1958 United States Senate elections
The 1958 United States Senate elections were elections for the United States Senate which occurred in the middle of President Dwight D. Eisenhower's second term. As is common in midterm elections, the party in the White House lost seats, but losses this year were more than usual, perhaps due to the high unemployment of the Recession of 1958. The Eisenhower Administration's position on right-to-work issues galvanized labor unions which supported Democrats. The launch of Sputnik may also have been a factor.
The Democratic Party took 12 Republican seats and a special election seat, and also won both Senate seats in the new state of [|Alaska]. This is the largest swing in the history of the Senate, and is only the second time in U.S. history that 10 or more Senate seats changed hands in a midterm election. This election featured the most incumbent Republicans defeated since senators were first popularly elected.
New seats
New Democratic seats
- Alaska : won by Bob Bartlett
- Alaska : won by Ernest Gruening
Incumbents retiring
Democrats
No Democrats retired.Republican seats held by Republicans
- New York: Irving Ives, replaced by Kenneth Keating
- Pennsylvania: Edward Martin, replaced by Hugh Scott
- Vermont: Ralph Flanders, replaced by Winston L. Prouty
Republicans replaced by Democrats
- California: William Knowland, replaced by Clair Engle
- Indiana: William E. Jenner, replaced by Vance Hartke
- New Jersey: Howard Alexander Smith, replaced by Harrison A. Williams
Incumbents who lost re-election (or appointee who lost election)
Democrats replaced by Republicans
No Democrats lost re-election.Republicans replaced by Democrats
's delegation changed from two Republicans to two Democrats.- Connecticut: William A. Purtell, lost to Thomas J. Dodd
- Maine: Frederick G. Payne, lost to Edmund Muskie
- Michigan: Charles E. Potter, lost to Philip Hart
- Minnesota: Edward John Thye, lost to Eugene McCarthy
- Nevada: George W. Malone, lost to Howard Cannon
- Ohio: John W. Bricker, lost to Stephen M. Young
- Utah: Arthur Vivian Watkins, lost to Frank Moss
- West Virginia: Chapman Revercomb, lost to Robert Byrd
- [|West Virginia] : John D. Hoblitzell Jr., lost to Jennings Randolph
- Wyoming: Frank A. Barrett, lost to Gale W. McGee
Results summary
Colored shading indicates party with largest share of that row.
Change in composition
Before the elections
After the elections
Key: | Race summariesSpecial / New state electionsIn the special elections, the winners were seated during 1958 or before January 3, 1959. In the new state elections, the winner were seated with the new Congress on January 3, 1959. Ordered by election date.Elections leading to the next CongressIn these general elections, the winners were elected for the term beginning January 3, 1959; ordered by state.All of the elections involved the Class 1 seats. AlaskaAlaska would become a new state January 3, 1959 and it elected two initial senators November 25, 1958 in advance of statehood. The Democratic Party thereby picked up 2 more seats.In their next elections, Alaska's senators would be elected to 6-year terms. The class 2 race, for the 2-year term ending in 1961, was between the Democratic incumbent territorial delegate Bob Bartlett, and the Republican Juneau attorney R. E. Robertson. Bartlett would be re-elected twice and serve until his 1968 death. The class 3 race, for the 4-year term ending in 1963, pitted two former territorial governors, Democrat Ernest Gruening against Republican Mike Stepovich. Gruening won a close race. Gruening would be re-elected in 1962 and serve until losing renomination in 1968. ArizonaCalifornia[|Connecticut]In Connecticut, Democrat Thomas J. Dodd defeated incumbent senator William A. Purtell who ran for a second term.DelawareTwo-term Republican John J. Williams was re-elected to a third term.Williams would be re-elected in 1964, serving four terms until his 1970 retirement. FloridaIncumbent Democrat Senator Holland, a conservative, was challenged by former senator Claude Pepper, who had been unseated in 1950. Holland had played a role in recruiting George A. Smathers to run against the liberal Pepper in that election. The two served as colleagues in the Senate from 1947 to 1951.[|Indiana]Incumbent Republican William E. Jenner did not seek a second full term in office and was replaced by Democrat Vance Hartke, the mayor of Evansville. Hartke defeated incumbent Republican Governor of Indiana Harold W. Handley.Jenner resigned shortly before the election and urged Handley, Jenner's political protégé, to seek his seat. A plan was proposed whereby Handley would resign the governorship, his lieutenant would appoint him senator, and he would finish the term and run as an incumbent. When the plan was revealed to the party leadership, they strongly advised him to not implement the it because they feared it would hurt the party and be perceived as a scandal. Handley did not resign from the governorship during his campaign and was widely criticized for the unprecedented action. Hartke accused Handley of raising taxes, breaking of his campaign promise, his reluctance in supporting right-to-work, and rising state unemployment. Statewide unemployment was just above 10% in April, but dropped to 6.9% by the end of September. [|Maine]Maine held its election September 8, 1958, in keeping with its routine practice of holding elections before the November national Election Day. Democrat Edmund Muskie defeated one-term Republican incumbent, Frederick G. Payne by a wide margin, 61–39%.MarylandMassachusettsMichigan[|Minnesota]In Minnesota, Democratic Representative Eugene McCarthy defeated incumbent senator Edward John Thye who ran for a third term.MississippiTwo-term Democrat John C. Stennis was re-elected with no opposition.Stennis would be re-elected four more times, serving until his retirement in 1989. MissouriIncumbent Democrat Stuart Symington was re-elected to a second term. Hazel Palmer was the first woman ever nominated for United States senator in Missouri.MontanaIncumbent Mike Mansfield, who was first elected to the Senate in 1952, ran for re-election. Mansfield won the Democratic primary comfortably, and moved on to the general election, where he was opposed by Lou W. Welch, a millworker and the Republican nominee. In contrast to the close campaign in 1952, Mansfield defeated Welch in a landslide and won his second term in the Senate easily.NebraskaRepublican Roman Hruska had won a 1954 special election and ran for a full term. He beat Democratic attorney Frank B. Morrison.Hruska would be re-elected two more times and serve until his 1976 retirement. Morrison would be elected Governor of Nebraska in 1960 and serve there for six years, twice again meanwhile running unsuccessfully for U.S. senator. [|Nevada]In Nevada, incumbent Republican George W. Malone ran for re-election to a third term, but was defeated by Democrat Howard Cannon.The campaign was considered one of the most competitive and highly watched in the nation in 1958. Senator Malone was known nationally as a leader within the Republican Party's right wing and held key appointments on the Senate Finance and Interior Committees. Malone campaigned on his experience and seniority in the Senate, using the slogan "He Knows Nevada Best." He received support from Eisenhower cabinet secretaries Fred Seaton and Ezra Taft Benson. Benson, one of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, was especially influential among Nevada's large Mormon population. His endorsement was seen as particularly important in light of Cannon's Mormon faith. Late in the campaign, Malone published full-page ads touting his effort to save Nevada from a federal gambling tax. Cannon focused his attacks on Malone's absentee record in the Senate and his reputation on Capitol Hill as an unpopular extremist. Cannon won the election by a safe margin owing to his overwhelming support in his native Clark County, which contained 47 percent of the state's registered voters. He was the first candidate from southern Nevada elected to the United States Senate. Senator Malone was unopposed for re-nomination by the Republican Party. New JerseyIncumbent Republican H. Alexander Smith chose not to seek a third term in office. Democratic U.S. Representative Harrison Williams won the open seat over U.S. Representative Robert Kean.New MexicoNew YorkIncumbent Republican Irving Ives retired. Republican Representative Kenneth Keating defeated Democrat Frank Hogan to succeed Ives.North Carolina (Special)Democrat W. Kerr Scott had died April 16, 1958 and former Democratic Governor of North Carolina B. Everett Jordan was appointed April 19, 1958 to continue the term, pending a special election. Jordan was then re-elected in November.Jordan would later be twice re-elected and serve until 1973. North DakotaIncumbent Republican, and former Non-Partisan League senator, William Langer, was re-elected to a fourth term, defeating North Dakota Democratic NPL Party candidate Raymond G. Vendsel.Only Langer filed as a Republican, and the endorsed Democratic-NPL candidate was Raymond G. Vendsel. Langer and Vendsel won the primary elections for their respective parties. Two independent candidates, Arthur C. Townley and Custer Solem, also filed before the deadline but had minimal impact on the outcome of the election, totaling less than 3,000 votes combined. Townley was known as the creator of the National Non-Partisan League, and had previously sought North Dakota's other senate seat in 1956. OhioIncumbent Republican John W. Bricker was defeated in his bid for a third term by U.S. Representative Stephen M. Young.[|Pennsylvania]Incumbent Republican Edward Martin did not seek re-election. The Republican nominee, Hugh Scott, defeated the term-limited Democratic Governor of Pennsylvania George M. Leader for the vacant seat.Scott would be twice re-elected, rising to the Senate Minority leader, and serve until retiring in 1977. Leader retired from public service after the defeat. Rhode IslandTwo-term incumbent Democrat John Pastore was easily re-elected over Republican attorney Bayard Ewing, a repeat of their 1952 race.Ewing would later serve as the national chairman of the United Way and the Rhode Island School of Design. TennesseeTexasUtahVermontIncumbent Republican Ralph Flanders did not run for re-election to another term in the United States Senate. Republican candidate Winston L. Prouty defeated Democratic candidate Frederick J. Fayette to succeed him.VirginiaIncumbent Harry F. Byrd Sr. was re-elected after defeating Independent Louise Wensel and Social Democrat Clarke Robb.WashingtonWest VirginiaWest Virginia (General)In 1956 senator Harley M. Kilgore died, and former senator William Revercomb won his seat in the 1956 special election. Revercomb lost re-election to Robert Byrd, who would hold the seat until his 2010 death.West Virginia (Special)Incumbent Democrat Matthew M. Neely died January 8, 1958 and Republican John D. Hoblitzell Jr. was appointed January 25, 1958 to continue the term, pending a special election.Former Democratic congressman Jennings Randolph was elected to finish the term that would run through 1961. Randolph would be re-elected four times and serve until his retirement in 1985. Hoblitzell resumed his business interests and died January 6, 1962. WisconsinWyoming |