- Source: 1968 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 1968 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 2007 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 2019 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 1991 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 2023 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 2011 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 1979 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 1972 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 2003 Louisiana gubernatorial election
- 2015 Louisiana gubernatorial election
The 1968 Louisiana gubernatorial election was held on February 4, 1968. Incumbent Democratic governor John McKeithen was re-elected to a second term in office. This was the first election in which the governor was eligible for re-election to a second consecutive term, following a 1966 constitutional referendum. It was also the first election after the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which brought thousands of African Americans into the electorate for the first time.
The 1967 primary election resulted in the overwhelming re-nomination of John McKeithen to his second consecutive term as governor, the result of a constitutional amendment approved by voters in 1966, which allows Louisiana governors to serve two back-to-back terms.
On November 4, 1967, McKeithen won the Democratic primary with 80.64% of the vote. At this time the Louisiana Republican Party rarely fielded candidates (though they had in 1964), so the Democratic nomination was tantamount to victory. McKeithen won the general election without an opponent. As of 2023, this is the last time a Democratic candidate carried all 64 parishes.
Democratic primary
= Candidates
=Frank Ahern
Cy D. F. Courtney
John McKeithen, incumbent governor
John Rarick, U.S. Representative from St. Francisville
Addison Roswell Thompson, candidate for governor in 1960 and 1964
= Results
=General election
This is the most recent time to date that there was no Republican running in the contest for governor. Hence, John McKeithen was re-elected unopposed.
Sources
Louisiana Secretary of State. Primary Election Returns, 1967