News

Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search

News

First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni

News

Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend

News

Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library

News

Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty

Democrats Sweep Governors' Races

Win 27 of 35 Contests

By Nicholas Lemann

Democrats apparently won 27 of yesterday's 35 gubernatorial races, gaining control of five previously Republican statehouses.

By press time this morning, it appeared that 36 of the 50 states--and nine of the ten most populous ones--would have Democratic governors, the widest Democratic margin in governors since the 1930s.

When the final returns are counted, the Democratic victory could be even more extensive; three races in which Republicans had slight leads were still in doubt this morning.

California Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. recaptured the state's governorship from the Republicans, defeating state controller Houston I. Flournoy.

In Connecticut, Ella Grasso took over another Republican statehouse, defeating Rep. Robert Steel and becoming the fourth woman governor in U.S. history and the first who did not follow her husband to the office.

Governor William Millikenof Michigan, a Republican, held a slim lead in his fight for reelection against Democratic challenger Sander Levin. The race was one of the nation's closest.

In another tight midwestern race, the lead seesawed between John J. Gilligan, the Democratic governor of Ohio, and former Republican Governor James A. Rhodes.

Environmentalist Richard Lamm, a Democrat, unseated Republican Governor John Vanderhoof in Colorado by advocating tight conservation of the state's resources and resistance to federal use of Colorado's land for energy.

Conservative James Longley of Maine scored one of the night's biggest upsets by racking up a majority vote to beat Democrat George Mitchell and Republican James S. Erwin.

The only Southern Republican who led in a gubernatorial race last night was South Carolina's James B. Edwards, who was only slightly ahead of Democrat William Jennings Bryan Dorn. Last month's disqualification of Democratic nominee Charles D. Ravenel '63, a former Harvard quarterback, muddled the race.

Other winners in gubernatorial races were:

Alabama, George C. Wallace (D)

Alaska, Jay Hammond (R) led with only scant returns in

Arizona, Raul Castro (D)

Arkansas, David Pryor (D)

Florida, Reuben Askew (D)

Georiga, George Busby (D)

Hawaii, George Ariyoshi (D)

Idaho, Cecil Andrus (D)

Iowa, Robert Ray (R)

Kansas, Robert F. Bennett (R) holds a slight lead

Maryland, Marvin Mandel (D)

Minnesota, Wendell Anderson (D)

Nebraska, James J. Exon (D)

Nevada, Michael O'Callaghan (D)

New Hampshire, Meldrin Thompson (R)

New Mexico, Gerald Apodaca (D)

Oklahoma, David Boren (D)

Oregon, Robert Straub (D)

Pennsylvania, Milton Shapp (D)

Rhode Island, Philip Noel (D)

South Dakota, Richard Kneip (D)

Tennessee, Raymond Blanton (D)

Texas, Dolph Briscoe (D)

Vermont, Thomas P. Salmon (D)

Wisconsin, Patrick Lucey (D)

Wyoming, Edward Herschler (R)

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags