The 1924 Minnesota gubernatorial election took place on November 4, 1924. Republican Party of Minnesota candidate Theodore Christianson defeated FarmerâÂÂLabor Party challenger Floyd B. Olson.
Incumbent Republican J.A.O. Preus was not running for a third term, and had no chosen successor.
The Farmer-Labor Party was divided between the Progressive faction and the Communist faction, colloquially referred to as the 'Red' faction. The nomination's winner, Floyd B. Olson, was a member of the Progressive faction.
Lambrecht withdrew from the race on May 14, 1924, to save the state the money that would be needed for a primary election. Avery became the unanimous nominee by default.
Christianson officially opened his campaign on September 20th. Christianson received endorsements from incumbent governor J.A.O. Preus and Representative Thomas D. Schall. Christianson's campaign was focused on "No compromise with Socialism in any of its disguises." Christianson believed that the Farmer-Labor policies of state-owned railroads and utilities would bring the country into debt. Instead, Christianson proposed that the state's finances should be redirected to funding education. Christianson would be the first gubernatorial candidate to campaign towards women, speaking at local women Republican gatherings.
Olson and the Farmer-Labor party as a whole was branded as 'socialist and radical' by Republican journalists.
Olson would attack Christianson on his tax and financial policy. Christianson campaigned on the slogan of 'More Ted, less taxes'. Olson argued that as a member of the legislature, Christianson was partially responsible for the taxes he was now campaigning against, and had proposed no actual plan to financially restructure the state other than lowering taxes. Olson focused on internal changes to be made to the state, such as advocating for the elimination of the position of Surveyor General of Logs and State Timber Agent, as the duties of both position were already supposed to be carried out by the Attorney General.
Democratic nominee Carlos Avery dismissed the Farmer-Labor party as a party of "misguided fledglings." Avery positioned himself as a reformer, hoping to be a alternative for progressive voters put off by the socialist factions of the Farmer-Labor party. Avery campaigned on an extensive policy of limited government and internal reform, a strong environmentalist policy (including supporting a state constitutional amendment mandating that forests could not be cleared for farmland) a massive irrigation effort for agriculture, new funding for highways and public transportation, and the expansion of welfare.