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James Watson Republican
Joseph Robinson Democratic
The U.S. Senate election of 1932 coincided with Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt's crushing defeat of incumbent Herbert Hoover in the presidential election. With the administration widely blamed for the Great Depression, Republicans lost twelve seats and control of the chamber. This became the first time since 1920 that the victorious party defended all of their own seats and achieved a pickup in the double-digits.
This was the first election in history that a Senate leader (in this case the Majority Leader) from either party lost re-election.
Democrats took open seats in California, Iowa, and Wisconsin, and defeated eight incumbents:
Democrat Kansas. As of 2014, he is the last Democrat to win a U.S. Senate election in Kansas.
Hattie Caraway (D-AR) was the first woman to be elected to a full term in the Senate.
All races are general elections for class 3 seats, unless noted.
All elections are for the Class 3 seat unless otherwise indicated.
Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Lyndon B. Johnson, Politics
Mitt Romney, Barack Obama, Richard Nixon, Abraham Lincoln, Ronald Reagan
Des Moines, Iowa, Davenport, Iowa, Dubuque, Iowa, Iowa State University, University of Iowa
World War II, John Steinbeck, Dust Bowl, United States, Milton Friedman
People's Party (United States), Unionist Party (United States), Second Party System, United States Senate elections, 1850, United States Senate elections, 1852
Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, New York, California, Democratic Party (United States)
New Jersey, United States Senate, Republican Party (United States), Washington, D.C., New York City
Puerto Rico, United States, Washington, D.C., United States Senate, Supreme Court of the United States
Great Depression, United States Senate, Democratic Party (United States), Franklin D. Roosevelt, Republican Party (United States)