- Source: 1970 Arizona gubernatorial election
The 1970 Arizona gubernatorial election took place on November 3, 1970. Incumbent Governor Jack Williams ran for reelection to a third term as governor. United States Ambassador to Bolivia Raúl Héctor Castro won the Democratic nomination, and narrowly lost the general election to Williams by 1.78%. Williams was sworn into his third and final term as Governor on January 5, 1971.
Due to a constitutional amendment approved by the voters in 1968, the length of the term of Governor of Arizona was changed from two years to four years, effective with the 1970 gubernatorial election. Thus, Williams became the first Governor of Arizona to serve a 4-year term.
Republican primary
= Candidates
=Jack Williams, incumbent Governor
= Results
=Democratic primary
= Candidates
=Raúl Héctor Castro, United States Ambassador to Bolivia, former United States Ambassador to El Salvador
Jack Ross, car dealer
George Nader, former Mayor
= Results
=General election
= Results
== Results by county
=Counties that flipped from Democratic to Republican
Apache
Counties that flipped from Republican to Democratic
Coconino
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 1970 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2022 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2026 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2006 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 1998 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2014 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2018 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 1986 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 1990–91 Arizona gubernatorial election
- 2002 Arizona gubernatorial election