Ooh, neat. Thanks for that, comrade.
1976Eugene McCarthy (Independent)1972Linda Jenness (Socialist Workers Party)Benjamin Spock (People's Party)Louis Fisher (Socialist Labor Party)Colorado was in the top five for both Spock and Fisher.
1968Henning Blomen (Socialist Labor Party)Dick Gregory (Peace and Freedom)Fred Halstead (Socialist Workers Party)All three candidates had New Jersey as one of their top performing states. Both Gregory and Halstead had New York as a top five state, and Blomen and Gregory both counted Colorado as a top five state.
1964Eric Hass (Socialist Labor Party)Clifton DeBerry (Socialist Workers Party)Both Hass and DeBerry had New Jersey as a top five state.
1960Eric Hass (Socialist Labor Party)1956Eric Hass (Socialist Labor Party)1952Vincent Hallinan (Progressive Party)Eric Hass (Socialist Labor Party)Darlington Hoopes (Socialist Party)Both Hass and Hoopes had Virginia and New Jersey as top five states.
1948Henry Wallace (Progressive Party)Norman Thomas (Socialist Party)Both Wallace and Thomas had New York in their top five states.
1944Norman Thomas (Socialist Party)Edward Teichert (Socialist Labor Party)Both Thomas and Teichert had Minnesota in their top five states.
1940Norman Thomas (Socialist Party)Earl Browder (Communist Party)John Aiken (Socialist Labor Party)Wisconsin and Maryland were top five states for both Thomas and Aiken. Washington and California were both top five states for both Thomas and Browder. Minnesota was a top five state for both Browder and Aiken.
1936William Lemke (Union Party)Norman Thomas (Socialist Party)Earl Browder (Communist Party)Oregon was a top five state for Lemke and Thomas. New York and Washington were both top five states for Thomas and Browder.
1932Norman Thomas (Socialist Party)William Z. Foster (Communist Party)William Harvey (Liberty Party)New York was a top five state for both Thomas and Foster. Washington was a top five state for both Foster and Harvey. And of course, that radical hotbed, Montana, was a top five state for the Socialists, the Commies, and the weirdo Liberty Party that wanted to coin silver as a way out of the Great Depression. (Yes, in 1932)
Next up: The Progressive Era