United States presidential election, 1960
From Conservapedia
President Eisenhower was leaving office and his Vice President, Richard Nixon, decided to run for President. Without serious opposition, Nixon was able easily to win the Republican nomination. However the Democrats were divided between young Massachusetts Senator, John Kennedy, and Texan Senator, Lyndon B. Johnson. When Kennedy won the Democratic primary he offered Johnson the position as his running mate. Nixon and Kennedy both campaigned long and hard. Nixon had experience as the Vice President and was expected to win. Several things were in Kennedy's way, such as his youth and Catholicism. Kennedy was able to answer most of the complaints successfully. However what probably helped Kennedy the most were the live televised Presidential Debates. In the debates Kennedy looked confident and handsome, while Nixon looked pale and out of place. The election was still very close, but in the end Kennedy claimed the victory. [1]
Election Results[2]
| candidates | popular vote | electoral vote |
|---|---|---|
| John F. Kennedy | 34, 220, 984 [3] | 303 |
| Richard M. Nixon | 34, 108, 157 | 219 |
| Unpledged electors / Harry F. Byrd | 286, 359 | 15 [4] |
| Others | 216, 982 | 0 |
References
- ↑ Encyclopedia of Presidents, John F. Kennedy, by Zachary Kent, Children's Press, 1987, pp. 59-63.
- ↑ 1960 Presidential Election Results
- ↑ This number includes the total Democratic vote for Alabama, which state's slate of electors was by prearrangement split, with 5 pledged to Kennedy and 6 unpledged. (The unpledged electors ultimately voted for Harry Byrd.) If the Alabama votes are proportionally allocated between Kennedy and the unpledged slate, Kennedy receives fewer popular votes nationally than Nixon.
- ↑ Virginia Sen. Harry Byrd received the votes of 8 unpledged electors in Mississippi, 6 unpledged Democratic electors in Alabama, and one "faithless" Nixon elector in Oklahoma.
- ↑ A Pictoral History of the U.S. Presidents, by Clare Gibson, Gramercy Books, 2001, p. 125.
