,864
69.73%
1,659
29.94%
18
0.33%
2,205
39.79%
5,541
San Miguel
5,360
54.59%
4,451
45.34%
7
0.07%
909
9.25%
9,818
Sandoval
1,795
52.06%
1,647
47.77%
6
0.17%
148
4.29%
3,448
Santa Fe
9,011
56.62%
6,786
42.64%
119
0.74%
2,225
13.98%
15,916
Sierra
2,033
63.61%
1,158
36.23%
5
0.16%
875
27.38%
3,196
Socorro
2,224
55.52%
1,777
44.36%
5
0.12%
447
11.16%
4,006
Taos
2,763
48.94%
2,877
50.96%
6
0.10%
-114
-2.02%
5,646
Torrance
1,747
54.99%
1,422
44.76%
8
0.25%
325
10.23%
3,177
Union
1,988
63.39%
1,142
36.42%
6
0.19%
846
26.97%
3,136
Valencia
3,810
53.47%
3,310
46.46%
5
0.07%
500
7.01%
7,125
Totals
132,170
55.39%
105,661
44.28%
777
0.33%
26,509
11.11%
238,608
Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
See also
Notes
^ Based on totals for highest elector on each ticket
References
^ "U.S. presidential election, 1952" . Facts on File. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 24, 2013 . Eisenhower, born in Texas, considered a resident of New York, and headquartered at the time in Paris, finally decided to run for the Republican nomination
^ "1952 Presidential General Election Results - New Mexico" . Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections. Retrieved February 14, 2018 .
^ New Mexico State Records Center & Archives, Canvass of Returns of General Election Held November 4, 1952 - State of New Mexico
^ New Mexico Secretary of State. Official Returns of the 1952 Elections . Santa Fe, New Mexico. p. 1.
^ New Mexico Secretary of State. New Mexico Election Returns 1911-1969 . Santa Fe, New Mexico.