1968 United States presidential election

1968 United States presidential election

← 1964 November 5, 1968 1972 →

538 members of the Electoral College
270 electoral votes needed to win
Opinion polls
Turnout62.5%[1] Decrease 0.3 pp
 
Nominee Richard Nixon Hubert Humphrey George Wallace
Party Republican Democratic[b] American Independent[c]
Home state New York[a] Minnesota Alabama
Running mate Spiro Agnew Edmund Muskie Curtis LeMay[d]
Electoral vote 301 191 46
States carried 32 13 + DC 5
Popular vote 31,783,783 31,271,839 9,901,118
Percentage 43.4% 42.7% 13.5%

1968 United States presidential election in California1968 United States presidential election in Oregon1968 United States presidential election in Washington (state)1968 United States presidential election in Idaho1968 United States presidential election in Nevada1968 United States presidential election in Utah1968 United States presidential election in Arizona1968 United States presidential election in Montana1968 United States presidential election in Wyoming1968 United States presidential election in Colorado1968 United States presidential election in New Mexico1968 United States presidential election in North Dakota1968 United States presidential election in South Dakota1968 United States presidential election in Nebraska1968 United States presidential election in Kansas1968 United States presidential election in Oklahoma1968 United States presidential election in Texas1968 United States presidential election in Minnesota1968 United States presidential election in Iowa1968 United States presidential election in Missouri1968 United States presidential election in Arkansas1968 United States presidential election in Louisiana1968 United States presidential election in Wisconsin1968 United States presidential election in Illinois1968 United States presidential election in Michigan1968 United States presidential election in Indiana1968 United States presidential election in Ohio1968 United States presidential election in Kentucky1968 United States presidential election in Tennessee1968 United States presidential election in Mississippi1968 United States presidential election in Alabama1968 United States presidential election in Georgia1968 United States presidential election in Florida1968 United States presidential election in South Carolina1968 United States presidential election in North Carolina1968 United States presidential election in Virginia1968 United States presidential election in West Virginia1968 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia1968 United States presidential election in Maryland1968 United States presidential election in Delaware1968 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania1968 United States presidential election in New Jersey1968 United States presidential election in New York1968 United States presidential election in Connecticut1968 United States presidential election in Rhode Island1968 United States presidential election in Vermont1968 United States presidential election in New Hampshire1968 United States presidential election in Maine1968 United States presidential election in Massachusetts1968 United States presidential election in Hawaii1968 United States presidential election in Alaska1968 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia1968 United States presidential election in Maryland1968 United States presidential election in Delaware1968 United States presidential election in New Jersey1968 United States presidential election in Connecticut1968 United States presidential election in Rhode Island1968 United States presidential election in Massachusetts1968 United States presidential election in Vermont1968 United States presidential election in New Hampshire
Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by Nixon/Agnew, blue denotes those won by Humphrey/Muskie, and orange denotes those won by Wallace/LeMay, including a North Carolina faithless elector. Numbers indicate electoral votes cast by each state.

President before election

Lyndon B. Johnson
Democratic

Elected President

Richard Nixon
Republican

The incumbent in 1968, Lyndon B. Johnson. His second term expired at noon on January 20, 1969.

The 1968 United States presidential election was the 46th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 5, 1968. The Republican nominee, former vice president Richard Nixon, defeated both the Democratic nominee, incumbent vice president Hubert Humphrey, and the American Independent Party nominee, former Alabama governor George Wallace. This was the last election until 1988 in which the incumbent president was not on the ballot. This was also the last election where a third-party candidate received an electoral vote.

Incumbent president Lyndon B. Johnson had been the early front-runner for the Democratic Party's nomination, but he withdrew from the race after only narrowly winning the New Hampshire primary. Eugene McCarthy, Robert F. Kennedy and Humphrey emerged as the three major candidates in the Democratic primaries until Kennedy was assassinated. His death after midnight on June 6, 1968, continued a streak of high-profile assassinations in the 1960s. Humphrey edged out anti-Vietnam war candidate McCarthy to win the Democratic nomination, sparking numerous anti-war protests. Nixon entered the Republican primaries as the front-runner, defeating liberal New York governor Nelson Rockefeller, conservative governor of California Ronald Reagan, and other candidates to win his party's nomination. Alabama's Democratic former governor, George Wallace, ran on the American Independent Party ticket, campaigning in favor of racial segregation on the basis of "states’ rights". The election year was tumultuous and chaotic. It was marked by the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in early April, and the subsequent 54 days of riots across the nation, by the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in early June, and by widespread opposition to the Vietnam War across university campuses. Vice President Hubert Humphrey won and secured the Democratic nomination, with Humphrey promising to continue Johnson's war on poverty and to support the civil rights movement.

The support of civil rights by the Johnson administration hurt Humphrey's image in the South, leading the prominent Democratic governor of Alabama, George Wallace, to mount a third-party challenge against his own party to defend racial segregation on the basis of "states’ rights". Wallace led a far-right American Independent Party attracting socially conservative voters throughout the South, and encroaching further support from white working-class voters in the Industrial North and Midwest who were attracted to Wallace's economic populism and anti-establishment rhetoric. In doing so, Wallace split the New Deal Coalition, winning over Southern Democrats, as well as former Goldwater supporters who preferred Wallace to Nixon. Nixon chose to take advantage of Democratic infighting by running a more centrist platform aimed at attracting moderate voters as part of his "silent majority" who were alienated by both the liberal agenda that was advocated by Hubert Humphrey and by the ultra-conservative viewpoints of George Wallace on race and civil rights. However, Nixon also employed coded language to combat Wallace in the Upper South, where the electorate was less extreme on the segregation issue. Nixon sought to restore law and order to the nation's cities and provide new leadership in the Vietnam War.

During most of the campaign, Humphrey trailed Nixon significantly in polls taken from late August to early October, with some polls predicting a margin of victory of as high as 16% as late as August. In the final month of the campaign, however, Humphrey managed to narrow Nixon's lead after Wallace's candidacy collapsed and Johnson suspended bombing in the Vietnam War to appease the anti-war movement; the election was considered a tossup by election day. Nixon managed to secure a close victory in the popular vote on election day, with just over 500,000 votes (0.7%) separating him and Humphrey. In the electoral college, however, Nixon's victory was much larger; he carried the tipping point state of California by over 230,000 votes (3.08%), and his overall margin of victory in the electoral college was 110 votes. This was the first presidential election after the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 which had resulted in growing restoration of the franchise for racial minorities, especially in the South, where most had been disenfranchised since the turn of the century. Minorities in other areas also regained their ability to vote.[2]

Nixon also became the first non-incumbent vice president to be elected president, something that would not happen again until 2020, when Joe Biden was elected president.[3] This also remains the most recent election in which the incumbent president was eligible to run again but was not the eventual nominee of that person's party. Nixon's victory also commenced the Republican Party's lock on certain Western states that would vote for them in every election until 1988, allowing them to win the presidency in five of the six presidential elections that took place in that period.

  1. ^ "National General Election VEP Turnout Rates, 1789-Present". United States Election Project. CQ Press.
  2. ^ "Voting Rights Act of 1965". HISTORY. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  3. ^ Azari, Julia (August 20, 2020). "Biden Had To Fight For The Presidential Nomination. But Most VPs Have To". FiveThirtyEight.


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