U.S. presidential election, 1972



         


Presidential Candidate Electoral Vote Popular Vote Pct Party Running Mate
(Electoral Votes)
Richard Milhous Nixon of California (W) 520 46,740,323 60.7% Republican Spiro Theodore Agnew of Maryland (520)
George Stanley McGovern of South Dakota 17 28,901,598 37.5% Democrat Robert Sargent Shriver of Maryland (17)
John G. Hospers of California 1 3,676 0.0% Libertarian Theodora Nathan of Oregon (1)
John G. Schmitz of California 0 1,099,482 1.4% American Thomas J. Anderson of Tennessee? (0)
Other 0 275,102 0.4%
Total 538 77,718,514 100.0%
Other elections: 1960, 1964, 1968, 1972, 1976, 1980, 1984


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Democratic Nomination

The Democratic Party was split between four major candidates, former United States Vice President Hubert Humphrey, South Dakota Senator George McGovern, Maine Senator Edmund Muskie, and Alabama Governor George Wallace. Other candidates included congresswoman Shirley Chisholm of New York (the first African-American woman to run for president), senator Scoop Jackson of Washington, senator Fred Harris of Oklahoma and John V. Lindsay, mayor of New York City and formerly a Republican.

The establishment-favorite for the nomination was 1968 Vice Presidential candidate, the moderate Ed Muskie, but he failed to live up to expectations in key primaries. The primary-voters were in large part anti-war. This favoured senator George McGovern. When favourite-son Muskie did worse than expected in the New Hampshire primary, his neighbouring state, and McGovern came in on a good second, McGovern got the momentum Muskie was supposed to have had. The good second-placing was put to good use by McGovern's effective campaign-manager, Gary Hart, a presidential contender himself 12 years later.

George Wallace did well in the South (he won every county in the Florida primary) and amongst alienated and dissatisfied voters with his 'outsider'-image. In 1968, the Alabama Governor had led a law and order campaign similar to that of Richard Nixon, taking a lot of votes away from Nixon, especially in the South. This lead Nixon to fear Wallace fronting a Democratic ticket in 1972. The president had supported the incumbent Governor of Alabama in the gubernatorial primaries against Wallace in 1970, as well as ordering IRS investigations of the Wallace campaign, to little effect. What could have become a forceful campaign was cut short when Wallace was gunned down while campaigning in Maryland. He would go on to win the Maryland primary, but that was the effective end of his campaign.

In the end, McGovern succeeded in winning the nomination by winning primaries through grass-roots support in spite of establishment opposition. McGovern had led a commission to redesign the Democratic nomination system after the messy and confused nomination struggle and convention of 1968. The fundamental principle of the McGovern Commission--that the Democratic primaries should determine the winner of the Democratic nomination--lasted throughout every subsequent nomination contest. McGovern chose Thomas Eagleton as a vice-presidential candidate, but Eagleton had difficulty campaigning and admitted receiving electroshock therapy for depression, and was eventually replaced by Sargent Shriver.

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Republican Nomination

Nixon, the incumbent president, was challenged in the GOP primaries by two congressmen from both sides of the political spectrum, the liberal Pete McCloskey of California and the conservative John Ashbrook of Ohio. McCloskey ran as an anti-war and anti-Nixon candidate, while Ashbrook opposed Nixon's détente policies towards China and the USSR. In the New Hampshire primary McCloskey's peace-platform garnered a surprising 20% to Nixon's 60%. Ashbrook got 10%. The outspoken McCloskey, one of a handful of antiwar Republicans in Congress, eventually snubbed the president by denying Nixon his coveted "nomination by acclamation" when the California congressman won the vote of exactly one delegate at the Republican National Convention, to Nixon's 1,347 delegates.

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Other Parties

Conservative congressman John G. Schmitz of the American Party was on the ballot in 32 states and received 1,099,482 popular votes.

John Hospers of the newly formed Libertarian Party was on the ballot only in Colorado and Washington and received only 3,673 popular votes. However, he was given one electoral vote by Republican elector Roger MacBride.

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General Election

George McGovern ran on a platform of ending the Vietnam War and instituting guaranteed minimum incomes for the nation's poor. Between difficulties with his running-mate, Thomas Eagleton (who he eventually dropped and replaced with Sargent Shriver), and the Republicans' successful campaign to paint him as unacceptably radical, he suffered a landslide defeat of 61%-38% to sitting President Richard Nixon. Nixon won a majority vote in 49 states, with only Massachusetts and the District of Columbia voting for the challenger, resulting in an even more lopsided Electoral College tally.

Nixon ran a harsh campaign with an aggressive policy of keeping tabs on perceived enemies, and his campaign aides committed the Watergate burglary to steal Democratic Party information during the election. Nixon's level of personal involvement with the burglary was never clear, but his tactics during the later coverup eventually destroyed his public support and led to his resignation.


This election had the lowest voter turnout for a presidential election since 1948, with only 55 percent of the electorate voting.

Spiro T. Agnew resigned as Vice-President October 10, 1973; he pleaded no contest to a charge that he had failed to report income from payoffs by Maryland businessmen and was fined $10,000. He was the second Vice-President of the United States to resign (after John C. Calhoun in 1832); he was succeeded by Gerald R. Ford, the first Vice President to be appointed without a national election.

Richard M. Nixon resigned as President August 9, 1974, under threat of impeachment, also over fallout from the Watergate burglary. He was succeeded by Gerald R. Ford, who appointed Nelson A. Rockefeller his Vice-President.

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Timeline

See also: President of the United States, U.S. presidential election, 1972, History of the United States (1964-1980)


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