1944
Wisconsin in 1944
The 1944 contest saw Wisconsin line up behind Roosevelt, delivering 12 electoral votes to the Democratic ticket. Wisconsin ended up on the winning side — Franklin D. Roosevelt captured the White House that year.
It marked the 4th consecutive election in which Wisconsin backed the Democratic party, a streak reaching back to 1932. The region divided — Minnesota, Illinois, and Michigan joined Wisconsin for the Democratic ticket, while Iowa did not. Across the 45 presidential elections Wisconsin has taken part in, it has most often sided with the Republican party (24 times). The vote fell within the New Deal Coalition — FDR, civil rights, and the long Democratic majority.
In the national count, Franklin D. Roosevelt took 432 of the 531 electoral votes, against Thomas E. Dewey's 99. Franklin D. Roosevelt led the national popular vote with 53.39% of the ballots cast.
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