Popular and powerful six-term (since 1955)
incumbent Orval E. Faubus decided against seeking re-election. "Justice Jim" Johnson, a political ally of
George C. Wallace of
Alabama, ran a segregationist campaign with support of the
White Citizens Council. A decade earlier, Johnson had run in the Democratic primary against Faubus, another segregationist, whom he accused of working behind the scenes for racial integration.
Candidates •
Thomas Dale Alford, former U.S. Representative and candidate for governor in 1962 • Sam Boyce, attorney and former State Representative •
Brooks Hays, former U.S. Representative and candidate for governor in 1930 • Frank Holt, State Supreme Court Associate Justice and Attorney General •
James D. "Justice Jim" Johnson, State Supreme Court Associate Justice, former State Senator and candidate for governor in 1956 • Raymond Rebsamen, insurance executive and Ford dealer • Kenneth S. Sulcer, state senator and real estate broker
Results Holt was supported by many younger, more liberal, Democrats, such as future governor and
U.S. President Bill Clinton, who served as his campaign aide though he was not old enough to vote at the time. ==Republican primary==