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1966 Alabama Senate election

The 1966 Alabama Senate election took place on Tuesday, November 8, 1966, to elect 35 representatives to serve four-year terms in the Alabama Senate. The sole non-Democrat to win a seat was conservative Republican Leland Childs of Jefferson County. Childs was the first Republican state senator elected in decades.

The Democratic primaries were held on May 3 with runoffs on May 31, which candidates had until March 1 to qualify for. The Republican Party did not hold primaries for state office, instead opting to nominate by party convention. The Republican convention took place in Montgomery on July 30.

This was the first Alabama Senate election held after Alabama's $1.50 poll tax was ruled illegal in March 1966 and the prohibition of literacy tests by the Voting Rights Act of 1965. This was also the first Senate election held after the reapportionment of 1965, which created multi-member senate districts for the first time.

On January 10, 1967, O. J. Goodwyn of Montgomery County was unanimously elected Senate president pro tempore.

Summary

Background

In September 1965, the Senate was reapportioned to have 26 districts, three of which were multi-member districts. District 12, Jefferson County, had seven seats; District 24, Mobile, three; District 21, Montgomery, two. These three counties elected senators at-large, with candidates running for designated places. Four counties received one seat each, and the remaining 19 districts were divided up into multi-county districts containing between two and five counties.

Before this election, the Alabama Senate had 35 single-member districts, based entirely on existing county lines. No county or district could have more than one member, no matter how large. This led to a massive population disparity that largely benefited rural areas of Alabama: The Jefferson County district, containing 634,864 people as of the 1960 United States census, was 20 times more populated than the smallest district, Bibb–Perry, with only 31,715 people.

Deviation

The table below will show the most-populated and least-populated senate districts under the 1962 and 1965 apportionment plans. The population of Alabama at the 1960 census was 3,266,740, with an ideal 93,335 people under a 35-district plan.

Incumbents

Won re-election

Only five incumbent senators were elected to the 1967–1970 legislature.

  • Jimmy Clark (Democratic) of Barbour won re-election.
  • Roland Cooper (Democratic) of Wilcox won re-election.
  • Walter C. Givhan (Democratic) of Dallas won re-election.
  • Ray Lolley (Democratic) of Coffee won re-election.
  • Emmett Oden (Democratic) of Franklin won re-election.

Eliminated in primary

  • L. D. Bentley (Democratic) of Blount lost renomination in the runoff to Aubrey Carr.
  • Clayton Carter (Democratic) of Marshall lost renomination to Aubrey Carr.
  • E. O. Eddins (Democratic) of Marengo lost renomination to William Lindsey.
  • Kenneth Hammond (Democratic) of DeKalb lost renomination in the runoff to Dan Stone.
  • Jimmy McDow (Democratic) of Autauga lost renomination in the runoff to W. G. McCarley.
  • B. G. Robison (Democratic) of Pickens lost renomination to Jimmy Branyon.
  • H. B. Taylor (Democratic) of Butler lost renomination to Alton Turner.
  • A. C. Shelton (Democratic) of Calhoun withdrew during the runoff, giving the nomination to Woodrow Albea.

Did not seek re-election

  • Charles Adams (Democratic) of Houston did not run for re-election.
  • Mutt Allen (Democratic) of Cullman did not run for re-election.
  • L. W. Brannan (Democratic) of Baldwin ran for state house.
  • Larry Dumas (Democratic) of Jefferson did not run for re-election.
  • Albert Evans (Democratic) of Choctaw did not run for re-election.
  • Bob Gilchrist (Democratic) of Morgan unsuccessfully ran for governor.
  • George Hawkins (Democratic) of Etowah did not run for re-election.
  • Ernest C. Hornsby (Democratic) of Tallapoosa did not run for re-election.
  • Ed Horton (Democratic) of Limestone did not run for re-election.
  • H. P. James (Democratic) of Bibb did not run for re-election.
  • Julian Lowe (Democratic) of Randolph did not run for re-election.
  • Neil Metcalf (Democratic) of Geneva unsuccessfully ran for lieutenant governor.
  • Bill McCain (Democratic) of Tuscaloosa did not run for re-election.
  • Charles Montgomery (Democratic) of Greene did not run for re-election.
  • Pete Mathews (Democratic) of Clay successfully ran for state house.
  • Bill Nichols (Democratic) of ran successfully for U.S. House from the 4th congressional district.
  • Ed Reynolds (Democratic) of Macon did not run for re-election.
  • Roscoe Roberts (Democratic) of Madison did not run for re-election.
  • Vaughan Hill Robison (Democratic) of Montgomery did not run for re-election.
  • Joe Smith (Democratic) of Russell did not run for re-election.
  • John M. Tyson (Democratic) of Mobile unsuccessfully ran for lieutenant governor.
  • Bob Wilson (Democratic) of Walker did not run for re-election.

General election results

Elected without opposition

Every candidate elected with no opponents was a Democrat.

  • District 2: Bob Harris received 17,259 votes.
  • District 4: Dan Stone received 16,953 votes.
  • District 14: Walter C. Givhan received 18,847 votes.
  • District 17: C. C. Torbert Jr. received 14,880 votes.
  • District 18: Bill Lindsey received 9,400 votes.
  • District 19: Roland Cooper received 14,917 votes.
  • District 22: Ray Lolley received 16,998 votes.
  • District 23: Jimmy Clark received 12,384 votes.
  • District 24, place 1: Myland R. Engel received 43,437 votes.

Democratic primary results

Of the 13 incumbent state senators who ran for re-election, only five received re-nomination in the Democratic primary.

One Black American ran for a senate seat, Lonnie Brown in District 19.

Runoff results by district

Candidates in boldface advanced to the general election. An asterisk (*) denotes a runoff winner who trailed in the first round.

Additionally, runoffs in District 9 and District 22 were planned, but were canceled after candidates withdrew from their races. Both withdrawals were from candidates who placed second in the first round.

  • District 9: Woodrow Albea advanced after A. C. Shelton (inc.) withdrew.
  • District 22: Ray Lolley (inc.) advanced after L. L. Dozier withdrew.

First round results by district

Candidates in boldface advanced to either the general election or a runoff, first-place winners with an asterisk (*) did not face a runoff.

Nominated without opposition

The following candidates automatically won the Democratic nomination, as no opponent filed to run against them.

  • District 12, place 1: Hugh Morrow
  • District 12, place 5: George L. Bailes
  • District 12, place 6: Eddie H. Gilmore
  • District 13: G. Kyser Leonard
  • District 17: C. C. Torbert Jr.
  • District 21, place 1: Junie Pierce
  • District 24, place 1: Mylan R. Engel
  • District 24, place 3: William McDermott
  • District 25: J. Ernest Jackson

Republican convention

The Alabama Republican Party did not nominate candidates by partisan primary, instead choosing its nominees by party convention. The state GOP convention was held on July 30, 1966, at Montgomery's Garrett Coliseum, with county and local conventions occurring earlier. The state party initially expected to nominate a full slate of candidates for all 35 seats, but did not end up doing so. The following candidates were selected:

  • District 1: Kenn Buttram
  • District 3: Wayne Robinson
  • District 5: Jimmy Wilson
  • District 6: Claude Gholston
  • District 7: J. D. Lay
  • District 8: Owen Leach
  • District 9: George Deyo
  • District 10: James Herren
  • District 11: Maxwell Peters
  • District 12, place 1: Frank Lankford
  • District 12, place 2: Leland Childs
  • District 12, place 3: Malcolm Bethea
  • District 12, place 4: Norman Brown
  • District 12, place 5: Bill Bailey
  • District 12, place 6: C. P. Malone
  • District 12, place 7: James Price
  • District 13: Travis McCaig
  • District 15: James N. Smith
  • District 16: J. B. Ruffin
  • District 20: Harold Albritten
  • District 21, place 1: Robert E. Varner
  • District 21, place 2: J. Paul Lowery
  • District 24, place 2: Bert Nettles
  • District 24, place 3: John H. Friend
  • District 25: Robin Swift
  • District 26: Edward Lisenby

Jefferson County convention

The Jefferson County Republican convention was held on June 3, 1966. A full slate of House and Senate candidates were picked to oppose Democrats.

Third party and independent candidates

The newly-formed Conservative Party of Alabama held a party convention on Saturday, July 23, 1966, at the Whitley Hotel in Montgomery, Alabama. Only one state senate candidate, Phil Holmes in Mobile County's District 24, place 3, was nominated. The party's inaugural convention saw about 100 delegates attend. He came in third in the general election with 10% of the vote.

One candidate, William "Buddy" Matthews, ran under the "Third Party for America" banner in District 26 in Houston and Dale counties. He came in second in the general election with 31% of the vote, ahead of the Republican nominee.

In the four-county 20th district, Democratic state representative Fletcher Jones filed to run as an independent candidate after failing to qualify for the Democratic primary election. He came in second in the general election with 28% of the vote, ahead of the Republican nominee.

See also

Notes

References