Younger Candidate More than Twice as Likely to Win Minnesota Gubernatorial Elections
A study of Minnesota’s 64 gubernatorial races finds younger candidate victorious more than 70 percent of the time
(This report is the sixth installment in Smart Politics’ ‘Pathway to the Governor’s Mansion’ Series. Past reports analyzed the political experience, geographic background, ethnic background, age (part 1), and astrological signs of successful gubernatorial candidates in Minnesota history).
Should Representative Marty Seifert end up with the GOP slot on the gubernatorial ballot next fall, he may very well be the favorite to win the election – and not necessarily due to his policy positions.
A Smart Politics analysis of the more than five dozen Minnesota gubernatorial elections since statehood finds that the younger candidate has defeated the older candidate in more than 70 percent of the contests.
Seifert, at age 37, is the youngest major party candidate in the 2010 gubernatorial field thus far. The other youngest candidates in the race are DFLers Margaret Anderson Kelliher (41) and Paul Thissen (43) and Republican Pat Anderson (43).
The success rate of younger gubernatorial candidates in the general election began to take hold in the late 1860s, and has been quite pronounced since the beginning of the 20th Century.
· Since 1926, the younger gubernatorial candidate has won 23 of 30 gubernatorial contests in Minnesota, or a success rate of 77 percent.
· Since 1904, the younger candidate has won 33 of 41 contests, or an 80 percent rate of victory.
(Note: the age of the second place challenger in one of Minnesota’s 64 gubernatorial general elections could not be determined: Democrat E.O. Hamblin in 1861. This election was therefore excluded from the analyses in this report).
In these 33 such races since 1904, the younger (victorious) candidate was 9.5 years younger than the second place finisher on average. Since 1857, the winning gubernatorial candidate has been 4.2 years younger than the second place finisher on average.
The state’s more recent political history has also borne out this general trend of the triumph of youth, with the younger candidate winning in 4 of the last 5 general election matchups:
· Tim Pawlenty was born 12 years later than Mike Hatch and 11 years later than Peter Hutchinson.
· Pawlenty was born 16 years after Roger Moe and 9 years after Tim Penny.
· Jesse Ventura was born 9 years after Skip Humphrey and 2 years after Norm Coleman.
· And while Arne Carlson was 22 years older than his 1994 challenger John Marty, he was 6 years younger than his 1990 opponent, incumbent Rudy Perpich.
Earlier in the 20th Century, during a remarkable stretch from 1904 through 1942, the younger candidate defeated the older candidate in 19 out of 20 Minnesota gubernatorial races – even though many of these more ‘seasoned’ candidates were political heavyweights:
· The younger Theodore Christianson defeated former U.S. Senator Magnus Johnson in 1926.
· Christianson also defeated the older former U.S. Representative (and future U.S. Senator) Ernest Lundeen in 1928.
· At just north of 30 years old, Harold Stassen defeated former Governor Elmer Benson in 1938.
· Stassen then defeated former Governor Hjalmer Peterson in 1940 and 1942 (Peterson was 17 years his elder).
The largest age difference in a general election gubernatorial matchup in the Gopher State was in 1918 when Republican J.A.A. Burnquist defeated Democrat David H. Evans, who was 27 years older.
That record would nearly be bested should the 2010 general election matchup end up with Representative Seifert, at age 37, on the Republican side of the ticket, and former U.S. Senator Mark Dayton, at age 62, on the DFL side – a difference of 25 years.
Age Differential of Minnesota Gubernatorial Election Winners and Losers, 1857-2006
Year
|
Winner
|
Born
|
Loser
|
Born
|
Diff.
|
1857
|
Henry Sibley
|
1811
|
Alexander Ramsey
|
1815
|
4
|
1859
|
Alexander Ramsey
|
1815
|
George L. Becker
|
1829
|
14
|
1861
|
Alexander Ramsey
|
1815
|
E.O. Hamblin
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
1863
|
Stephen Miller
|
1816
|
Henry T. Welles
|
1821
|
5
|
1865
|
William Marshall
|
1825
|
Henry M. Rice
|
1816
|
-9
|
1867
|
William Marshall
|
1825
|
Charles E. Flandrau
|
1828
|
3
|
1869
|
Horace Austin
|
1831
|
George L. Otis
|
1829
|
-2
|
1871
|
Horace Austin
|
1831
|
Winthrop Young
|
1817
|
-14
|
1873
|
Cushman Davis
|
1838
|
Ara Barton
|
1824
|
-14
|
1875
|
John Pillsbury
|
1827
|
David L. Buell
|
1831
|
4
|
1877
|
John Pillsbury
|
1827
|
William L. Banning
|
1814
|
-13
|
1879
|
John Pillsbury
|
1827
|
Edmund Rice
|
1819
|
-8
|
1881
|
Lucius Hubbard
|
1836
|
Richard W. Johnson
|
1827
|
-9
|
1883
|
Lucius Hubbard
|
1836
|
Adolph Biermann
|
1842
|
6
|
1886
|
Andrew McGill
|
1840
|
Albert Ames
|
1842
|
2
|
1888
|
William Merriam
|
1849
|
Eugene M. Wilson
|
1833
|
-16
|
1890
|
William Merriam
|
1849
|
Thomas Wilson
|
1827
|
-22
|
1892
|
Knute Nelson
|
1842
|
Daniel M. Lawler
|
1859
|
17
|
1894
|
Knute Nelson
|
1842
|
Sidney M. Owen
|
1838
|
-4
|
1896
|
David Clough
|
1846
|
John Lind
|
1854
|
8
|
1898
|
John Lind
|
1854
|
William H. Eustis
|
1845
|
-9
|
1900
|
Samuel Van Sant
|
1844
|
John Lind
|
1854
|
10
|
1902
|
Samuel Van Sant
|
1844
|
Leonard A. Rosing
|
1861
|
17
|
1904
|
John Johnson
|
1861
|
Robert C. Dunn
|
1855
|
-6
|
1906
|
John Johnson
|
1861
|
A.L. Cole
|
1848
|
-13
|
1908
|
John Johnson
|
1861
|
Jacob F. Jacobson
|
1849
|
-12
|
1910
|
Adolph Eberhart
|
1870
|
James Gray
|
1862
|
-8
|
1912
|
Adolph Eberhart
|
1870
|
Peter M. Ringdahl
|
1861
|
-9
|
1914
|
Winfield Hammond
|
1863
|
William E. Lee
|
1852
|
-11
|
1916
|
J.A.A. Burnquist
|
1879
|
Thomas P. Dwyer
|
1855
|
-24
|
1918
|
J.A.A. Burnquist
|
1879
|
David H. Evans
|
1852
|
-27
|
1920
|
J.A.O. Preus
|
1883
|
Henrik Shipstead
|
1881
|
-2
|
1922
|
J.A.O. Preus
|
1883
|
Magnus Johnson
|
1871
|
-12
|
1924
|
Theodore Christianson
|
1883
|
Floyd Olson
|
1891
|
8
|
1926
|
Theodore Christianson
|
1883
|
Magnus Johnson
|
1871
|
-12
|
1928
|
Theodore Christianson
|
1883
|
Ernest Lundeen
|
1878
|
-5
|
1930
|
Floyd Olson
|
1891
|
Raymond P. Chase
|
1880
|
-11
|
1932
|
Floyd Olson
|
1891
|
Earle Brown
|
1879
|
-12
|
1934
|
Floyd Olson
|
1891
|
Martin A. Nelson
|
1889
|
-2
|
1936
|
Elmer Benson
|
1895
|
Martin A. Nelson
|
1889
|
-6
|
1938
|
Harold Stassen
|
1907
|
Elmer Benson
|
1895
|
-12
|
1940
|
Harold Stassen
|
1907
|
Hjalmer Petersen
|
1890
|
-17
|
1942
|
Harold Stassen
|
1907
|
Hjalmer Petersen
|
1890
|
-17
|
1944
|
Edward Thye
|
1896
|
Byron G. Allen
|
1901
|
5
|
1946
|
Luther Youngdahl
|
1896
|
Harold H. Barker
|
1889
|
-7
|
1948
|
Luther Youngdahl
|
1896
|
Charles L. Halsted
|
1894
|
-2
|
1950
|
Luther Youngdahl
|
1896
|
Harry H. Peterson
|
1890
|
-6
|
1952
|
C. Elmer Anderson
|
1912
|
Orville Freeman
|
1918
|
6
|
1954
|
Orville Freeman
|
1918
|
C. Elmer Anderson
|
1912
|
-6
|
1956
|
Orville Freeman
|
1918
|
Ancher Nelsen
|
1904
|
-14
|
1958
|
Orville Freeman
|
1918
|
George MacKinnon
|
1906
|
-12
|
1960
|
Elmer Andersen
|
1909
|
Orville Freeman
|
1918
|
9
|
1962
|
Karl Rolvaag
|
1913
|
Elmer Andersen
|
1909
|
-4
|
1966
|
Harold LeVander
|
1910
|
Karl Rolvaag
|
1913
|
3
|
1970
|
Wendell Anderson
|
1933
|
Douglas M. Head
|
1930
|
-3
|
1974
|
Wendell Anderson
|
1933
|
John W. Johnson
|
1929
|
-4
|
1978
|
Al Quie
|
1923
|
Rudy Perpich
|
1928
|
5
|
1982
|
Rudy Perpich
|
1928
|
Wheelock Whitney
|
1926
|
-2
|
1986
|
Rudy Perpich
|
1928
|
Carl R. Ludeman
|
1951
|
23
|
1990
|
Arne Carlson
|
1934
|
Rudy Perpich
|
1928
|
-6
|
1994
|
Arne Carlson
|
1934
|
John Marty
|
1956
|
22
|
1998
|
Jesse Ventura
|
1951
|
Norm Coleman
|
1949
|
-2
|
2002
|
Tim Pawlenty
|
1960
|
Roger D. Moe
|
1944
|
-16
|
2006
|
Tim Pawlenty
|
1960
|
Mike Hatch
|
1948
|
-12
|
Note: Table compiles the age of the second place finisher in the “loser” column. Notable third place candidates in 2006 (Peter Hutchinson), 2002 (Tim Penny), 1998 (Skip Humphrey), 1942 (John D. Sullivan), 1938 (Thomas Gallagher), 1932 & 1934 (John E. Regan), 1930 (Edward Indrehus), 1924 (Carlos Avery), 1922 (Edward Indrehus), 1920 (L.C. Hodgson), 1894 (George L. Becker), and 1890 (Sidney M. Owen) were all older than the victorious candidate in that respective election. The age of notable third place candidates in 1918 (Fred E. Wheaton), 1926 (Alfred Jacques), 1928 (Andrew Nelson), and 1940 (Edward Murphy) could not be established. Data compiled by Smart Politics.
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