1976 New Jersey Republican presidential primary

1976 New Jersey Republican presidential primaries

June 8, 1976
Presidential delegate primary

67 Republican National Convention delegates
 
Candidate Uncommitted (supported Gerald Ford) Ronald Reagan
Home state California
Delegate count 67 0
Popular vote 860,087 207,236
Percentage 80.6% 19.4%
Presidential preference primary (non-binding)

No Republican National Convention delegates
 
Candidate Gerald Ford
Home state Michigan
Popular vote 242,122
Percentage 100.0%

The 1976 New Jersey Republican presidential primary was held on June 8, 1976, in New Jersey as one of the Republican Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 1976 United States presidential election.

In the binding delegate primary, uncommitted delegates endorsed by the state and county parties, who supported incumbent Gerald Ford swept the statewide contest and congressional district races against delegate slates pledged to former California governor Ronald Reagan.[1] However, Reagan publicly disclaimed the delegates (who therefore could not legally use his name), and his campaign refused to send any money into the state, effectively conceding the delegation to Ford in advance.[2]

In the non-binding preference primary, Ford was the only candidate on the ballot.

In combination with the Democratic primary held the same day, a higher percentage of eligible voters (28.1%) cast a ballot in the 1976 primaries than in any presidential year since 1952 (39%).[1]

Background

Reagan was supported in New Jersey by a grassroots initiative; the Reagan campaign refused to enter his name into the statewide preference primary and instead focused their efforts on the California and Ohio primaries on the same day, effectively conceding to Ford in the state. Many of the Reagan delegates entered the race at the eleventh hour, filing only minutes before the April 29 deadline.[2]

Procedure

In 1976, seven delegates were elected on a statewide slate and four delegates were elected individually from each of the state's fourteen congressional districts.[1][3]

Candidates

Endorsements

Gerald Ford
State legislators
Individuals
Uncommitted
U.S. congressmembers
State executive branch officials
State legislators
Local officials
Party officials
  • Benjamin Danskin, chair of the Monmouth County Republican Party (ran for delegate at-large)
  • John E. Dimon, former chair of the New Jersey Republican Party and Burlington County Republican Party (ran for district alternate)
  • Webster B. Todd, chair of the New Jersey Republican Party (ran for delegate at-large)
Individuals

Campaign

The party delegate slate, which was formally uncommitted and publicly for President Ford, was led by U.S. senator Clifford P. Case at Case's own insistence, over the objections of party chair Webster B. Todd. The New York Times reported that the statewide delegate slate was secretly in favor of a nominee more liberal than Ford, such as vice president Nelson Rockefeller.[2]

Lacking official sanction from the Reagan campaign, the insurgents claimed his support regardless. “Of course, Governor Reagan is behind us,” said one statewide delegate candidate. “He just can't say so publicly.”[2] Because they could not use his name, they appeared on the ballot as candidates on the "Former Calif. Governor for President" ticket.[2]

According to The New York Times, state leadership characterized the Reagan delegates as a "rightwing guerrilla attack on President Ford, Vice President Rockefeller, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and Senator Clifford P. Case, not necessarily in that order."[2] Under the county line system, the Republican organizations developed ballots with the Reagan slates listed in remote columns.[2]

The Reagan organizers were not professional politicians, with even the most conservative elected officials avoiding a campaign against the entire state establishment. Former representative Charles W. Sandman Jr., who had a reputation as a leading conservative in the state, openly expressed his fear that a Reagan nomination would result in a Democratic landslide in the style of the 1964 election.[2]

Results

Preference primary results

1976 New Jersey presidential preference primary[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Gerald Ford (incumbent) 242,122 100.00%
Total votes 242,122 100.00%

Delegate primary results

Delegate slate Candidate Delegate candidates Delegates Aggregate votes
Statewide District Total Of
total
(%)
Total Of
total
(%)
Uncommitted 8 66 67 100.0 858,611 80.45
Former Calif. Governor for President Ronald Reagan 7 33 0 0.00 207,236 19.42
For the President Gerald Ford 0 1 0 0.00 1,476 0.14
Total 15 100 67 100.0 1,067,323 100.00
Registered voters, and turnout

Delegate primary results by contest

1976 New Jersey Republican primary[1]
Contest Delegates
and popular vote
Uncommitted[a] Reagan Ford Other Total
Delegates at-large 7
1,519,779 (71.34%)

586,132 (27.51%)

24,552 (1.15%)
2,130,463
1st district 4
35,249 (59.40%)

22,289 (37.56%)

1,805 (3.04%)
59,343
2nd district 4
108,610 (93.35%)

8,106 (6.95%)
116,716
3rd district 4
78,760 (93.41%)

5,557 (6.59%)
84,317
4th district 4
25,086 (61.66%)

15,596 (38.34%)
40,682
5th district 4
103,450 (74.45%)

33,182 (22.38%)

2,316 (1.67%)
138,948
6th district 4
78,887 (70.25%)

33,405 (29.75%)
112,292
7th district 4
82,351 (73.69%)

29,403 (26.31%)
111,754
8th district 4
33,875 (100.00%)
33,875
9th district 4
49,376 (97.10%)

1,476 (2.90%)
50,852
10th district 4
9,881 (73.94%)

3,483 (26.06%)
13,364
11th district 4
51,738 (72.41%)

19,711 (27.59%)
71,449
12th district 4
61,431 (74.32%)

21,223 (25.68%)
82,654
13th district 4
79,128 (66.99%)

38,983 (33.01%)
118,111
14th district 4
13,223 (100.00%)
13,223
15th district 4
19,743 (100.00%)
19,743
District subtotal 67
830,788 (77.84%)

207,236 (19.42%)

1,476 (0.14%)

27,823 (2.61%)
1,067,323
  1. ^ Uncommitted totals in the district elections are the totals of the top four uncommitted delegate candidates; i.e., the establishment slate. Additional delegate candidates are listed under "other".

Aftermath

Ultimately, the New Jersey delegation was split at the 1976 national convention; Ford won 63 delegates while Reagan won four.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "1976 New Jersey primary results" (PDF). nj.gov.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Times, Ronald Sullivan Special to The New York (May 22, 1976). "'Grass-Roots'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 8, 2025.
  3. ^ Wildstein, David (October 1, 2024). "Jimmy Carter turns 100. Here's our look at his four presidential campaigns in New Jersey". New Jersey Globe. Retrieved June 2, 2025.