Governor
Ernest Vandiver had pledged to maintain the county unit system, but after Judge Bell issued the injunction against its usage, Vandiver then ordered the Georgia Democratic State Executive Committee to conduct the 1962 primary by popular vote. Due to the court's injunction of the county unit system in 1962, that year's Democratic gubernatorial primary was the first to be decided by popular vote since 1908. It was won by
Carl Sanders of
Augusta, who would go on to win unopposed in the
general election in November. Sanders was the first person from an urban county (
Richmond) to be elected governor since the 1920s. In addition, a State Senate district was reconfigured in Fulton County, allowing for the election of
Leroy Johnson as the first Black state legislator since 1908. Following the 1963
Gray v. Sanders decision, the Georgia Legislature had the option to redesign the county unit system to meet the new "one person, one vote" standard. The legislature chose, instead, to continue electing statewide offices by their popular vote, which continues to the present day. The newly elected Governor Sanders also spearheaded a massive
reapportionment of Georgia's
General Assembly and 10
U.S. Congressional districts, providing more proportional representation to the state's urban areas as well as to the first Black members elected to the State House. However, conservative legislators feared the end of the county unit system as portending a loss of white power in the electoral process, and State Representative
Denmark Groover drafted legislation to change the primary and general election systems from
plurality voting to a
two-round system. The bill was passed in 1964, but would not be extended to statewide executive elections until after the result of the
1966 Georgia gubernatorial election, which persuaded the General Assembly to send Amendment 2 to passage by referendum in 1968. == Similar systems ==