Two
United States Senate elections (a regular and a special election) were held in
Illinois on March 26, 1913. The two elections were interconnected through a compromise made to elect a
Democrat in the regular election and a
Republican in the special election.
These were the last elections to U.S. Senate from Illinois to take place by vote of state legislature, as the
Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution would make all subsequent U.S. Senate elections conducted by a popular vote.
The elections saw the election of Democrat
J. Hamilton Lewis to a full term in the state's class 2 United States Senate seat in a regular election, and Republican
Lawrence Y. Sherman to the state's class 3 United States Senate seat in a special election.
In the
November 1912 state elections, the Republicans lost control of the
Illinois General Assembly due to the
Republican /
Progressive split.[citation needed] But while the Democrats held a plurality of the Illinois General Assembly, they did not have a majority. The General Assembly took up the matter of electing the senators on February 1.[citation needed] The General Assembly therefore failed to elect until after the new congress began.
On March 26, in a compromise arranged by governor
Dunne, the General Assembly elected Democrat
J. Hamilton Lewis to fill the full-term seat and Republican
Lawrence Y. Sherman to fill the two remaining years of a vacancy that had just recently opened. This broke a
deadlock on the matter that had been in place since February 11.[1]
Party primaries
Non-binding preference
primaries were held April 9, 1912, which informed the legislature of the preferred candidate of the voters that participated in each party's primaries. They coincided with binding primaries held for other offices.[2]
While the party was eligible to hold a primary, no Socialist primary was held for the office of U.S. Senator.[2]
On April 12, 1912, five-term Republican incumbent
Shelby Moore Cullom lost renomination to
Lieutenant Governor of IllinoisLawrence Y. Sherman in the Republican "advisory" primary, where the voters expressed their preference for senator but the decision was not binding on the
General Assembly, which made the actual choice. Cullom had suffered politically over his support for the other Illinois senator,
William Lorimer, who was embroiled in a scandal over alleged bribery in his
1909 election to the Senate. After his defeat, Cullom withdrew his name from consideration by the General Assembly.[citation needed]
The
Illinois General Assembly eventually elected the Democratic nominee, Congressman
J. Hamilton Lewis March 26, 1913, who had previously won the Democratic advisory primary as the sole candidate on the ballot. Before their conclusive March 26 vote, after a compromise was stricken, the Illinois legislature had twelve-times cast deadlocked ballots for the class 2 senate seat.
James Hamilton Lewis was the first non-Republican to win this seat since
1877 and was the first non-Republican to have held this seat since 1883.
[5]
Illinois legislative vote, class 2 (March 26, 1913)[1][6]
In July 1912, the U.S. Senate invalidated
William Lorimer's
1909 election and declared the seat vacant.[8] The
Illinois Attorney General,
William H. Stead determined that the General Assembly had failed to properly elect Lorimer in 1909 and so the governor could not appoint a replacement.[9] As a result, the General Assembly had a second Senate seat to fill.
Lawrence Y. Sherman, who had won the Republican advisory primary for Illinois’ regular senate election, was elected in the special election. Sherman defeated Democratic candidate Charles Boeschenstein, a newspaper publisher from
Edwardsville and Democratic National Committeeman from Illinois.[10]
Illinois special legislative vote, class 3 (March 26, 1913)[11][6]
^Smith, George Washington (1927).
History of Illinois and Her People. Vol. 4. American Historical Society Inc. p. 14. Retrieved December 26, 2023 – via Google Books.