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1914 United States Senate elections

The 1914 United States Senate elections were held on November 3, 1914. These were the first regularly scheduled elections held following the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913, which required that all seats up for election be popularly elected, rather than chosen by their state legislatures. Thus, it was the first time that elections were generally scheduled on Election Day to coincide with the U.S. House elections. The 32 seats of Class 3 were contested in regular elections in 1914. Special elections were also held to fill vacancies. These elections occurred in the middle of Democratic President Woodrow Wilson's first term.

Gains, losses, and holds
Retirements Four Republicans and three Democrats retired instead of seeking re-election. One Democrat retired instead of seeking election to finish the unexpired term. Defeats Two Republicans sought re-election but lost in the primary election. Deaths One Democrat died on August 8, 1913, and his seat remained vacant until a May 11, 1914 special election. Post-election changes One Democrat died during the 64th Congress and was replaced by a Democratic appointee. == Change in composition ==
Change in composition
Before the elections Elections results Beginning of the next Congress == Summary of races ==
Summary of races
Special elections during the 63rd Congress In these special elections, the winners were seated once elected and qualified; ordered by election date. Races leading to the 64th Congress In these general elections, the winners were elected for the term beginning March 4, 1915; ordered by state. All of the elections involved the Class 3 seats. == Closest races ==
Closest races
Nineteen races had a margin of victory under 10%: == Alabama ==
Alabama
Alabama (special) Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Joseph F. Johnston died August 8, 1913. Two appointees, Henry D. Clayton and Franklin P. Glass, were named to replace Johnston, but both faced challenges and were ultimately not seated. A special election was held to fill out the remaining months of Johnston's term. Attorney Frank White won the Democratic primary on April 6, 1914, and was elected unopposed in the special general election on May 11, 1914. Alabama (regular) White declined to run in the regular election for a full term. U.S. Representative Oscar Underwood, the House Majority Leader, won the Democratic primary over Representative Richmond P. Hobson. He then defeated Alex C. Birch, the Republican nominee, in the general election. == Arizona ==
Arizona
Incumbent Democrat Marcus A. Smith was elected in 1912 with 50% of the vote and sought re-election. Although he easily defeated his primary challenger, he faced a large field of candidates in the general election. State Senator and trader Don Lorenzo Hubbell was the Republican nominee. Third-party candidates included Eugene W. Chafin of the Prohibition Party, who ran for president under the party's nomination, as well as Socialist Bert Davis and Progressive J. Bernard Nelson. Smith received over half of the vote, defeating each candidate by a wide margin. He was elected to his second term. == Arkansas ==
California
Incumbent Republican George Clement Perkins was first elected in an 1895 special election and was re-elected for three more terms. He did not seek re-election. U.S. Representative Joseph R. Knowland of Oakland was the Republican nominee for this seat in 1914. He was challenged by the Democratic nominee, former mayor of San Francisco James Duval Phelan, and Progressive nominee Francis J. Heney, the former attorney general of the Arizona Territory. Phelan defeated Heney and Knowland by slim margins and with less than a third of the vote. == Colorado ==
Connecticut
{{Infobox election | election_name = 1914 United States Senate election in Connecticut | country = Connecticut | flag_year = 1897 | type = presidential | ongoing = no | previous_election = 1909 United States Senate election in Connecticut | previous_year = 1909 | next_election = 1920 United States Senate election in Connecticut | next_year = 1920 | image_size = x136px | image1 = Frank Bosworth Brandegee.jpg | nominee1 = Frank B. Brandegee | party1 = Republican Party (US) | popular_vote1 = 89,983 | percentage1 = 49.77% | image2 = Simeon E. Baldwin.jpg | nominee2 = Simeon E. Baldwin | party2 = Democratic Party (US) | popular_vote2 = 76,081 | percentage2 = 42.08% | map = == Florida ==
Florida
Incumbent Democrat Duncan Fletcher was elected in a special election after being appointed when William Hall Milton retired after a year in office. He sought re-election to a full term, facing competition only in the primary. == Georgia ==
Georgia
There were two elections due to the February 14, 1914, death of Democrat Augustus Octavius Bacon. It was the first time that both of Georgia's Senate seats have been up for election at the same time. Georgia (special) Democrat William West was appointed to continue the term pending a special election, in which he was not a candidate. Democrat Thomas W. Hardwick was elected November 3, 1914, to finish the term that would end in 1919 and served until losing renomination in 1918. Georgia (regular) Democrat M. Hoke Smith, who had first won in a 1911 special election, was re-elected and would serve until his 1920 renomination loss. == Idaho ==
Kentucky
There were 2 elections to the same seat due to the May 23, 1914, death of one-term Republican William O. Bradley. Kentucky (special) Democrat Johnson N. Camden was appointed June 16, 1914, to continue Bradley's term, pending a special election. He was challenged by U.S. Solicitor General William Marshall Bullitt. Camden was elected in November to finish the term ending 1915. Kentucky (regular) Democratic appointee Johnson N. Camden was not a candidate for the next term, instead returning to agricultural activities on a farm. In this race, two former governors of Kentucky fought for the seat. The Democratic nominee was John C. W. Beckham, who was sworn in after the assassination of William Goebel in 1900. The Republican nominee was Augustus E. Willson, who flipped the seat in 1907 after Beckham's term ended. Beckham won the election, and would continue to serve until his re-election loss. == Louisiana ==
Louisiana
Senator Robert F. Broussard had already been elected on May 21, 1912, indirectly by the state legislature. == Maryland ==
Ohio
Republican nominee Warren G. Harding, future President of the United States, defeated Democratic nominee Timothy S. Hogan to succeed retiring incumbent Republican Senator Theodore E. Burton. Initially, Harding was not interested in running for U.S. Senate, due to the divisive remnants of the 1912 elections between the conservative and progressive factions of the Republican party. Harry Daugherty, an Ohio political boss, was interested in running for the seat himself upon learning of incumbent Senator Theodore Burton's plans to retire upon the expiration of his term, but party leaders advised him not to run. Instead, Daugherty unsuccessfully attempted to stage a draft movement to convince Harding to run for the seat. After the death of Amos Kling, the father of Harding's wife Florence, she encouraged her husband to run. The precise reasoning for this is unknown, but some in Marion, the Hardings' home town, believe that Harding had agreed not to seek higher office as part of a reuniting "truce" between Florence and her father, or that Kling had convinced Harding that it would behoove him to further his business rather than run for public office. Although Daugherty claimed it was him who had convinced Harding to run for the Senate, Harding's friend and attorney Hoke Donithen, who eventually became Harding's campaign manager, may have played a role in his decision to run. Retiring Senator Theodore Burton also claimed credit, saying to his biographer that Daugherty did not agree to throw his support behind Harding until after learning he had backed him. and Ralph Cole. Rather than antagonizing his opponents, Harding notably tried to keep and make friends within the Republican party, to the frustration of those running against him. Ralph Cole, in his frustration, said, "If he is not going to fight someone, why did he enter the contest?" Harding downplayed the issue of World War I, despite the fact that the election took place just after the outbreak of the war, due to the high German immigrant population. Harding ultimately won the election and subsequently became the first United States Senator from Ohio to be popularly elected, following the passage of the 17th Amendment to the Constitution. Harding's victory in his bid for the Senate seat raised speculation that he would seek higher office, specifically the Presidency, although Harding himself did not show any interest in doing so at the time. He told family and friends after being elected to the Senate that he would return to his previous career in newspaper publishing at The Marion Daily Star after serving in the Senate. == Oklahoma ==
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