There have been 90 gubernatorial elections in the state of New York since 1777.
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Originally the term was three years long and began on July 1, the election being held in the last week of April or May 1. In 1817, following the resignation of Daniel D. Tompkins after serving only 8 months of his term, there was a new election, since the 1777 Constitution did not give the Lt. Gov. the right to succeed to the governor's office, and DeWitt Clinton was elected for a whole three-year-term. The New York State Constitutional Convention of 1821 reduced the term to two years - beginning on January 1 and ending on December 31 - and moved the election to the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. Due to this measure, DeWitt Clinton's own second term was cut short by half a year. Beginning with the election in 1876, the term was increased to three years again, beginning with the election in 1894 reduced to two years, and since the election in 1938 has its present duration of four years.
Although the candidates for Lieutenant Governor have always run on tickets with the governor's candidates, until the election of 1950 they were elected on separate ballots, so on several occasions (1826, 1846, 1850, 1906, 1924) the governor and his lieutenant were elected of opposing tickets.
In only 15 of the total 89 elections the incumbent ran and was defeated.
The elected candidates are shown in bold face in the tables below.
The next election for Governor of New York will be held in 2014.
2010 gubernatorial election, New York[1] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage | |
Democratic | Andrew Cuomo | 2,911,616 | 62.6% | |
Republican | Carl Paladino | 1,548,101 | 33.3% | |
Green | Howie Hawkins | 59,928 | 1.3% | |
Libertarian | Warren Redlich | 48,386 | 1.0% | |
RITDH | Jimmy McMillan | 41,131 | 0.9% | |
Freedom | Charles Barron | 24,572 | 0.5% | |
Anti-Prohibition | Kristin M. Davis | 20,429 | 0.5% | |
Majority | 1,363,515 | 29.3 | ||
Totals | 4,654,163 | 100.0% |
Governor candidate | Running mate | Party | Popular Vote | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eliot Spitzer | David Paterson | Democratic, Independence, Working Families |
2,882,542 | ||
John Faso | C. Scott Vanderhoef | Republican, Conservative |
1,217,516 | ||
Malachy McCourt | Alison Duncan | Green | 40,729 | ||
John Clifton | Donald Silberger | Libertarian | 15,068 | ||
Jimmy McMillan | Rent Is Too Damn High | 13,743 | |||
Maura DeLuca | Socialist Workers | 7,128 | |||
Phoebe Legere | Nancy Beattie | Integrity | |||
Jennifer Liese | Wendy Holibaugh | Right to Life |
Governor candidate | Running mate | Party | Popular Vote | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
George Pataki | Mary Donohue | Republican, Conservative |
2,262,255 | 48.23% | |
Carl McCall | Dennis Mehiel | Democratic, Working Families |
1,534,064 | 32.70% | |
B. Thomas Golisano | Mary Donohue | Independence | 654,016 | 13.94% | |
Gerard J. Cronin | Stasia T. Vogel | Right to Life | 44,195 | 0.94% | |
Stanley Aronowitz | Jennifer Daniels | Green | 41,797 | 0.89% | |
Thomas K. Leighton | Thomas J. Hillgardner | Marijuana Reform | 21,977 | 0.47% | |
Andrew M. Cuomo | Charles G. King | Liberal | 15,761 | 0.34% | |
Scott Jeffrey | Jay Greco | Libertarian | 5,013 | 0.11% |
Gubernatorial elections under the State Constitution of 1938. The term is four years.
Governor candidate | Running mate | Party | Popular Vote | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
George E. Pataki | Mary O. Donohue | Republican, Conservative |
2,571,991 | 54.32% | |
Peter F. Vallone, Sr. | Sandra Frankel | Democrat, Working Families |
1,570,317 | 33.16% | |
B. Thomas Golisano | Laureen Oliver | Independence | 364,056 | 7.69% | |
Betsy McCaughey Ross | Jonathan C. Reiter | Liberal | 77,915 | 1.65% | |
Michael Reynolds | Karen Prior | Right to Life | 56,683 | 1.20% | |
Al Lewis | Alice Green | Green | 52,533 | 1.11% | |
Thomas K. Leighton | Jeffrey C. Wright | Marijuana Reform | 24,788 | 0.52% | |
Mary Alice France | Unity Party | 9,692 | 0.20% | ||
Chris Garvey | Don Silberger | Libertarian | 4,722 | 0.10% | |
Al Duncan | Ruth Robinett | Socialist Workers | 2,539 | 0.05% |
Note: 4,985,932 ballots have been cast on that election. Out of them, 250,696 were declared blank, void or missing.
Governor candidate | Running mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
George E. Pataki | Betsy McCaughey Ross | Republican, Conservative, Tax Cut Now |
2,488,631 | (48.8 %) |
Mario M. Cuomo | Stan Lundine | Democratic, Liberal |
2,364,904 | (45.4 %) |
B. Thomas Golisano | Dominick Fusco | Independence Fusion | 217,490 | (4.1 %) |
Robert T. Walsh | Virginia E. Sutton | Right to Life | 67,750 | (1.3 %) |
Robert L. Schulz | Stan Dworkin | Libertarian | 9,506 | (0.2 %) |
Lawrence Lane | May Nell Bockman | Socialist Workers | 5,410 | (0.1 %) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mario M. Cuomo | Stan Lundine | Democratic, Liberal |
2,157,087 | (53.17%) |
Pierre Rinfret | George Yancey, Jr. | Republican | 865,948 | (21.35%) |
Herbert London | Anthony DiPerna | Conservative | 827,614 | (20.40%) |
Louis P. Wein | Gertrude G. Manning | Right to Life | 137,804 | (3.40%) |
Lenora Fulani | Ada I. Vazquez | New Alliance | 31,089 | (0.77%) |
W. Gary Johnson | Dottie Lou Brokaw | Libertarian | 24,611 | (0.61%) |
Craig Gannon | Susan Anmuth | Socialist Workers | 12,743 | (0.31%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mario M. Cuomo | Stan Lundine | Democratic, Liberal |
2,775,045 | (64.63%) |
Andrew O'Rourke | E. Michael Kavanagh | Republican, Conservative |
1,363,968 | (31.77%) |
Denis Dillon | Thomas E. Drolesky | Right to Life | 130,827 | (3.05%) |
Lenora Fulani | Rafael Mendez | New Alliance | 24,135 | (0.56%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mario M. Cuomo | Alfred DelBello | Democratic, Liberal |
2,675,213 | (50.91%) |
Lewis Lehrman | James L. Emery | Republican, Conservative, |
2,494,827 | (47.48%) |
Robert J. Bohner | Paul Callahan | Right to Life | 52,356 | (1.00%) |
John H. Northrup | David Hoesley | Libertarian | 16,913 | (0.32%) |
Jane Benedict | Angela M. Gilliam | Unity | 6,353 | (0.12%) |
Nancy Ross | Lenora Fulani | New Alliance | 5,277 | (0.10%) |
Diane Wang | Peter A. Thierjung | Socialist Workers | 3,766 | (0.07%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hugh Carey | Mario M. Cuomo | Democratic | 2,429,272 | (50.95%) |
Perry Duryea, Jr. | Bruce Caputo | Republican, Conservative |
2,156,404 | (45.22%) |
Mary Jane Tobin | Ellen McCormack | Right to Life | 130,193 | (2.73%) |
Gary Greenberg | James Franz | Libertarian | 18,990 | (0.40%) |
Dianne M. Feeley | Kevin E. Kellogg | Socialist Workers | 12,987 | (0.27%) |
Jarvis Tyner | Grace Mora-Newman | Communist | 11,400 | (0.24%) |
Paul Gallagher | J. Philip Rubinstein | Labor | 9,073 | (0.19%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hugh Carey | Mary Anne Krupsak | Democratic, Liberal |
3,028,503 | (57.22%) |
Malcolm Wilson | Ralph G. Caso | Republican | 2,219,667 | (41.94%) |
Wayne S. Amato | Charles R. Schanger | Courage | 12,459 | (0.24%) |
Jerry Tuccille | Louis J. Sicilia | Free Libertarian | 10,503 | (0.20%) |
Derrick Morrison | James Mendietta | Socialist Workers | 8,857 | (0.17%) |
Jose A. Ristorucci | Carol A. Twigg | Communist | 5,232 | (0.10%) |
John Emanuel | (none) | Socialist Labor | 4,574 | (0.09%) |
Anton Chaitkin | Victoria Staton | Labor | 3,151 | (0.06%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nelson A. Rockefeller | Malcolm Wilson | Republican | 3,151,432 | (52.41%) |
Arthur Goldberg | Basil Paterson | Democratic, Liberal |
2,421,426 | (40.27%) |
Paul L. Adams | Edward F. Leonard | Conservative | 422,514 | (7.03%) |
Rasheed Storey | Grace Mora-Newman | Communist | 7,760 | (0.13%) |
Clifton DeBerry | Jonathan Rothschild | Socialist Workers | 5,766 | (0.10%) |
Stephen Emery | Arnold Babel | Socialist Labor | 3,963 | (0.07%) |
Note: The highest number of votes ever received by any Governor of NY until today
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nelson A. Rockefeller | Malcolm Wilson | Republican | 2,690,626 | (44.61%) |
Frank D. O'Connor | Howard J. Samuels | Democratic | 2,298,363 | (38.11%) |
Paul L. Adams | Kieran O'Doherty | Conservative | 513,023 | (8.46%) |
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr. | Donald S. Harrington | Liberal | 507,234 | (8.41%) |
Milton Herder | Doris Ballantyne | Socialist Labor | 12,730 | (0.21%) |
Judith White | Richard Garza | Socialist Workers | 12,506 | (0.21%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nelson A. Rockefeller | Malcolm Wilson | Republican | 3,081587 | (53.08%) |
Robert M. Morgenthau | John J. Burns | Democratic, Liberal |
2,552,418 | (43.97%) |
David H. Jaquith | E. Vernon Carbonara | Conservative | 141,877 | (2.44%) |
Richard Garza | Sylvia Weinstein | Socialist Workers | 19,698 | (0.34%) |
Eric Hass | John Emanuel | Socialist Labor | 9,762 | (0.17%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nelson A. Rockefeller | Malcolm Wilson | Republican | 3,126,929 | |
W. Averell Harriman | George DeLuca | Democratic, Liberal |
2,553,895 | |
John T. McManus | Annette T. Rubinstein | Independent-Socialist | 31,658 | |
Eric Hass | John Emanuel | Socialist Labor |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
W. Averell Harriman | George DeLuca | Democratic, Liberal |
2,560,738 | (49.61%) |
Irving Ives | J. Raymond McGovern | Republican | 2,549,613 | (49.40%) |
John T. McManus | Karen Morley | American Labor | 46,886 | (0.91%) |
David L. Weiss | Dorothy Haines | Socialist Workers | 2,617 | (0.05%) |
Nathan Karp | Stephen Emery | Industrial Government | 1,720 | (0.03%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas E. Dewey | Frank C. Moore | Republican | 2,819,523 | (53.11%) |
Walter A. Lynch | Richard H. Balch | Democratic, Liberal |
2,246,855 | (42.32%) |
John T. McManus | Clementina J. Paolone | American Labor | 221,966 | (4.18%) |
Michael Bartell | Gladys Barker | Socialist Workers | 13,274 | (0.25%) |
Eric Hass | Nathan Karp | Industrial Government | 7,254 | (0.14%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas E. Dewey | Joe R. Hanley | Republican | 2,825,633 | (56.92%) |
James M. Mead | Erastus Corning 2nd | Democratic, Liberal, American Labor |
2,138,482 | (43.08%) |
Lieutenant Governor candidate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|
Joe R. Hanley | Republican | 1,846,314 | (55.29%) |
William N. Haskell | Democratic | 1,493,082 | (44.71%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas E. Dewey | Thomas W. Wallace | Republican | 2,148,546 | (52.10%) |
John J. Bennett, Jr. | Charles Poletti | Democratic | 1,501,039 | (36.40%) |
Dean Alfange | Charles Poletti | American Labor | 403,626 | (9.79%) |
Israel Amter | (none) | Communist | 45,220 | (1.10%) |
Coleman B. Cheney | Samuel H. Friedman | Socialist | 21,911 | (0.53%) |
Aaron M. Orange | Bronko Papadopolos | Industrial Government | 3,496 | (0.08%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Herbert H. Lehman | Charles Poletti | Democratic, American Labor |
2,391,286 | (50.38%) |
Thomas E. Dewey | Frederic Holdrege Bontecou | Republican, Independent Progressive |
2,326,682 | (49.02%) |
Norman Thomas | George W. Hartmann | Socialist | 24,980 | (0.53%) |
Aaron M. Orange | Jacob Berlin | Industrial Government | 3,516 | (0.07%) |
Gubernatorial elections under the State Constitution of 1894. The term was two years.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Herbert H. Lehman | M. William Bray | Democratic, American Labor |
2,970,575 | (53.45%) |
William F. Bleakley | Ralph K. Robertson | Republican | 2,450,104 | (44.09%) |
Harry W. Laidler | Herman J. Hahn | Socialist | 96,233 | (1.73%) |
Robert Minor | Julian S. Sawyer | Communist | 40,406 | (0.73%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Herbert H. Lehman | M. William Bray | Democratic | 2,201,729 | (58.01%) |
Robert Moses | Fred James Douglas | Republican | 1,393,638 | (36.72%) |
Charles Solomon | Herman Kobbe | Socialist | 126,580 | (3.34%) |
Israel Amter | William J. Burroughs | Communist | 45,878 | (1.21%) |
William F. Varney | James F. Luckey | Law Preservation | 20,449 | (0.54%) |
Aaron M. Orange | Emil F. Teichert | Socialist Labor | 7,225 | (0.19%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Herbert H. Lehman | M. William Bray | Democratic | 2,659,519 | (56.69%) |
William J. Donovan | F. Trubee Davison | Republican | 1,812,080 | (38.62%) |
Louis Waldman | Charles W. Noonan | Socialist | 102,959 | (2.19%) |
John F. Vichert | H. Westlake Coon | Law Preservation | 83,452 | (1.78%) |
Israel Amter | Henry Shepard | Communist | 26,407 | (0.56%) |
Aaron M. Orange | Emil F. Teichert | Socialist Labor | 7,233 | (0.15%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Franklin D. Roosevelt | Herbert H. Lehman | Democratic | 1,770,342 | (56.49%) |
Charles H. Tuttle | Caleb Howard Baumes | Republican | 1,045,341 | (33.36%) |
Robert Paris Carroll | (none) | Law Preservation | 190,666 | (6.08%) |
Louis Waldman | Elizabeth C. Roth | Socialist | 100,444 | (3.21%) |
William Z. Foster | J. Louis Engdahl | Communist | 18,034 | (0.58%) |
Jeremiah D. Crowley | Charles M. Carlson | Socialist Labor | 9,096 | (0.29%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Franklin D. Roosevelt | Herbert H. Lehman | Democratic | 2,130,193 | (48.96%) |
Albert Ottinger | Charles Clapp Lockwood | Republican | 2,104,129 | (48.36%) |
Louis Waldman | Herman J. Hahn | Socialist | 101,859 | (2.34%) |
William F. Dunne | Franklin P. Brill | Workers | 10,741 | (0.25%) |
Charles H. Corregan | John E. DeLee | Socialist Labor | 4,213 | (0.10%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alfred E. Smith | Edwin Corning | Democratic | 1,523,813 | (52.13%) |
Ogden L. Mills | Seymour Lowman | Republican | 1,276,137 | (43.80%) |
Jacob Panken | August Claessens | Socialist | 83,481 | (2.87%) |
Charles E. Manierre | Ella L. McCarthy | Prohibition | 21,285 | (0.73%) |
Benjamin Gitlow | Franklin P. Brill | Workers | 5,507 | (0.19%) |
Jeremiah D. Crowley | John E. DeLee | Socialist Labor | 3,553 | (0.12%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alfred E. Smith | George R. Lunn | Democratic | 1,627,111 | (49.96%) |
Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. | Seymour Lowman | Republican | 1,518,552 | (46.63%) |
Norman Mattoon Thomas | Charles Solomon | Socialist | 99,854 | (3.07%) |
James P. Cannon | Franklin P. Brill | Workers | 6,395 | (0.20%) |
Frank E. Passanno | Milton Weinberger | Socialist Labor | 4,931 | (0.15%) |
Note: This was the last time the running mate of the elected governor was defeated, Democrat Smith having Republican Lowman as lieutenant for the duration of this term.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alfred E. Smith | George R. Lunn | Democratic | 1,397,670 | (55.22%) |
Nathan L. Miller | William J. Donovan | Republican | 1,011,725 | (39.98%) |
Edward F. Cassidy | Theresa B. Wiley | Socialist, Farmer-Labor |
108,136 | (4.27%) |
George K. Hinds | William C. Ramsdell | Prohibition | 9,561 | (0.38%) |
Jeremiah D. Crowley | John E. DeLee | Socialist Labor | 3,799 | (0.15%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nathan L. Miller | Jeremiah Wood | Republican | 1,335,878 | (46.58%) |
Alfred E. Smith | George R. Fitts | Democratic | 1,261,812 | (44.00%) |
Joseph D. Cannon | Jessie Wallace Hughan | Socialist | 159,804 | (5.57%) |
Dudley Field Malone | Robert E. Haffey | Farmer-Labor | 69,908 | (2.44%) |
George F. Thompson | Edward G. Dietrich | Prohibition | 35,509 | (1.24%) |
John P. Quinn | Jeremiah D. Crowley | Social Labor | 5,015 | (0.17%) |
Notes:
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alfred E. Smith | Harry C. Walker | Democratic | 1,009,936 | (47.37%) |
Charles S. Whitman | Edward Schoeneck (Republican), Mamie W. Colvin (Prohibition) |
Republican, Prohibition |
995,094 | (46.68%) |
Charles Wesley Ervin | Ella Reeve Bloor | Socialist | 121,705 | (5.71%) |
Olive M. Johnson | August Gillhaus | Socialist Labor | 5,183 | (0.24%) |
Notes:
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Charles S. Whitman | Edward Schoeneck (Republican), L. Bradley Dorr (Progressive), Thomas J. Kreuzer (American) |
Republican, Progressive, American |
850,020 | (52.63%) |
Samuel Seabury | Thomas J. Kreuzer | Democratic | 686.862 | (42.53%) |
Algernon Lee | Stephen J. Mahoney | Socialist | 52,560 | (3.25%) |
Charles E. Welch | Clarence Z. Spriggs | Prohibition | 21,773 | (1.35%) |
Jeremiah D. Crowley | Boris Reinstein | Socialist Labor | 3,847 | (0.24%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Charles S. Whitman | Edward Schoeneck | Republican | 686,701 | (47.69%) |
Martin H. Glynn | Thomas B. Lockwood | Democratic, Independence League |
541,269 | (37.59%) |
William Sulzer | Charles E. Welch | American, Prohibition |
126,270 | (8.77%) |
Frederick Morgan Davenport | Chauncey J. Hamlin | Progressive | 45,586 | (3.17%) |
Gustave A. Strebel | Stephen J. Mahoney | Socialist | 37,793 | (2.62%) |
James F. Hunter | Jeremiah D. Crowley | Socialist Labor | 2,350 | (0.16%) |
Note: William Sulzer had been elected governor as a Democrat at the previous election, but was impeached. Martin Glynn had been elected Lt. Gov and succeeded to the governorship upon Sulzer's impeachment
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William Sulzer | Martin H. Glynn | Democratic | 649,559 | (41.46%) |
Job E. Hedges | James W. Wadsworth, Jr. | Republican | 444,105 | (28.35%) |
Oscar Solomon Straus | Frederick Morgan Davenport | Independence League, Progressive |
393,183 | (25.10%) |
Charles Edward Russell | Gustave A. Strebel | Socialist | 56,917 | (3.63%) |
T. Alexander MacNicholl | Clark Allis | Prohibition | 18,990 | (1.21%) |
John Hall | Jeremiah D. Crowley | Socialist Labor | 3,792 | (0.24%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Alden Dix | Thomas F. Conway | Democratic | 689,700 | (48.00%) |
Henry L. Stimson | Edward Schoeneck | Republican | 622,299 | (43.31%) |
Charles Edward Russell | Gustave A. Strebel | Socialist | 48,529 | (3.38%) |
John J. Hopper | William Randolph Hearst | Independence League | 48,470 | (3.37%) |
T. Alexander MacNicholl | Calvin McCarthy | Prohibition | 22,295 | (1.55%) |
Frank E. Passanno | James F. Hunter | Socialist Labor | 5,717 | (0.40%) |
Note: Election result, in NYT on December 16, 1910
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Charles Evans Hughes | Horace White | Republican | 804,651 | (49.08%) |
Lewis S. Chanler | John Alden Dix | Democratic | 735,189 | (44.84%) |
Clarence J. Shearn | Daniel W. Finnimore | Independence League | 43,212 | (2.64%) |
Joshua Wanhope | Gustave A. Strebel | Socialist | 33,994 | (2.07%) |
George E. Stockwell | Marshall A. Hudson | Prohibition | 18,802 | (1.15%) |
Leander A. Armstrong | Frank E. Passanno | Socialist Labor | 3,655 | (0.22%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Charles Evans Hughes | M. Linn Bruce | Republican | 749,002 | (50.52%) |
William Randolph Hearst | Lewis S. Chanler | Democratic, Independence League |
691,105 | (46.62%) |
John C. Chase | Gustave A. Strebel | Socialist | 21,751 | (1.47%) |
Henry M. Randall | Freeman H. Bettys | Prohibition | 15,985 | (1.08%) |
Thomas H. Jackson | Frank E. Passanno | Socialist Labor | 4,624 | (0.31%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Frank W. Higgins | M. Linn Bruce | Republican | 813,264 | (50.27%) |
D. Cady Herrick | Francis B. Harrison | Democratic | 691,105 | (46.62%) |
Thomas Pendergast | Charles R. Bach | Social Democratic | 36,259 | (2.24%) |
John McKee | Alden W. Young | Prohibition | 20,568 | (1.27%) |
Daniel De Leon | Boris Reinstein | Socialist Labor | 8,976 | (0.55%) |
Alfred J. Boulton | Charles Spaulding | People's Party | 6,015 | (0.37%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Benjamin B. Odell, Jr. | Frank W. Higgins | Republican | 665,150 | (48.09%) |
Bird Sim Coler | Charles N. Bulger | Democratic | 656,347 | (47.45%) |
Benjamin Hanford | William Thurston Brown | Social Democratic | 23,400 | (1.69%) |
Alfred Lee Manierre | John A. Hartman | Prohibition | 20,490 | (1.48%) |
Daniel De Leon | Socialist Labor | 15,886 | (1.15%) | |
Edgar Lee Ryder | J. C. Corbin | Liberal Democratic | 1,894 | (0,14%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Benjamin B. Odell, Jr. | Timothy L. Woodruff | Republican | 804,859 | (51.97%) |
John B. Stanchfield | William F. Mackey | Democratic | 693,733 | (44.80%) |
William T. Wardwell | Albert J. Rumsey | Prohibition | 22,704 | (1.47%) |
Charles H. Corregan | Leander A. Armstrong | Socialist Labor | 13,762 | (0.89%) |
Benjamin Hanford | William Butscher | Social Democratic | 13,493 | (0.87%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Theodore Roosevelt | Timothy L. Woodruff | Republican | 661,707 | 49.02% |
Augustus Van Wyck | Elliott Danforth | Democratic | 643,921 | 47.70% |
Benjamin Hanford | Leander A. Armstrong | Socialist Labor | 23,860 | 1.77% |
John Kline | John A. Sayles | Prohibition | 18,383 | 1.36% |
Theodore Bacon | Thomas M. Osborne | Citizens Union | 2,103 | 0.16% |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Frank S. Black | Timothy L. Woodruff | Republican | 787,516 | (52.63%) |
Wilbur F. Porter | Frederick C. Schraub | Democratic, People's |
574,524 | (40.33%) |
Daniel G. Griffin | Frederick W. Hinrichs | National Democratic | 26,698 | (1.87%) |
Howard Balkam | Frederick Bennets | Socialist Labor | 18,362 | (1.29%) |
William W. Smith | Charles E. Latimer | Prohibition | 17,419 | (1.22%) |
Note: The majority faction of the Democratic Party were then known as "Silver Democrats", the "National Democrats" were the "Gold Democrats".[2]
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Levi P. Morton | Charles T. Saxton | Republican | 673,818 | (47.69%) |
David B. Hill | Daniel N. Lockwood | Democratic | 517,710 | (40.79%) |
Everett P. Wheeler | Daniel N. Lockwood | Democratic Reform | 27,202 | (2.14%) |
Francis E. Baldwin | Justus Miller | Prohibition | 23,525 | (1.85%) |
Charles H. Matchett | William F. Steer | Socialist Labor | 15,868 | (1.25%) |
Charles B. Matthews | Robert C. Hewson | People's | 11,049 | (0.87%) |
Notes:
Gubernatorial elections under the State Constitution of 1846, amended in 1874. The term was three years.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Roswell P. Flower | William F. Sheehan | Democratic | 582,893 | (50.13%) |
Jacob S. Fassett | John W. Vrooman | Republican | 534,956 | (46.00%) |
Joseph W. Bruce | George W. Hallock (d. 1895)[3] | Prohibition | 30,353 | (2.61%) |
Daniel DeLeon | Frank Gesser | Socialist Labor | 14,651 | (1.26%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
David B. Hill | Edward F. Jones | Democratic | 650,464 | (49.45%) |
Warner Miller | Stephen Van Rensselaer Cruger (Republican), John H. Blakeney (United Labor);[4][5] |
Republican, United Labor Party |
631,293 | (48.00%) |
W. Martin Jones | George F. Powell | Prohibition | 30,215 | (2.30%) |
J. Edward Hall | Christian Pattberg | Socialist Labor[6] | 3,348 | (0.25%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
David B. Hill | Edward F. Jones | Democratic | 501,465 | (48.93%) |
Ira Davenport | Joseph Bradford Carr | Republican | 490,331 | (47.85%) |
Henry Clay Bascom | W. Jennings Demorest | Prohibition | 30,867 | (3.01%) |
George O. Jones | Lyman W. Gage | National Greenback-Labor | 2,130 | (0.21%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grover Cleveland | David B. Hill | Democratic | 535,318 | (58.47%) |
Charles J. Folger | B. Platt Carpenter | Republican | 342,464 | (37.41%) |
Alphonso A. Hopkins | William H. Boole | Prohibition | 25,783 | (2.82%) |
Epenetus Howe | James Allen | National Greenback-Labor | 11,974 | (1.31%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alonzo B. Cornell | George Gilbert Hoskins | Republican | 418,567 | |
Lucius Robinson | Clarkson N. Potter | Democratic | 375,790 | |
John Kelly | Clarkson N. Potter (Tammany Hall), John M. Wieting (Working Men), Robert W. Hume (Jeffersonian Democratic) |
Tammany Hall, Working Men, Jeffersonian Democratic |
77,566 | |
Harris Lewis | John M. Wieting | Greenback-Labor | 20,286 | |
John W. Mears | James H. Bronson | Prohibition | 4,437 | |
Caleb Pink | Osborne Ward | Socialist Labor |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lucius Robinson | William Dorsheimer | Democratic | 519,831 | (51.97%) |
Edwin D. Morgan | Sherman S. Rogers | Republican | 489,371 | (48.26%) |
William J. Groo | Albert F. Brown | Prohibition | 3,412 | (0.34%) |
Richard Montgomery Griffin [7] | Thomas Armstrong [8] | Greenback | 1,436 | (0.14%) |
Gubernatorial elections under the State Constitution of 1846. The term was two years.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Samuel Jones Tilden | William Dorsheimer | Democratic | 416,391 | (52.43%) |
John Adams Dix | John Cleveland Robinson | Republican | 366,074 | (46.09%) |
Myron Holley Clark | James L. Bagg [9] | Prohibition | 11,768 | (1.48%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Adams Dix | John Cleveland Robinson | Republican | 445,801 | (53.19%) |
Francis Kernan | Chauncey M. Depew | Democratic, Liberal Republican |
392,350 | (46.81%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Thompson Hoffman | Allen C. Beach | Democratic | 399,490 | (52.19%) |
Stewart L. Woodford | Sigismund Kaufman | Republican | 366,424 | (47.84%) |
The Tickets: [10] in NYT on October 30, 1870
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Thompson Hoffman | Allen C. Beach | Democratic | 439,301 | (51.64%) |
John Augustus Griswold | Alonzo B. Cornell | Republican | (48.36%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Reuben E. Fenton | Stewart L. Woodford | Republican | 366,315 | (50.96%) |
John Thompson Hoffman | Robert H. Pruyn | Conservative Union | 352,526 | (49.04%) |
Note: John T. Hoffman was a Democrat, Robert H. Pruyn a Republican. The "Conservative Union" ticket was nominated by the Democrats in an attempt to attract Republicans, especially Democrats who had joined the Republican Union and remained Republicans after the Civil War, to return to the Democratic Party.[10]
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Reuben E. Fenton | Thomas G. Alvord | Republican Union | 369,557 | (50.57%) |
Horatio Seymour | David R. Floyd-Jones | Democratic | 361,264 | (49.43%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Horatio Seymour | David R. Floyd-Jones | Democratic | 306,649 | (50.89%) |
James S. Wadsworth | Lyman Tremain | Republican Union | 295,897 | (49.11%) |
Note:
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Edwin D. Morgan | Robert Campbell | Republican | 358,272 | (53.24%) |
William Kelly | William C. Crain | Douglas Democracy | 294,812 | (43.81%) |
James T. Brady | Henry K. Viele | Breckinridge Democracy | 19,841 | (2.95%) |
Note:
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Edwin D. Morgan | Robert Campbell | Republican | 257,953 | (45.49%) |
Amasa J. Parker | John J. Taylor | Democratic | 230,513 | (42.29%) |
Lorenzo Burrows | Nathaniel S. Benton | American | 61,137 | (11.22%) |
Gerrit Smith | Sidney A. Beers | Abolitionist[14] | 5,470 | (1.00%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Alsop King | Henry R. Selden | Republican | 264,400 | (44.52%) |
Amasa J. Parker | John Vanderbilt | Democratic | 198,616 | (33.44%) |
Erastus Brooks | Lyman Odell | American | 130,870 | (22.04%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Myron H. Clark | Henry J. Raymond (Whig, Anti-Nebraska, Temperance), Bradford R. Wood (Anti-Rent, Free Democratic) |
Whig, Anti-Nebraska, Anti-Rent, Free Democratic, Temperance |
156,804 | (33.38%) |
Horatio Seymour | William H. Ludlow | Democratic (Soft) | 156,495 | (33.32%) |
Daniel Ullmann | Gustavus Adolphus Scroggs | American | 122,282 | (26.03%) |
Greene C. Bronson | Elijah Ford | Democratic (Hard) | 33,850 | (7.21%) |
William Goodell | Austin Ward | Liberty | 289 | (0.06%) |
Notes:
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Horatio Seymour | Sanford E. Church | Democratic | 264,121 | (50.31%) |
Washington Hunt | William Kent | Whig | 241,525 | (46.01%) |
Minthorne Tompkins | Seth Merrill Gates | Free Democratic | 19,296 | (3.68%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Washington Hunt | George J. Cornell (Whig) Sanford E. Church (Anti-Rent) |
Whig, Anti-Rent |
214,614 | (49.64%) |
Horatio Seymour | Sanford E. Church | Democratic | 214,352 | (49.57%) |
William Lawrence Chaplin | Joseph Plumb (1791–1870) | Liberty | 3,416 | (0.79%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hamilton Fish | George Washington Patterson | Whig | 218,776 | (47.56%) |
John Adams Dix | Seth Merrill Gates | Democratic (Barnburner), Free Soil |
122,811 | (26.70%) |
Reuben H. Walworth | Charles O'Conor | Democratic (Hunker) | 116,811 | (25.39%) |
William Goodell | Robert Anderson | Liberty | 1,593 | (0.35%) |
Lieutenant Governor candidate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|
Hamilton Fish | Whig | 170,072 | (52.63%) |
Nathan Dayton | Democratic | 139,623 | (43.21%) |
Charles O. Shepard | Liberty, Anti-Rent |
13,429 | (4.16%) |
Note:
Gubernatorial elections under the State Constitution of 1821. The term was two years. Until 1840, elections were held during three days beginning on the first Monday in November, and since 1841, until today, all regular elections have been held on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November. The elected candidate takes office on January 1 of the following calendar year.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Young | Hamilton Fish (Whig) Addison Gardiner (Anti-Rent) |
Whig, Anti-Rent |
198,878 | (49.07%) |
Silas Wright | Addison Gardiner | Democratic | 187,306 | (46.21%) |
Henry Bradley | William Lawrence Chaplin | Liberty, National Reform |
12,844 | (3.17%) |
Ogden Edwards | George Folsom | Native American | 6,305 | (1.56%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Silas Wright | Addison Gardiner | Democratic | 241,090 | (49.48%) |
Millard Fillmore | Samuel J. Wilkin | Whig | 231,057 | (47.42%) |
Alvan Stewart | Charles O. Shepard | Liberty | 15,136 | (3.11%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William C. Bouck | Daniel S. Dickinson | Democratic | 208,072 | (51.83%) |
Luther Bradish | Gabriel Furman | Whig | 186,091 | (46.36%) |
Alvan Stewart | Charles O. Shepard | Liberty | 7,263 | (1.81%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William H. Seward | Luther Bradish | Whig | 222,011 | (50.29%) |
William C. Bouck | Daniel S. Dickinson | Democratic | 216,808 | (49.11%) |
Gerrit Smith | Charles O. Shepard | Liberty | 2,662 | (0.60%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William H. Seward | Luther Bradish | Whig | 192,882 | (51.39%) |
William L. Marcy | John Tracy | Democratic | 182,461 | (48.61%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William L. Marcy | John Tracy | Democratic | 166,122 | (54.24%) |
Jesse Buel | Gamaliel H. Barstow | Whig | 136,648 | (44.62%) |
Isaac S. Smith | Moses Jacques | Equal Rights | 3,496 | (1.14%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William L. Marcy | John Tracy | Democratic | 181,905 | (51.84%) |
William H. Seward | Silas M. Stilwell | Whig | 168,969 | (48.16%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
William L. Marcy | John Tracy | Democratic | 166,410 | (51.51%) |
Francis Granger | Samuel Stevens | Anti-Masonic, National Republican |
156,672 | (48.49%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Enos T. Throop | Edward Philip Livingston | Democratic | 128,842 | (51.22%) |
Francis Granger | Samuel Stevens | Anti-Masonic, National Republican |
120,361 | (47.85%) |
Ezekiel Williams | Isaac S. Smith | Workingmen's | 2,332 | (0.93%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Martin Van Buren | Enos T. Throop | Democratic | 136,794 | (49.46%) |
Smith Thompson | Francis Granger | National Republican | 106,444 | (38.49%) |
Solomon Southwick | John Crary | Anti-Masonic | 33,345 | (12.06%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
DeWitt Clinton | Henry Huntington | Democratic-Republican (Clintonian) | 99,785 | (50.93%) |
William B. Rochester | Nathaniel Pitcher | Democratic-Republican (Bucktails) | 96,135 | (49.07%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
DeWitt Clinton | James Tallmadge, Jr. | People's | 103,452 | (54.29%) |
Samuel Young | Erastus Root | Democratic-Republican | 87,093 | (45.71%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Joseph C. Yates | Erastus Root (Bucktails), Henry Huntington (Clintonian)[20] |
Democratic-Republican | 128,293 | (97.78%) |
Solomon Southwick | (none) | Independent | 2,913 | (2.22%) |
Gubernatorial elections under the State Constitution of 1777. The term was three years, the election held in the last week of April or on May 1.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
DeWitt Clinton | John Tayler | Democratic-Republican (Clintonian) | 47,445 | (50.78%) |
Daniel D. Tompkins | Benjamin Mooers | Democratic-Republican (Bucktails) | 45,990 | (49.22%) |
Note:
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
DeWitt Clinton | John Tayler | Democratic-Republican | 43,310 | (96.70%) |
Peter Buell Porter | (none) | Tammany Hall[21] | 1,479 | (3.30%) |
Note: Governor Tompkins was elected US Vice President in November 1816, he resigned in February 1817. Article XVII of the New York State Constitution of 1777 said that "...as often as the seat of government shall become vacant, a wise and descreet freeholder of this State shall be, by ballot, elected governor,...,which elections shall be always held at the times and places of choosing representatives in assembly..." This meant that, whenever a vacancy occurred, the Lt. Gov. did not succeed to the governor's office but administrated the state only until the end of the yearly term of the New York State Assembly on June 30, the successor being elected in April.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel D. Tompkins | John Tayler | Democratic-Republican | 45,412 | (54.02%) |
Rufus King | George Tibbits | Federalist | 38,647 | (45.98%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel D. Tompkins | John Tayler | Democratic-Republican | 43,324 | (52.17%) |
Stephen Van Rensselaer | George Huntington | Federalist | 39,718 | (47.83%) |
Lieutenant Governor candidate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|
DeWitt Clinton | Democratic-Republican | 32,747 | (50.37%) |
Nicholas Fish | Federalist | 29,046 | (44.68%) |
Marinus Willett | Tammany Hall | 3,218 | (4.95%) |
Note: Lt. Gov. Broome died in August 1810, and the 1777 Constitution provided for new elections if a vacancy occurred either in the Governor's or the Lieutenant Governor's office. See 1817 general election.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel D. Tompkins | John Broome | Democratic-Republican | 43,094 | (54.15%) |
Jonas Platt | Nicholas Fish | Federalist | 36,484 | (45.85%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel D. Tompkins | John Broome | Democratic-Republican (Clintonian) | 35,074 | (53.09%) |
Morgan Lewis | Thomas Storm | Democratic-Republican (Lewisites) | 30,989 | (46.91%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Morgan Lewis | John Broome | Democratic-Republican (Clintonian) | 30,829 | (58.20%) |
Aaron Burr | Oliver Phelps | Democratic-Republican (Tammany Hall) Federalist |
22,139 | (41.80%) |
Note: Aaron Burr was the sitting US Vice President
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | Jeremiah Van Rensselaer | Democratic-Republican | 24,808 | (54.34%) |
Stephen Van Rensselaer | James Watson | Federalist | 20,843 | (45.66%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Jay | Stephen Van Rensselaer | Federalist | 16,012 | (54.01%) |
Robert R. Livingston | Stephen Van Rensselaer | Democratic-Republican | 13,632 | (45.99%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Jay | Stephen Van Rensselaer | Federalist | 13,479 | (53.14%) |
Robert Yates | William Floyd | Democratic-Republican | 11,884 | (46.86%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | Pierre Van Cortlandt | Democratic-Republican | 8,440 | (50.32%) |
John Jay | Stephen Van Rensselaer | Federalist | 8,332 | (49.68%) |
Note: John Jay received more votes than George Clinton, but on technicalities the votes of Otsego, Tioga and Clinton counties were disqualified and not counted, giving George Clinton a slight majority. Under the Constitution of 1777, the votes were canvassed by a joint committee of the state legislature, six members each from the assembly and the senate. The members were David Gelston, Thomas Tillotson, Melancton Smith, David Graham, Pierre Van Cortlandt, Jr., David McCarty, Jonathan N. Havens, Samuel Jones, Isaac Roosevelt, Leonard Gansevoort and Joshua Sands. The state constitution said that the cast votes shall be delivered to the secretary of state "by the sheriff or his deputy". The ballots froms Otsego County were forwarded to the secretary of state by Sheriff Smith who was holding over in office until the appointment of a successor after his term had expired. The ballot box from Clinton County was delivered to the secretary of state's office by a person without deputation who had received the box from the sheriff. The ballot box from Tioga County was delivered to the secretary of state by the clerk of the special deputy appointed by the sheriff. The canvass committee disagreed on whether to allow these ballots to be counted or not. The question was referred to the U.S. Senators from New York, Federalist Rufus King and Dem.-Rep. Aaron Burr, for arbitration. King said all votes ought to be canvassed, Burr said that the ballots from Clinton County ought to be allowed, the ones from Otsego and Tioga Counties should be rejected. Thereupon, a majority of the canvass committee (Gelston, Tillotson, Smith, Graham, Van Cortlandt, McCarty, Havens) rejected the ballots from all three counties and declared George Clinton duly elected governor by a majority of 108 votes. The minority (Jones, Roosevelt, Gansevoort, Sands) protested in writing. In Otsego County, John Jay had a majority of about 400, and discounting the small majorities for Clinton in Tioga and Clinton Counties, would have won the election. Clinton was accused by the Federalists of usurpation and the canvass committee of having made a partisan decision against the wishes of the electorate.[22]
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Party | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | Pierre Van Cortlandt | Democratic-Republican | 6,391 | (51.74%) |
Robert Yates | Pierre Van Cortlandt | Federalist | 5,962 | (48.26%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | Pierre Van Cortlandt | (100%) |
Note:Clinton and Van Cortlandt were re-elected unopposed.
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | Pierre Van Cortlandt | 3,584 | (75.50%) |
Philip Schuyler | 643 | (13.55%) | |
Ephraim Paine | 520 | (10.95%) |
Governor candidate | Running Mate | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | Pierre Van Cortlandt | 3,624 | (100%) |
Note: Clinton and Van Cortlandt were re-elected unopposed.
Lieutenant Governor candidate | Popular Vote | |
---|---|---|
Pierre Van Cortlandt |
Governor candidate | Popular Vote | Lieutenant Governor candidate | Popular Vote | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
George Clinton | 1,828 | (48.44%) | George Clinton | 1,647 | (47.15%) |
Philip Schuyler | 1,199 | (31.77%) | Pierre Van Cortlandt | 1,098 | (31.43%) |
John Morin Scott | 368 | (9.75%) | Abraham Ten Broeck | 748 | (21.41%) |
John Jay | 367 | (9.72%) | |||
Robert R. Livingston | 7 | (0.19%) | |||
Philip Livingston | 5 | (0.13%) |
Notes:
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