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1970 United States Senate election in New Jersey

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1970 United States Senate election in New Jersey

1964 November 3, 1970 1976
Nominee Harrison A. Williams Nelson G. Gross
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 1,157,074 903,026
Percentage 54.02% 42.16%

County results
Williams:40–50%50–60%60–70%
Gross:40–50%50–60%

U.S. senatorbefore election

Harrison A. Williams
Democratic

Elected U.S. senator

Harrison A. Williams
Democratic

The1970 United States Senate election in New Jerseywas held on November 3, 1970. IncumbentDemocratHarrison A. WilliamsdefeatedRepublicannomineeNelson G. Grosswith 54.02% of the vote.

Primary electionswere held on June 2, 1970.[1]Williams held off a challenge from the Hudson County party organization in the form of State SenatorFrank Guarini,while Gross prevailed over two candidates without organizational support.[2]

Democratic primary[edit]

Candidates[edit]

Campaign[edit]

Guarini ran as the candidate of the powerfulHudson CountyDemocratic machine.[3]As in 1958, the machine hoped to defeat Williams by running up a large margin in Hudson County, which accounted for the majority of the state's Democratic vote.[2]Guarini campaigned on themes that echoed Republican President Richard Nixon's 1968 campaign, calling himself a candidate who would uphold “law and order” and a champion of the “silent majority” and the “forgotten taxpayer."[2]Guarini also emphasized his Italian ancestry.[4]

In a May interview withThe New York Times,Williams confessed to past struggles resulting fromalcoholismand said that he had been 18 months sober, which prompted Guarini campaign managerArthur J. Sillsto claim the party should not "risk" supporting a former alcoholic.[4]Sills was rebuked by most of the state's Democratic leadership, including former GovernorRichard J. Hughes,under whom Sills had served as Attorney General. Hughes praised Williams's "courage," denounced both Sills and Guarini for trying to inject “the meanest kind of issue” into the race and called Guarini “someone who crawled out of the woodwork.”[2]Hughes further suggested Sills, who was confined to a wheelchair withpoliomyelitis,“ought to be the last man in the world to hurt anybody with a disease, illness or handicap.”[4]

Of all primary candidates in either party, Williams took the strongest stance against the Vietnam War; he called for unilateral American withdrawal within one year.[2]Guarini also supported withdrawal but contended that the United States should have gone into Vietnam to win instead of “tying the generals' hands.”[2]

Williams had the unified support of organized labor, possibly owing to his position as potential chair of the Senate Committee on Labor and Welfare in the next term.[4][2]

Results[edit]

Democratic primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Harrison A. Williams(incumbent) 190,692 65.59
Democratic Frank Joseph Guarini 100,045 34.41
Total votes 290,737 100.00

Williams won the primary easily; he nearly finished even with Guarini in Hudson County.[2]

Republican primary[edit]

Candidates[edit]

Declined[edit]

Campaign[edit]

Nelson Gross resigned his position as party chairman on April 9 to enter the race for Senate with the full-backing of GovernorWilliam T. Cahill.Cahill's support discouraged any serious contenders from challenging Gross in the primary.[3]Gross also had the support of President Richard Nixon, for whom he had helped secure the Republican nomination in 1968.[2]

Gross was nonetheless privately criticized as a poor choice by some Republicans due to his ongoing investigation by theUnited States Department of Justicefor involvement with a Mafia-backed labor union. The investigation was led by U.S. AttorneyFrederick Bernard Lacey,who had been personally recommended to the Nixon administration by SenatorClifford Case.Case and Gross had been on uneven terms since Gross undermined Case's "favorite son" status at the1968 Republican National Conventionby bringing Bergen County delegates into the Nixon column.[3]

On the war issue, Gross advocated for congressional restriction on the American incursion into Cambodia, but withheld calling for unilateral withdrawal, pending a fact-finding trip he pledged to take after the primary.[2]Quaremba defended the Nixon administration's policy.[4]

Quaremba emphasized his Italian ancestry in the campaign.[4]

Joseph Gavin did not campaign actively. He ran only to provide a Senate heading on the ballot line for Assemblyman Walter T. Smith, who was running for the U.S. House of Representatives.[2][4]

By the end of the campaign, observers said that Gross had an "insurmountable" lead over Quaremba.[4]He largely ignored Quaremba's campaign and spent the final week of the primary filming television ads for the general election.[4]

Results[edit]

Republican primary results[1]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nelson G. Gross 150,662 65.39%
Republican James A. Quaremba 43,547 18.90%
Republican Joseph T. Gavin 36,208 15.71%
Total votes 230,417 100.00

General election[edit]

Candidates[edit]

  • Nelson G. Gross, former Chairman of theNew Jersey Republican State Committeeand State Assemblyman (Republican)
  • Joseph F. Job, Bergen County Sheriff (Independent)[5]
  • Jules Levin (Socialist Labor)
  • Joseph S. Mans (Independent)
  • William J. O'Grady (Independent)
  • Harrison A. Williams, incumbent Senator since 1959 (Democratic)

Campaign[edit]

Gross campaigned with PresidentRichard NixoninOcean Groveon October 17.

Gross assailed Williams as a "radical liberal" and implied that he was involved in "influence peddling" for having sponsored special bills for about 70 Chinese seamen who jumped ship in the United States.[6]

In mid-October, PresidentRichard Nixoncampaigned for Gross as part of a one-day swing through Pennsylvania, Vermont, Wisconsin and New Jersey.[6]

Debates[edit]

Williams declined numerous calls for debates.[6]

Endorsements[edit]

Nelson Gross
U.S. executive branch officials
Newspapers
  • The Hackensack Record[8]
  • The Newark Sunday News[8]

Polling[edit]

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size
Margin of
error
Harrison
Williams (D)
Nelson
Gross (R)
Other Undecided
RSCC[6][a] October 15, 1970 ? ±?% 36% 32% 3% 29%
  1. ^Poll released by the Gross campaign.

Results[edit]

1970 United States Senate election in New Jersey[9]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Harrison A. Williams(incumbent) 1,157,074 54.02% Decrease7.89
Republican Nelson G. Gross 903,026 42.16% Increase4.84
Independent Joseph F. Job 58,992 2.75% N/A
Independent William J. O'Grady 12,938 0.60% N/A
Independent Joseph S. Mans 6,066 0.28% N/A
Socialist Labor Jules Levin 4,009 0.19% Increase0.11
Majority 254,048
Turnout 2,142,105
Democratichold Swing

References[edit]

  1. ^abc"1970 Primary Election Results"(PDF).Secretary of State of New Jersey.1970.RetrievedMay 4,2019.
  2. ^abcdefghijklSullivan, Ronald (June 3, 1970)."Williams and Gross Win Jersey Senate Primaries".The New York Times.RetrievedMarch 23,2022.
  3. ^abcd"GROSS QUITS AS G.O.P. CHAIRMAN IN JERSEY TO RUN FOR THE SENATE".The New York Times.April 9, 1970. p. 44.RetrievedAugust 20,2021.
  4. ^abcdefghiSullivan, Ronald (May 31, 1970)."Williams and Gross Favored in Jersey".The New York Times.RetrievedMarch 23,2022.
  5. ^"Bergen Sheriff Plans to Run For Senate as Independent".The New York Times.April 23, 1970. p. 29.RetrievedAugust 20,2021.
  6. ^abcdeSullivan, Ronald (October 15, 1970)."Test for G.O.P. in Jersey".The New York Times.p. 53.RetrievedAugust 20,2021.
  7. ^"The New Jersey Senate Race".The New York Times.October 19, 1970.RetrievedAugust 20,2021.In our opinion, the case for the re‐election of Senator Williams is clear and persuasive... Senator Williams is far and away the better choice.
  8. ^abcd"Gross Vows to Seek U.S. Aid for Jersey".The New York Times.October 26, 1970. p. 44.RetrievedAugust 20,2021.
  9. ^"1970 General Election Results"(PDF).Secretary of State of New Jersey.1970.RetrievedMay 4,2019.