1961 United States Senate special election in Texas

1961 United States Senate special election in Texas

← 1960 April 4, 1961 (first round)
May 27, 1961 (runoff)
1966 →
 
Candidate John Tower William A. Blakley Jim Wright
Party Republican Democratic Democratic
First round 327,308
30.93%
190,818
18.03%
171,328
16.19%
Runoff 448,217
50.58%
437,874
49.42%
Eliminated

 
Candidate Will Wilson Maury Maverick Jr. Henry B. González
Party Democratic Democratic Democratic
First round 121,961
11.53%
104,992
9.92%
97,659
9.23%
Runoff Eliminated Eliminated Eliminated

Tower:      20–30%      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

Blakley:      20–30%      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%      >90%
Wright:      20–30%      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Wilson:      20–30%      30–40%      40–50%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Maverick:      20–30%      30–40%
Gonzalez:      20–30%      30–40%      40–50%      50–60%      80–90%      >90%

Tie:      50%

U.S. senator before election

William A. Blakley
Democratic

Elected U.S. Senator

John Tower
Republican

The 1961 United States Senate special election in Texas was held on May 27, 1961. The election was held to replace outgoing Senator Lyndon B. Johnson, who had been elected Vice President of the United States.

Republican John Tower, who had been the nominee for the regularly scheduled election in 1960, defeated seventy other candidates to become the first Republican to represent Texas in the Senate since Reconstruction in 1877. Tower was also the first Republican to be popularly elected to the Senate in any former Confederate state.

Because Texas had been a Solid South state, the loss of Johnson's Senate seat would be seen as a stinging defeat for the Kennedy administration and the Democratic Party, given that the Civil Rights Movement was getting off the ground and the increasing sympathy for it amongst increasingly influential liberal Democrats.

One of the Democrats who were defeated in the first round was congressman Jim Wright, who went on to briefly serve as Speaker of the United States House of Representatives in the late 1980s.


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