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1968 Democratic Party presidential primaries

From March to July 1968, Democratic Party voters elected delegates to the 1968 Democratic National Convention for the purpose of selecting the party's nominee for President in the upcoming election. After an inconclusive and tumultuous campaign focused on the Vietnam War and marred by the June assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey was nominated at the 1968 Democratic National Convention held from August 26 to August 29, 1968, in Chicago, Illinois.

1968 Democratic Party presidential primaries

← 1964 March 12 to June 11, 1968 1972 →

2,607 delegates to the 1968 Democratic National Convention
1,304 (majority) votes needed to win
 
Candidate Hubert Humphrey Eugene McCarthy Robert F. Kennedy
Home state Minnesota Minnesota New York
Contests won 0 6 4
Popular vote 166,463 2,914,933 2,305,148
Percentage 2.2% 38.7% 30.6%

     Kennedy      Humphrey      Johnson      McCarthy      George Smathers      Stephen M. Young

Previous Democratic nominee

Lyndon B. Johnson

Democratic nominee

Hubert Humphrey

The campaign for the nomination began with incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson expected to win re-nomination for a second consecutive election, despite low approval ratings following the Tet Offensive in January 1968. His only significant challenger was Eugene McCarthy, an anti-war Senator from Minnesota. After McCarthy nearly won the New Hampshire primary, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, another critic of the war and the brother of the late President John F. Kennedy, entered the race. Johnson soon announced that he would not campaign for re-election. In April, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey joined the race as the establishment candidate; he did not criticize the administration's conduct of the war and avoided the popular contests for delegates.

McCarthy and Kennedy traded primary victories while Humphrey collected delegates through the closed caucus and convention systems in place in most states. Many other delegates were selected without a formal commitment to support any particular candidate. The race was upended on June 5, the night of the California and South Dakota primaries. Both races went for Kennedy, but he was assassinated after his victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel. At the moment of his assassination, Kennedy trailed Humphrey in the pledged delegate count with McCarthy third. Without any obligation to vote for any candidate, most Kennedy delegates backed Humphrey over McCarthy or fell behind Kennedy supporter George McGovern.

At the convention, Humphrey secured the nomination easily despite anti-war protests outside the convention center; he went on to lose the presidential election narrowly to Richard Nixon. Partly in reaction to Humphrey's victory without entering most state primaries, George McGovern led the McGovern–Fraser Commission, dramatically reforming the nomination process to expand the use of popular primaries rather than caucuses.

Background edit

1960 and 1964 presidential elections edit

In 1960, John F. Kennedy won the Democratic nomination over Lyndon B. Johnson. After he secured the nomination at the party convention, Kennedy offered Johnson the vice presidential nomination; the offer was a surprise, and some Kennedy supporters claimed that the nominee expected Johnson to decline. Robert F. Kennedy, the nominee's brother and campaign manager, reportedly went to Johnson's hotel suite to dissuade Johnson from accepting.[1] Johnson accepted, and the Kennedy-Johnson ticket was narrowly elected, but the 1960 campaign intensified the personal enmity between Robert F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, which dated to as early as 1953. President Kennedy named his brother to his cabinet as United States Attorney General.

President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963; Johnson succeeded him with tremendous national popularity amid a wave of mourning and sympathy. Robert Kennedy remained in the cabinet for several months, creating what Johnson staffers began to refer to as "the Bobby problem": despite the personal hatred between the two, Democratic voters overwhelmingly favored Kennedy as Johnson's running mate in the 1964 election.[2] Kennedy began to plan for a nationwide campaign,[3] and in the informal New Hampshire vice-presidential primary, Kennedy defeated Hubert H. Humphrey in a landslide.[4]

In July 1964, Johnson issued an official statement ruling out any cabinet member for the vice presidency.[5] In search of a way out of the dilemma, Kennedy asked speechwriter Milton Gwirtzman to write a memo comparing two offices: 1) governor of Massachusetts and 2) U.S. senator from New York, and "which would be a better place from which to make a run for the presidency in future years?"[6] In September, Kennedy resigned as attorney general, and ran for and won election to the U.S. Senate.[7] Johnson was elected in a landslide.

Vietnam War edit

United States involvement in the Vietnam War began shortly after the end of World War II. Beginning in 1964, President Johnson dramatically escalated American military presence after the Gulf of Tonkin incident. On the recommendation of General William C. Westmoreland, whom Johnson had appointed to command American troops in Vietnam, U.S. manpower in Southeast Asia expanded from 16,000 in 1964 to more than 553,000 by 1969.

As U.S. involvement escalated throughout 1964 to 1966, protests against the war escalated in proportion. Several anti-war groups were founded or expanded during the period.

1966 midterms and "Dump Johnson" movement edit

 
Anti-war Senator Eugene McCarthy agreed to challenge President Johnson in October 1967, after several better-known candidates (including Robert Kennedy) declined to run.

Amid criticism of U.S. handling of the war from both parties, President Johnson's approval rating sank from a high above 70 percent to below 40 percent by the 1966 midterm elections. The Democratic Party had already begun to split between anti-war "doves" and pro-war "hawks," and the Republican Party gained dozens of seats in Congress.

As opposition grew in 1967, anti-war Democrats led by Allard Lowenstein and Curtis Gans formed the Dump Johnson movement, which sought to challenge the President's re-election. Their first choice was Robert Kennedy, who had sufficiently established himself as a critic of the war and an effective popular campaigner. He declined, as did a series of lesser-known candidates, including Senator George McGovern. Lowenstein finally found a candidate in October 1967, when Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy agreed to challenge the President. At first, McCarthy merely expressed his interest, telling Lowenstein, "Somebody has to raise the flag."[8][9] On November 30, 1967, McCarthy publicly announced his campaign for the nomination.

Kennedy continued to demur, despite pressure from his aides to enter the race and worry that anti-war allies, like George McGovern, would begin to make commitments to McCarthy.[10] On January 30, he again indicated to the press that he had no plans to campaign against Johnson.[11]

In early February 1968, after the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, Kennedy received an anguished letter from writer Pete Hamill, noting that poor people in the Watts area of Los Angeles had hung pictures of Kennedy's brother, President John F. Kennedy, in their homes. Hamill's letter reminded Robert Kennedy that he had an "obligation of staying true to whatever it was that put those pictures on those walls."[12] There were other factors that influenced Kennedy's decision to enter the presidential primary race. On February 29, 1968, the Kerner Commission issued a report on the racial unrest that had affected American cities during the previous summer. The Kerner Commission blamed "white racism" for the violence, but its findings were largely dismissed by the Johnson administration.[12]

On March 10, Kennedy told his aide, Peter Edelman, that he had decided to run and had to "figure out how to get McCarthy out of it."[13][14] However, Kennedy hesitated to enter the race with McCarthy still in and agreed to McCarthy's request to delay an announcement of his intentions until after the New Hampshire primary.[13]

Candidates edit

The following political leaders were candidates for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination:

Nominee edit

Candidate Born Most recent office Home state Campaign

Withdrawal date

Popular vote Contests won Running mate
Hubert Humphrey   May 27, 1911
(age 57)
Wallace, South Dakota
Vice President of the United States
(1965–1969)
 
Minnesota
 
(Campaign)
Secured nomination: August 29, 1968
166,463
(2.2%)
0 Edmund Muskie

Other major candidates edit

These candidates participated in multiple state primaries or were included in multiple major national polls.

Candidate Born Most recent office Home state Campaign

Withdrawal date

Lyndon B. Johnson   August 27, 1908
(age 59)
Stonewall, Texas
President of the United States
(1963–1969)
 
Texas
(Campaign)
Declined: March 31, 1968
Robert F. Kennedy   November 20, 1925
(age 42)
Brookline, Massachusetts
U.S. Senator
from New York
(1965–1968)
 
New York
 
(Campaign)
Declared: March 16, 1968
Assassinated: June 5, 1968
Eugene McCarthy   March 29, 1916
(age 52)
Watkins, Minnesota
U.S. Senator
from Minnesota
(1959–1971)
 
Minnesota
 
(Campaign)
Declared: November 30, 1967
Defeated at convention: August 29, 1968
George McGovern   July 19, 1922
(age 45)
Avon, South Dakota
U.S. Senator
from South Dakota
(1963–1981)
 
South Dakota
(Campaign)
Announced: July 23, 1968[a]
Defeated at convention: August 29, 1968
  1. ^ McGovern entered the race following Robert Kennedy's assassination.
George McGovernEugene McCarthy 1968 presidential campaignRobert F. Kennedy 1968 presidential campaignHubert Humphrey 1968 presidential campaign

Favorite sons edit

The following candidates ran only in their home state or district's primary or caucuses for the purpose of controlling its delegate slate at the convention and did not appear to be considered national candidates by the media.

Declined to run edit

The following persons were listed in two or more major national polls or were the subject of media speculation surrounding their potential candidacy, but declined to actively seek the nomination.

Polling edit

Nationwide polling edit

Poll source Publication
Hubert Humphrey
Lyndon B. Johnson
Robert F. Kennedy
Eugene McCarthy
Gallup[15] Feb. 1966 5% 52% 27%
Gallup[15] Aug. 1966 6% 38% 40%
Gallup[15] Jan. 1967 8% 34% 43%
Gallup[15] Sep. 1967 6% 37% 39%
Newsweek[15] Jan. 7, 1968 74.3% 16.7%
Theodore H. White[15] Jan. 10, 1968 79% 12%
Newsweek[15] Jan. 21, 1968 73% 18%
U.S. News & World Report[15] Jan. 22, 1968 66.7% 24.3%
Newsweek[15] Jan. 28, 1968 80% 11%
New York Times/CBS[15] Feb. 1, 1968 71% 20%
Theodore H. White[15] Feb. 10, 1968 73% 18%
Newsweek[15] Feb. 25, 1968 76.7% 14.3%
U.S. News & World Report[15] Feb. 26, 1968 76.2% 14.8%
New York Times/CBS[15] Feb. 29, 1968 77% 14%
Newsweek[15] Mar. 3, 1968 69% 20%
U.S. News & World Report[15] Mar. 5, 1968 65% 30%
Theodore H. White[15] Mar. 10, 1968 65.5% 26.5%
March 12: New Hampshire primary
March 16: Robert F. Kennedy enters the race
New York Times/CBS[15] Mar. 21, 1968 50% 41%
U.S. News & World Report[15] Mar. 24, 1968 39% 52%
March 31: Johnson withdraws
New York Times/CBS[15] Apr. 4, 1968 12% 79%
Gallup[15] Apr. 9, 1968 31% 35% 23%
Gallup[15] Apr. 23, 1968 25% 28% 33%
April 27: Hubert Humphrey enters the race
Gallup[15] May 7, 1968 40% 31% 19%
June 5: Robert F. Kennedy is assassinated
Gallup[15] July 23, 1968 53% 39%

Campaign edit

March: New Hampshire, Kennedy enters, Johnson declines edit

Running as an antiwar candidate in the New Hampshire primary, McCarthy hoped to pressure the Democrats into publicly opposing the Vietnam War. Trailing badly in national polls and with little chance to influence delegate selection absent primary wins, McCarthy decided to pour most of his resources into New Hampshire, the first state to hold a primary election. He was boosted by thousands of young college students who volunteered throughout the state, who shaved their beards and cut their hair to "Get Clean for Gene."

On March 12, McCarthy was the only person on the ballot, as Johnson had not filed, and was only a write in candidate. McCarthy won 42% of the primary vote to Johnson's 50%, an extremely strong showing for such a challenger which gave McCarthy's campaign legitimacy and momentum.[16] In addition, McCarthy's superior coordination led to a near sweep of the state's twenty-four pledged delegates; since Johnson had no formal campaign organization in the state, a number of competing pro-Johnson delegate candidates split his vote, allowing McCarthy to take twenty delegates.

Despite his desire to oppose Johnson directly and the fear that McCarthy would split the anti-war vote, Kennedy pushed forward with his planned campaign. On March 16, Kennedy declared, "I am today announcing my candidacy for the presidency of the United States. I do not run for the presidency merely to oppose any man, but to propose new policies. I run because I am convinced that this country is on a perilous course and because I have such strong feelings about what must be done, and I feel that I'm obliged to do all I can."[17] However, due to his late entry, Kennedy's name would not appear on a state ballot until the Indiana primary on May 7.

 
President Lyndon B. Johnson delivers a speech announcing he will not run for re-election on March 31.

Johnson now had two strong challengers, sitting members of the Senate with demonstrated popularity. To make matters worse, polling in Wisconsin showed McCarthy beating Johnson badly, with the latter getting only 12% of the vote.[18] Facing declining health and bleak political forecasts in the upcoming primaries,[19] Johnson concluded that he could not win the nomination without a major political and personal struggle. On March 31, 1968, at the end of a televised address on Vietnam, he shocked the nation by announcing that he would not seek re-election. By withdrawing, he could avoid the stigma of defeat and could keep control of the party machinery to support Vice President Hubert Humphrey. As the year developed, it also became clear that Johnson believed he could secure his place in the history books by ending the war before the election in November, which would give Humphrey the boost he would need to win.[20][21][22]

April: McCarthy triumphant, Humphrey enters edit

After Johnson's withdrawal, Vice President Hubert Humphrey announced his candidacy on April 27.[23] Humphrey's campaign concentrated on winning the delegates in non-primary states, where party leaders controlled the delegate votes. Humphrey did not compete in the primaries, leaving favorite sons to win delegates as surrogates, notably Senator George A. Smathers from Florida, Senator Stephen M. Young from Ohio, and Indiana Governor Roger D. Branigin.

The Wisconsin primary on April 2 was effectively uncontested. McCarthy received 56% of the vote. Kennedy received 6% as a write-in candidate. Kennedy was ineligible for the ballot because he entered the race following the filing deadline.[24] The Pennsylvania primary on April 23 was similarly a rout for McCarthy, who took 71% of the vote.[25]

In the Massachusetts primary on April 30 neither Humphrey nor Kennedy were formally listed on the ballot. As a result, McCarthy won the popular vote easily, and by the rules in place at the time, all 72 of the commonwealth's delegates were pledged to him on the first ballot. Some analysts viewed Humphrey's unexpectedly strong showing (44,156 write-in votes, or 18% of the total) as a clear victory over Kennedy, a Brookline, Massachusetts native, who polled a meager 28% write-in vote in his family's home state.[26]

May: Kennedy momentum, McCarthy in Oregon edit

On March 27, 1968, Kennedy announced his intention to run against McCarthy in the Indiana primary, although aides told him that a race in Indiana would be extremely tight and advised him against it.[27] At the Indiana Statehouse, Kennedy told a cheering crowd that the state was important to his campaign: "If we can win in Indiana, we can win in every other state, and win when we go to the convention in August."[28] The Indiana primary thus marked the first open entry of Kennedy into the field and pitted him against McCarthy and Governor Roger Branigin, a favorite son who had backed Johnson and now impliedly supported Humphrey.

During his first campaign stop in Indiana, Kennedy delivered two of a trio notable speeches. First, on April 4, he spoke at Ball State University in Muncie. In this speech, Kennedy suggested the election would "determine the direction that the United States is going to move" and that the American people should "examine everything. Not take anything for granted." Kennedy expressed concerns about poverty and hunger, lawlessness and violence, jobs and economic development, and foreign policy. He emphasized that Americans had a "moral obligation" and should "make an honest effort to understand one another and move forward together." After leaving the stage at Ball State, Kennedy boarded a plane for Indianapolis. When he arrived, he was informed of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.[29] Addressing a crowd gathered for a political rally on the black north side of the city, Kennedy gave a heartfelt impromptu speech to the crowd, calling for peace and compassion.[30] The next day in Cleveland, he delivered prepared remarks entitled "On the Mindless Menace of Violence," elaborating the themes he had addressed in Indianapolis. After attending King's funeral in Atlanta, Kennedy resumed campaigning in Indiana on April 10.[31]

Branigan campaigned in nearly all of the state's 92 counties, while McCarthy's campaign strategy concentrated on Indiana's rural areas and small towns. According to Kennedy's campaign advisor, John Bartlow Martin, the campaign gained momentum with Kennedy's visits to central and southern Indiana on April 22 and 23, which included a memorable whistle-stop railroad trip aboard the Wabash Cannonball.[32] Martin urged the candidate to speak out against violence and rioting, emphasize his "law enforcement experience" as former U.S. Attorney General, and promote coordination between the government and private sector to solve domestic issues. Kennedy continued to speak out against the war and in support of the cessation of hostilities and reallocating war funds to domestic programs.[33] To appeal to conservative voters, Kennedy "toned down his rhetoric" as well.[34] McCarthy, meanwhile, contrasted his approach to conflict of "call[ing] upon everyone ... to be as fully responsible as [they] can be" against Humphrey's ("run[ning] things together indiscriminately") and Kennedy's (a "combination of separate interests ... or groups").[35]

On May 7, Kennedy won with 42 percent of the vote; Branigan was second with 31 percent of the vote; and McCarthy, earning 27 percent, came in third.[36][37] In response to the defeat, McCarthy remarked, "We've tested the enemy now, and we know his techniques ... we know his weaknesses."[38]

Campaigning vigorously in the Nebraska primary, Kennedy hoped for a major win to give him momentum going into the crucial California primary in June. While McCarthy made only one visit to Nebraska, Kennedy made numerous appearances.[39] Though Kennedy's advisors had been worried about his chances in Nebraska, given his lack of credibility on ranching and agriculture policy and the short amount of time to campaign in the state after the Indiana primary,[40] Kennedy won on May 14 with 51.4 percent of the vote to McCarthy's 31 percent.[39][41] Kennedy won 24 of the 25 counties that he visited ahead of the vote; of those, the sole county he lost by two votes was home to the University of Nebraska, where a plurality of students favored McCarthy.[42] Kennedy declared that the results, where two anti-war candidates collectively earned over 80 percent of the vote, were "a smashing repudiation" of the Johnson-Humphrey administration.[43]

A Newsweek delegate survey, taken after the Nebraska primary,[44] showed 1,280 delegates (1,312 delegates needed to win the nomination)[45] solid or leaning toward Humphrey, 714 leaning to Kennedy, and 280 favoring McCarthy.[46]

In contrast to Nebraska, the Oregon primary posed several challenges to Kennedy's campaign. His campaign organization, run by U.S. Congresswoman Edith Green, was not strong and his platform emphasizing poverty, hunger, and minority issues did not resonate with Oregon voters.[47][48] About Kennedy's calls for unity amongst Americans, Mills wrote that "As far as Oregonians were concerned, America had not fallen apart."[49] The Kennedy campaign circulated material on McCarthy's record; McCarthy had voted against a minimum wage law and repeal of the poll tax in the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The McCarthy campaign responded with charges that Kennedy illegally taped Martin Luther King, Jr. as United States Attorney General.[50] Ten days ahead of the vote, Kennedy admitted his message did not appeal well to Oregonians: "This state is like one giant suburb. I appeal best to people who have problems."[51] During a speech he gave in California, Kennedy also admitted, "I think that if I get beaten in any primary, I am not a very viable candidate," further raising the stakes in Oregon.[50] Following that comment, Kennedy campaigned for sixteen hours a day; in the weeks before the election, his campaign canvased 50,000 homes.[52]

On May 28, McCarthy won the Oregon primary with 44.7 percent; Kennedy received 38.8 percent of votes.[53] After Kennedy's loss was confirmed, he sent a terse congratulatory message to McCarthy but asserted that he would remain in the race.[54] According to Kennedy biographer Larry Tye, the defeat in Oregon proved to Kennedy that he needed to take risks and convinced voters that Kennedy was vulnerable to electoral defeat.[51][55] Observers remarked that McCarthy was "back in the race as a real contender."[56]

Meanwhile, in the Florida primary (also on May 28), a slate of Humphrey delegates led by favorite son George A. Smathers easily swept aside McCarthy, who managed only four delegates from two Miami congressional districts.[57] Humphrey also picked up 83 of the 125 delegates from Pennsylvania,[58] following an endorsement from Philadelphia Mayor James Tate,[59] and collected delegates from non-primary party caucuses and state conventions.[60] In April and May, Humphrey won the majority of delegates in Delaware, Alaska, Hawaii, Wyoming, Arizona, Maryland, Nevada, New Jersey, Missouri, Maine, and Vermont.[61] The other candidates criticized this tactic, and accused Humphrey of organizing a "bossed convention" against the wishes of the people.[62]

June 4: California, South Dakota, and New Jersey; Kennedy assassinated edit

 
Kennedy campaigning in Los Angeles (photo courtesy of John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum, Boston)

McCarthy and Kennedy vigorously campaigned throughout California in the beginning of June, with the latter announcing he would exit the race if he lost the state's primary. California's winner-take-all primary became crucial to both Kennedy and McCarthy's campaigns.[63] McCarthy stumped the state's many colleges and universities, where he was treated as a hero for being the first presidential candidate to oppose the war. Kennedy campaigned in the ghettos and barrios of the state's larger cities, where he was mobbed by enthusiastic supporters.[64] In the South Dakota primary, Kennedy also hoped to simultaneously pull off an upset victory over McCarthy and Humphrey, both from neighboring Minnesota (Humphrey was also a native of Wallace, South Dakota).[65]

On June 1, Kennedy and McCarthy met in a televised debate on ABC's "Issues and Answers",[66] which observers generally considered a draw.[67] "It was a conversation rather than a debate," said The New York Times, "and it demonstrated that the two rivals are in substantial agreement on every major issue."[68] Though Kennedy considered the debate "indecisive and disappointing," subsequent polling showed that undecided voters favored his performance by a margin of two-to-one.[69]

On June 3, Kennedy made a "final dash" through the state's major urban centers, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego; along with suburban Long Beach, in a single day.[70] As his motorcade moved slowly through cheering crowds in San Francisco's Chinatown, gun shots appeared to ring out. However, it was just the sound of celebratory firecrackers.[71] The campaign entourage and traveling press were all "scared to death," recalled Bill Eppridge, a Life magazine photographer in the car just ahead of the Kennedys.[72]

On June 4, Kennedy privately expressed his hope to Theodore H. White that victories in the California and South Dakota primaries could persuade party insiders that he was more electable than Humphrey and thus win him crucial support from unpledged delegates. Kennedy won the California primary with 46 percent of the vote to McCarthy's 42 percent.[73] Author Joseph Palermo referred to the victory as Kennedy's "greatest."[74] Kennedy also won the South Dakota primary, winning approximately 50 percent of the vote.[75]

McCarthy, who that same night defeated Kennedy in the New Jersey primary (with 36% of the write-in vote),[76] made it clear that he would contest the upcoming New York primary on June 18 in Kennedy's adopted state.[77]

Kennedy assassination edit

After giving his victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, Kennedy was assassinated in the kitchen service pantry in the early morning of June 5. Sirhan Sirhan, a 24-year-old Palestinian-born Jordanian, was arrested. Kennedy died 26 hours later at Good Samaritan Hospital.

At the moment of Kennedy's death, the delegate totals were estimated to be:[78]

  • Hubert Humphrey – 561
  • Robert F. Kennedy – 393
  • Eugene McCarthy – 258

Kennedy's death threw the Democratic Party into disarray. Shaken by the event, Humphrey took off two weeks from campaigning. He met with President Johnson, and the two talked about "everything"[79] during a three-hour meeting. The assassination all but guaranteed Humphrey the nomination. He commented that he "was doing everything I could to win the nomination ... but God knows I didn't want it that way."[80] A large number of Kennedy delegates switched to Humphrey, but he lost money from Republican donors concerned about a Kennedy nomination,[80] and popular opinion polls shifted in favor of Senator McCarthy.[81] In fact, Humphrey was booed before 50,000 people on June 19 at the Lincoln Memorial as he was introduced at a Solidarity March for civil rights.[82] He tried to defend his record against the liberal detractors,[83] but often encountered anti-war protesters and hostile crowds while campaigning.[62] At the end of June, Republican Senator Mark Hatfield of Oregon assessed the race, arguing that Humphrey would be the party's nominee for president but criticized him for being too closely aligned with Johnson's policies.[84]

Schedule and results edit

Statewide results by winner edit

Tablemaker's Note:[a]

Date Total pledged
delegates
Contest
and total popular vote
Delegates won and popular vote
Hubert
Humphrey
Eugene
McCarthy
Robert
Kennedy
Lyndon
Johnson
Favorite
Son(s)
Uncommitted Other(s)
March 12 0 (of 24) New Hampshire
Pres. Primary
[85]
55,464
- 23,263
(41.94%)
606 WI
(1.09%)
27,520 WI
(49.62%)
- - 4,075 [b]
(7.35%)
24 (of 24) New Hampshire
Del. Primary[85]
?
- 20 Del.
16,315
- 4 Del.
17,444
- - -
March 16 22 (of 22) Nevada
State Convention[86]
- - - - - 22 Del. -
March 28 28 (of 28) South Carolina
State Convention[87][88]
- - - - 28 Del. [c][d] - -
March 30 38 (of 38) Kansas
State Convention[89]
- - - - - 38 Del. -
April 2 60 (of 60) Wisconsin
Primary[90]
733,002
3,605 WI
(0.49%)
52 Del.
412,160
(56.23%)
46,507 WI
(6.35%)
8 Del.
253,696
(34.61%)
- 11,861
(1.62%)
5,173 WI[e]
(0.71%)
April 8 22 (of 22) Alaska
State Convention[91]
- - - - - 22 Del. -
April 20 19 (of 19) Arizona
State Convention[92]
- - - - - 19 Del. -
April 23 0 (of 130) Pennsylvania
Pres. Primary
599,966
51,998 WI
(8.67%)
428,891
(71.49%)
65,430 WI
(10.91%)
21,265 WI
(3.54%)
- - 32,382 [f]
(5.40%)
130[g] (of 130) Pennsylvania
Del. Primary[93]
- 18 Del. 1.5 Del. - - 110.5 Del. [h] -
April 29 49 (of 49) Maryland
State Convention[94]
- - - - - 49 Del. -
April 30 72 (of 72) Massachusetts
Primary[95]
248,903
44,156 WI
(17.74%)
72 Del.
122,697
(49.30%)
68,604 WI
(27.56%)
6,890 WI
(2.77%)
- - 6,556 [i]
(2.63%)
May 7 32 (of 32) Alabama
Del. Primary[96][97]
- - - - - 32 Del. 0 Del. [j]
63 (of 63) Indiana
Primary[98]
776,513
- 209,695
(27.01%)
59 Del. [k]
328,118
(42.26%)
- 4 Del. [l]
238,700
(30.74%)
- -
115 (of 115) Ohio
Primary[99]
549,140
- 3 Del. - - 112 Del.[m]
549,140
(100.00%)
- -
23 (of 23) Washington D.C.
Primary[100]
92,114
34,559
(37.52%)
- 23 Del.
57,555
(62.48%)
- - - -
May 11 22 (of 22) Delaware
State Convention[101]
16 Del. - 6 Del. - - - -
9 (of 52) Minnesota
7th and 8th
District Conventions[102]
9 Del. - - - - - -
22 (of 22) Wyoming
State Convention[103]
- - - - - 22 Del. -
May 12 26 (of 26) Hawaii
State Convention[104]
- - - - - 26 Del. -
May 14 0 (of 30) Nebraska
Pres. Primary[105]
162,611
12,087 WI
(7.43%)
50,655
(31.15%)
84,102
(51.72%)
9,187
(5.65%)
- - 6,580 WI[n]
(4.04%)
28 (of 30) Nebraska
Del. Primary[105]
1 Del. 3 Del. 20 Del. - - 4 Del. -
36 (of 38) West Virginia
Del. Primary[106]
- - - - - 36 Del. [o] -
May 16 43 (of 43) Georgia
State Convention[107]
- - - - - 43 Del. -
May 18 27 (of 27) Maine
State Convention[108]
- - - - 27 Del. [p] - -
May 25 6 (of 35) Colorado
1st District Convention[109]
- 3 Del. 3 Del. - - - -
46 (of 46) Iowa
State Convention[110]
9.5 Del. 5 Del. 25 Del. - - 6.5 Del. -
13.5 (of 52) Minnesota
3rd, 4th and 5th
District Conventions[111]
- 13.5 Del. - - - - -
22 (of 22) Vermont
State Convention[112]
996
10 Del.
399
(40.06%)
5 Del.
270
(27.11%)
7 Del.
327
(32.83%)
- - - -
May 26 13.5 (of 52) Minnesota
1st, 2nd and 6th
District Conventions[111]
13.5 Del. - - - - - -
May 28 61 (of 63) Florida
Primary[113]
512,357
- 4 Del.
147,216
(28.73%)
- - 57 Del. [q]
236,242
(46.11%)
128,899 [r]
(25.16%)
-
35 (of 35) Oregon
Primary[114]
373,070
12,421 WI
(3.33%)
35 Del.
163,990
(43.96%)
141,631
(37.96%)
45,174
(12.11%)
- - 9,854 WI[s]
(2.64%)
27 (of 27) Rhode Island
State Committee[115]
- - - - - 27 Del. -
June 1 60 (of 60) Missouri
State Convention[116]
- - - - - 60 Del. -
June 2 96 (of 96) Michigan
State Convention[117]
- - - - - 96 Del. -
June 4 172 (of 174) California
Primary[118]
3,181,753
- 1,329,301
(41.78%)
172 Del.
1,472,166
(46.27%)
- - 380,286 [t]
(11.95%)
-
0 (of 82) New Jersey
Pres. Primary[119]
27,446
5,578 WI
(20.32%)
9,906 WI
(36.09%)
8,603 WI
(31.35%)
380 WI
(1.39%)
- - 2,979 [u]
(10.85%)
80 (of 82) New Jersey
Del. Primary[119][120]
- 20 Del. - - 60 Del. [v] - -
24 (of 24) South Dakota
Primary[121]
64,287
- 13,145
(20.45%)
24 Del.
31,826
(49.51%)
19,316
(30.05%)
- - -
June 6 59 (of 59) North Carolina
State Convention[122]
- - - - 59 Del. [w] - -
June 11 0 (of 118) Illinois
Pres. Primary
12,038
2,059 WI
(17.10%)
4,646 WI
(38.59%)
- 162 WI
(1.35%)
- - 5,171 [x]
(42.96%)
48 (of 118) Illinois
Del. Primary[123]
- 2 Del. - - - 46 Del. -
104 (of 104) Texas
State Convention[124]
- - - - 104 Del. [y] - -
June 12 5 (of 5) Panama Canal Zone
Territorial Convention[125]
- - - - - 5 Del. -
June 14 36 (of 36) Louisiana
State Convention[126]
- - - - 36 Del. [z] - -
June 15 25 (of 25) Idaho
State Convention[127]
- - - - - 25 Del. -
26 (of 26) Montana
State Convention[128]
24 Del. 2 Del. - - - - -
June 17 6 (of 35) Colorado
2nd District Convention[129]
- 5 Del. - - - 1 Del. [aa] -
June 18 123 (of 190) New York
Del. Primary[130][131]
19 Del. 62 Del. - - - 42 Del. [ab] -
June 22 44 (of 44) Connecticut
State Convention[132]
- 0 Del. [ac] - - - 44 Del. -
13.5 (of 52) Minnesota
State Convention[133]
14 Del. - - - - - -
June 27 33 (of 33) Arkansas
State Committee[134]
- - - - - 33 Del. -
June 28 68 (of 118) Illinois
State Convention[135]
- - - - - 68 Del. -
65 (of 190) New York
State Committee[131]
- 15.5 Del. - - - 49.5 Del. -
51 (of 51) Tennessee
State Convention[136]
- - - - 51 Del. [ad] - -
June 29 26 (of 26) New Mexico
State Convention[137]
15 Del. 11 Del. - - - - -
25 (of 25) North Dakota
State Convention[138]
17 Del. 7 Del. - - - 1 Del. -
41 (of 41) Oklahoma
State Convention[139]
37 Del. 2.7 Del. - - - 1.3 Del. -
July 2 24 (of 24) Mississippi
State Convention[140]
- - - - - 24 Del. [ae] -
July 6 6 (of 35) Colorado
3rd District Convention[141]
3 Del. 2 Del. - - - 1 Del. [af] -
July 13 6 (of 35) Colorado
State Convention[142]
- 2 Del. - - - 4 Del. [ag] -
6 (of 35) Colorado
4th District Convention[143]
6 Del. - - - - - -
47 (of 47) Washington
State Convention[144]
32.5 Del. 9.5 Del. - - - 5 Del. -
July 27 46 (of 46) Kentucky
State Convention[145]
41 Del. 5 Del. - - - - -
26 (of 26) Utah
State Convention[146]
20 Del. - - - - 6 Del. [ah] -
63 (of 63) Virginia
State Convention[147]
- - - - 63 Del. [ai] - -
Total
2,622 pledged delegates
7,356,838 votes
258
166,463
(2.26%)
379.2
2,915,565
(39.63%)
340.5
2,273,322
(30.90%)
12
383,590
(5.21%)
601
1,024,082
(13.92%)
968.8
521,046
(7.08%)
0
72,770
(0.99%)
Suspected Delegate Count
June 5, 1968
[148]
561.5
(21.41%)
255
(9.73%)
393.5
(15.01%)
- 310
(11.82%)
99
(3.78%)
2[aj]
(0.08%)
Suspected Delegate Count
August 27, 1968
[149]
1,159.5
(44.22%)
487.5
(18.59%)
- - 179.5
(6.85%)
727
(27.73%)
51.5[ak]
(1.96%)
  1. ^ This should not be taken as a finalized list of results. While a significant amount of research was done, there were a number of Delegates who were not bound by the instruction, or "Pledged" to a candidate, and to simplify the data these delegates were considered "Uncommitted". Many states also held primaries for the delegate positions, and these on occasion were where slates or candidates pledged to a certain candidate might be elected; however, as these elections allowed for a single person to vote for multiple candidates, as many as the number of positions being filled, it is difficult to determine how many people actually voted in these primaries. For this reason, while such results may be found, they are not included in the popular vote summaries at the bottom of the table.
  2. ^ Includes 2,532 Write-In votes for Richard Nixon at (4.57%), 506 Write-In votes for Paul C. Fisher at (0.91%), 249 votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at (0.45%), 201 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (0.36%), and 186 votes for John G. Crommelin at (0.34%).
  3. ^ Committed to Governor Robert McNair of South Carolina.
  4. ^ Initially uncommitted, the delegates met and decided to commit themselves to Governor McNair in April, following President Johnson's withdrawal from the race.
  5. ^ Includes 4,031 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (0.55%).
  6. ^ Includes 24,147 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (4.03%), 3,434 Write-In votes for Richard Nixon at (0.57%), 1,897 Write-In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at (0.32%), 327 Write-In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at (0.06%), and 21 Write-In votes for Governor Raymond Shafer at (0.00%).
  7. ^ Includes 49 delegate votes that were not apportioned this day.
  8. ^ Only 61.5 of the delegate votes were elected in the delegate primary; 49 of the delegate votes were amongst appointed delegates who had been chosen at another date. However, it is not currently known when this was.
  9. ^ Includes 2,275 Write-In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at (0.91%), 1,688 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (0.68%), and 575 Write-In votes for Richard Nixon at (0.23%).
  10. ^ More than half of the delegation was initially committed to supporting George Wallace; some backed down once Wallace made it clear he did not want to be nominated at the Democratic Convention, but there remained a significant cadre who wished to do so. Those remaining Wallace delegates however were later stripped of their right to sit as delegates given they refused to sign a pledge declaring their support for the Democratic nominee for President.
  11. ^ This represents the minimum number of delegates Kennedy could have earned based on his performance; the delegates themselves and their apportionment were not to be decided until Mid-June, some time after Kennedy's assassination.
  12. ^ Committed to Governor Roger Branigin of Indiana.
  13. ^ Committed to Senator Stephen Young of Ohio.
  14. ^ Includes 2,731 Write-In votes for Richard Nixon at (1.68%), 1,905 Write-In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at (1.17%), 1,298 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (0.80%), and 509 Write-In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at (0.31%).
  15. ^ While some delegates mentioned their candidate of choice, by state law the delegates were uncommitted.
  16. ^ Committed to Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine.
  17. ^ Committed to Senator George Smathers of Florida.
  18. ^ Represents an Uncommitted slate lead by State Senator Scott Kelly of Lakeland which said it would support either Robert Kennedy or George Wallace.
  19. ^ Includes 3,082 Write-In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at (0.83%), 2,974 Write-In votes for Richard Nixon at (0.80%), 2,841 Write-In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at (0.76%), and 957 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (0.26%).
  20. ^ Votes for an Uncommitted slate headed by State Attorney General Thomas Lynch.
  21. ^ Includes 1,399 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (5.10%), 1,364 Write-In votes for Richard Nixon at (4.97%), 176 Write-In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at (0.64%), and 40 Write-In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at (0.15%).
  22. ^ Committed to Governor Richard Hughes of New Jersey.
  23. ^ Committed to Governor Dan Moore of North Carolina.
  24. ^ Includes 4,052 Write-In votes for Senator Edward Kennedy at (33.66%), and 768 Write-In votes for George Wallace at (6.38%).
  25. ^ Committed to Governor John Connally of Texas.
  26. ^ Committed to Governor John McKeithen of Louisiana.
  27. ^ This delegate was formally for Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination.
  28. ^ 30 of these delegates were committed to Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination.
  29. ^ 9 delegates had initially been apportioned to McCarthy, but after the McCarthyites walked out because of the Conventions refusal to name a 10th McCarthy delegates, all 9 slots were filled with Uncommitted delegates.
  30. ^ Committed to Governor Buford Ellington of Tennessee.
  31. ^ "Regulars" and "Loyalists" named opposing delegations to the National Convention, with the Loyalists being seated. Neither delegation was committed.
  32. ^ This delegate was formally for Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination.
  33. ^ These delegates were formally for Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination.
  34. ^ Four of the delegates were formally supporters of Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination.
  35. ^ Committed to Governor Mills Godwin of Virginia.
  36. ^ Supporting George Wallace of Alabama.
  37. ^ Supporting Senator George McGovern of South McGovern.

Total popular vote:[150]

Johnson/Humphrey surrogates:

Minor candidates and write-ins:

  

Primary Map By County (Massachusetts not Included) Hubert Humphrey – Red Lyndon B. Johnson – Yellow (outside of Florida) Robert F. Kennedy – Purple Eugene McCarthy – Green George Wallace – Lime Green Roger D. Branigin – Orange George Smathers – Yellow (Florida Only) Stephen Young – Brown

Democratic Convention and antiwar protests edit

When the 1968 Democratic National Convention opened in Chicago, thousands of young antiwar activists from around the nation gathered in the city to protest the Vietnam War. In a clash covered on live television, Americans were shocked to see Chicago Police officers brutally beating antiwar protesters. While the protesters chanted "the whole world is watching," the police used clubs and tear gas to beat back the protesters, leaving many of them bloody and dazed. The tear gas even wafted into numerous hotel suites. In one of them, Humphrey was watching the proceedings on television. Meanwhile, the convention itself was marred by the strong-armed tactics of Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, who was seen on television angrily cursing Connecticut Senator Abraham Ribicoff, who had made a speech at the convention denouncing the excesses of the Chicago police in the riots.

In the end, the nomination itself was anticlimactic, with Humphrey handily beating McCarthy and McGovern on the first ballot. The convention then chose Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine as Humphrey's running mate. However, the tragedy of the antiwar riots crippled the Humphrey campaign from the start, and it never fully recovered. (White, pp. 377–378;[151])

The Final Ballot
Presidential tally Vice Presidential tally:
Hubert Humphrey 1759.25 Edmund S. Muskie 1942.5
Eugene McCarthy 601 Not Voting 604.25
George S. McGovern 146.5 Julian Bond[152] 48.5
Channing Phillips 67.5 David Hoeh 4
Daniel K. Moore 17.5 Edward M. Kennedy 3.5
Edward M. Kennedy 12.75 Eugene McCarthy 3.0
Paul E. "Bear" Bryant 1.5 Others 16.25
James H. Gray 0.5
George Wallace 0.5

Source: Keating Holland, "All the Votes... Really," CNN[153]

Endorsements edit

Hubert Humphrey

Robert F. Kennedy

Eugene McCarthy

George McGovern (during convention)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nash, Knowlton (1984). History on the Run: The Trenchcoat Memoirs of a Foreign Correspondent. Toronto, Canada: McClelland & Stewart. pp. 103–104. ISBN 0-7710-6700-3.
  2. ^ Donaldson, Gary (2003). Liberalism's Last Hurrah: The Presidential Campaign of 1964. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. p. 103. ISBN 0-7656-1119-8.
  3. ^ Bohrer, John R. (May 24, 2017). "Robert Kennedy's Secret Campaign to Become Lyndon Johnson's Vice President". Daily Beast. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  4. ^ Donaldson, Gary (2003). Liberalism's Last Hurrah: The Presidential Campaign of 1964. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0-7656-1119-8.
  5. ^ Sabato, Larry J. (2014). The Kennedy Half-Century: The Presidency, Assassination, and Lasting Legacy of John F. Kennedy. Bloomsbury USA. pp. 269–271. ISBN 978-1620402825.
  6. ^ Shesol, Jeff (1998). Mutual Contempt: Lyndon Johnson, Robert Kennedy, and the Feud that Defined a Decade. W. W. Norton. p. 179.
  7. ^ Thomas 2000, p. 297.
  8. ^ Gould, Lewis L. 1968: The Election That Changed America (Chicago 1993), pp. 20–21.
  9. ^ Sandbrook, Dominic (2007-12-18). Eugene McCarthy: The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 188. ISBN 978-0-307-42577-5.
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  11. ^ Thomas 2000, p. 357.
  12. ^ a b Thomas, p. 357.
  13. ^ a b Clark, Thurston (June 2008). . Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on 2014-12-20. Retrieved 31 Dec 2022. Excerpt from The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and the 82 Days that Inspired America (New York, Henry Holt, 2008) by Thurston Clark.
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  86. ^ "NEVADA DEMOCRATS ELECT PRO-JOHNSON DELEGATION TO CONVENTION". The Reno Gazette-Journal. Reno, Nevada. March 18, 1968. Retrieved October 10, 2023.
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  88. ^ "CAROLINA DELEGATES GIVEN TO GOV. M'NAIR". The New York Times. New York, New York. April 11, 1968. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
  89. ^ "KANSAS SKIRMISH WON BY KENNEDY". The New York Times. New York, New York. March 31, 1968. Retrieved October 6, 2023.
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  132. ^ "200 M'CARTHY MEN BOLT IN HARTFORD". The New York Times. New York, New York. June 23, 1968. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
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  147. ^ "MODERATES, LIBERALS SCORE AT STATE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION". The Danville Register and Bee. Danville, Virginia. July 28, 1968. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
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  157. ^ The Rise of a Prairie Statesman: The Life and Times of George McGovern, p. 405

Sources cited edit

  • Boomhower, Ray E. (2008). Robert F. Kennedy and the 1968 Indiana Primary. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253350893.
  • Clarke, Thurston (2008). The Last Campaign: Robert F. Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America. Henry Holt and Co. ISBN 978-0805077926.
  • Dallek, Robert (16 April 1998). Flawed Giant: Lyndon Johnson and His Times, 1961-1973. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-982670-4.
  • Gould, Lewis L. (1993). 1968: The Election that Changed America. Ivan R. Dee. ISBN 978-1-56663-010-8.
  • Mills, Judie (1998). Robert Kennedy. Millbrook Press. ISBN 978-1562942502.
  • Schlesinger, Arthur M. (1978). Robert Kennedy and His Times. Vol. 2 (book club ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Thomas, Evan (2000). Robert F. Kennedy: His Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0684834801.
  • Woods, Randall (1 August 2006). LBJ: Architect of American Ambition. Free Press. ISBN 978-0-684-83458-0.

Further reading edit

  • Alterman, Eric. The Cause: The Fight for American Liberalism from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama (Penguin, 2013).
  • Boomhower, Ray E. (2020). "Fighting the Good Fight: John Bartlow Martin and Hubert Humphrey's 1968 Presidential Campaign". Indiana Magazine of History. Vol. 116, no. 1. pp. 1–29.
  • Chester, Lewis, Hodgson, Godfrey, Page, Bruce. An American Melodrama: The Presidential Campaign of 1968. (The Viking Press, 1969).
  • Johns, Andrew L. The Price of Loyalty: Hubert Humphrey's Vietnam Conflict (Rowman & Littlefield, 2020).
  • Nelson, Justin A. "Drafting Lyndon Johnson: The President's Secret Role in the 1968 Democratic Convention." Presidential Studies Quarterly 30.4 (2000): 688-713.
  • Nelson, Michael. "The Historical Presidency: Lost Confidence: The Democratic Party, the Vietnam War, and the 1968 Election." Presidential Studies Quarterly 48.3 (2018): 570-585.
  • Sandbrook, Dominic (2007). Eugene McCarthy: The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism. ISBN 9780307425775.
  • Small, Melvin. "The Doves Ascendant: The American Antiwar Movement in 1968." South Central Review 16 (1999): 43-52 online.
  • Solberg, Carl. Hubert Humphrey: A Biography. (Norton, 1984).
  • White, Theodore H. The Making of the President 1968. (1969)

1968, democratic, party, presidential, primaries, from, march, july, 1968, democratic, party, voters, elected, delegates, 1968, democratic, national, convention, purpose, selecting, party, nominee, president, upcoming, election, after, inconclusive, tumultuous. From March to July 1968 Democratic Party voters elected delegates to the 1968 Democratic National Convention for the purpose of selecting the party s nominee for President in the upcoming election After an inconclusive and tumultuous campaign focused on the Vietnam War and marred by the June assassination of Robert F Kennedy incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey was nominated at the 1968 Democratic National Convention held from August 26 to August 29 1968 in Chicago Illinois 1968 Democratic Party presidential primaries 1964 March 12 to June 11 1968 1972 2 607 delegates to the 1968 Democratic National Convention1 304 majority votes needed to win Candidate Hubert Humphrey Eugene McCarthy Robert F Kennedy Home state Minnesota Minnesota New YorkContests won 0 6 4Popular vote 166 463 2 914 933 2 305 148Percentage 2 2 38 7 30 6 Results by popular voteResults by convention roll call Kennedy Humphrey Johnson McCarthy George Smathers Stephen M YoungPrevious Democratic nomineeLyndon B Johnson Democratic nominee Hubert HumphreyThe campaign for the nomination began with incumbent President Lyndon B Johnson expected to win re nomination for a second consecutive election despite low approval ratings following the Tet Offensive in January 1968 His only significant challenger was Eugene McCarthy an anti war Senator from Minnesota After McCarthy nearly won the New Hampshire primary Senator Robert F Kennedy another critic of the war and the brother of the late President John F Kennedy entered the race Johnson soon announced that he would not campaign for re election In April Vice President Hubert H Humphrey joined the race as the establishment candidate he did not criticize the administration s conduct of the war and avoided the popular contests for delegates McCarthy and Kennedy traded primary victories while Humphrey collected delegates through the closed caucus and convention systems in place in most states Many other delegates were selected without a formal commitment to support any particular candidate The race was upended on June 5 the night of the California and South Dakota primaries Both races went for Kennedy but he was assassinated after his victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel At the moment of his assassination Kennedy trailed Humphrey in the pledged delegate count with McCarthy third Without any obligation to vote for any candidate most Kennedy delegates backed Humphrey over McCarthy or fell behind Kennedy supporter George McGovern At the convention Humphrey secured the nomination easily despite anti war protests outside the convention center he went on to lose the presidential election narrowly to Richard Nixon Partly in reaction to Humphrey s victory without entering most state primaries George McGovern led the McGovern Fraser Commission dramatically reforming the nomination process to expand the use of popular primaries rather than caucuses Contents 1 Background 1 1 1960 and 1964 presidential elections 1 2 Vietnam War 1 3 1966 midterms and Dump Johnson movement 2 Candidates 2 1 Nominee 2 2 Other major candidates 2 3 Favorite sons 2 4 Declined to run 3 Polling 3 1 Nationwide polling 4 Campaign 4 1 March New Hampshire Kennedy enters Johnson declines 4 2 April McCarthy triumphant Humphrey enters 4 3 May Kennedy momentum McCarthy in Oregon 4 4 June 4 California South Dakota and New Jersey Kennedy assassinated 4 4 1 Kennedy assassination 5 Schedule and results 5 1 Statewide results by winner 6 Democratic Convention and antiwar protests 6 1 Endorsements 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources cited 9 Further readingBackground edit1960 and 1964 presidential elections edit In 1960 John F Kennedy won the Democratic nomination over Lyndon B Johnson After he secured the nomination at the party convention Kennedy offered Johnson the vice presidential nomination the offer was a surprise and some Kennedy supporters claimed that the nominee expected Johnson to decline Robert F Kennedy the nominee s brother and campaign manager reportedly went to Johnson s hotel suite to dissuade Johnson from accepting 1 Johnson accepted and the Kennedy Johnson ticket was narrowly elected but the 1960 campaign intensified the personal enmity between Robert F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson which dated to as early as 1953 President Kennedy named his brother to his cabinet as United States Attorney General President Kennedy was assassinated on November 22 1963 Johnson succeeded him with tremendous national popularity amid a wave of mourning and sympathy Robert Kennedy remained in the cabinet for several months creating what Johnson staffers began to refer to as the Bobby problem despite the personal hatred between the two Democratic voters overwhelmingly favored Kennedy as Johnson s running mate in the 1964 election 2 Kennedy began to plan for a nationwide campaign 3 and in the informal New Hampshire vice presidential primary Kennedy defeated Hubert H Humphrey in a landslide 4 In July 1964 Johnson issued an official statement ruling out any cabinet member for the vice presidency 5 In search of a way out of the dilemma Kennedy asked speechwriter Milton Gwirtzman to write a memo comparing two offices 1 governor of Massachusetts and 2 U S senator from New York and which would be a better place from which to make a run for the presidency in future years 6 In September Kennedy resigned as attorney general and ran for and won election to the U S Senate 7 Johnson was elected in a landslide Vietnam War edit See also United States in the Vietnam War and List of protests against the Vietnam War United States involvement in the Vietnam War began shortly after the end of World War II Beginning in 1964 President Johnson dramatically escalated American military presence after the Gulf of Tonkin incident On the recommendation of General William C Westmoreland whom Johnson had appointed to command American troops in Vietnam U S manpower in Southeast Asia expanded from 16 000 in 1964 to more than 553 000 by 1969 As U S involvement escalated throughout 1964 to 1966 protests against the war escalated in proportion Several anti war groups were founded or expanded during the period 1966 midterms and Dump Johnson movement edit nbsp Anti war Senator Eugene McCarthy agreed to challenge President Johnson in October 1967 after several better known candidates including Robert Kennedy declined to run Amid criticism of U S handling of the war from both parties President Johnson s approval rating sank from a high above 70 percent to below 40 percent by the 1966 midterm elections The Democratic Party had already begun to split between anti war doves and pro war hawks and the Republican Party gained dozens of seats in Congress As opposition grew in 1967 anti war Democrats led by Allard Lowenstein and Curtis Gans formed the Dump Johnson movement which sought to challenge the President s re election Their first choice was Robert Kennedy who had sufficiently established himself as a critic of the war and an effective popular campaigner He declined as did a series of lesser known candidates including Senator George McGovern Lowenstein finally found a candidate in October 1967 when Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy agreed to challenge the President At first McCarthy merely expressed his interest telling Lowenstein Somebody has to raise the flag 8 9 On November 30 1967 McCarthy publicly announced his campaign for the nomination Kennedy continued to demur despite pressure from his aides to enter the race and worry that anti war allies like George McGovern would begin to make commitments to McCarthy 10 On January 30 he again indicated to the press that he had no plans to campaign against Johnson 11 In early February 1968 after the Tet Offensive in Vietnam Kennedy received an anguished letter from writer Pete Hamill noting that poor people in the Watts area of Los Angeles had hung pictures of Kennedy s brother President John F Kennedy in their homes Hamill s letter reminded Robert Kennedy that he had an obligation of staying true to whatever it was that put those pictures on those walls 12 There were other factors that influenced Kennedy s decision to enter the presidential primary race On February 29 1968 the Kerner Commission issued a report on the racial unrest that had affected American cities during the previous summer The Kerner Commission blamed white racism for the violence but its findings were largely dismissed by the Johnson administration 12 On March 10 Kennedy told his aide Peter Edelman that he had decided to run and had to figure out how to get McCarthy out of it 13 14 However Kennedy hesitated to enter the race with McCarthy still in and agreed to McCarthy s request to delay an announcement of his intentions until after the New Hampshire primary 13 Candidates editThe following political leaders were candidates for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination Nominee edit Candidate Born Most recent office Home state Campaign Withdrawal date Popular vote Contests won Running mateHubert Humphrey nbsp May 27 1911 age 57 Wallace South Dakota Vice President of the United States 1965 1969 nbsp Minnesota nbsp Campaign Secured nomination August 29 1968 166 463 2 2 0 Edmund MuskieOther major candidates edit These candidates participated in multiple state primaries or were included in multiple major national polls Candidate Born Most recent office Home state Campaign Withdrawal dateLyndon B Johnson nbsp August 27 1908 age 59 Stonewall Texas President of the United States 1963 1969 nbsp Texas Campaign Declined March 31 1968Robert F Kennedy nbsp November 20 1925 age 42 Brookline Massachusetts U S Senatorfrom New York 1965 1968 nbsp New York nbsp Campaign Declared March 16 1968Assassinated June 5 1968Eugene McCarthy nbsp March 29 1916 age 52 Watkins Minnesota U S Senatorfrom Minnesota 1959 1971 nbsp Minnesota nbsp Campaign Declared November 30 1967Defeated at convention August 29 1968George McGovern nbsp July 19 1922 age 45 Avon South Dakota U S Senatorfrom South Dakota 1963 1981 nbsp South Dakota Campaign Announced July 23 1968 a Defeated at convention August 29 1968 McGovern entered the race following Robert Kennedy s assassination Favorite sons edit Further information Favorite son The following candidates ran only in their home state or district s primary or caucuses for the purpose of controlling its delegate slate at the convention and did not appear to be considered national candidates by the media Governor Roger D Branigin of Indiana endorsed Humphrey Governor Richard J Hughes of New Jersey endorsed Humphrey State Attorney General Thomas C Lynch of California endorsed Humphrey Governor Robert Evander McNair of South Carolina Governor Dan Moore of North Carolina Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine Representative Joseph Resnick of Westchester County New York Senator George Smathers of Florida endorsed Humphrey Senator Stephen M Young of Ohio endorsed Humphrey Declined to run edit The following persons were listed in two or more major national polls or were the subject of media speculation surrounding their potential candidacy but declined to actively seek the nomination Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts Former Governor George Wallace of Alabama ran third party campaign Polling editGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Nationwide polling edit Poll source Publication Hubert Humphrey Lyndon B Johnson Robert F Kennedy Eugene McCarthyGallup 15 Feb 1966 5 52 27 Gallup 15 Aug 1966 6 38 40 Gallup 15 Jan 1967 8 34 43 Gallup 15 Sep 1967 6 37 39 Newsweek 15 Jan 7 1968 74 3 16 7 Theodore H White 15 Jan 10 1968 79 12 Newsweek 15 Jan 21 1968 73 18 U S News amp World Report 15 Jan 22 1968 66 7 24 3 Newsweek 15 Jan 28 1968 80 11 New York Times CBS 15 Feb 1 1968 71 20 Theodore H White 15 Feb 10 1968 73 18 Newsweek 15 Feb 25 1968 76 7 14 3 U S News amp World Report 15 Feb 26 1968 76 2 14 8 New York Times CBS 15 Feb 29 1968 77 14 Newsweek 15 Mar 3 1968 69 20 U S News amp World Report 15 Mar 5 1968 65 30 Theodore H White 15 Mar 10 1968 65 5 26 5 March 12 New Hampshire primaryMarch 16 Robert F Kennedy enters the raceNew York Times CBS 15 Mar 21 1968 50 41 U S News amp World Report 15 Mar 24 1968 39 52 March 31 Johnson withdrawsNew York Times CBS 15 Apr 4 1968 12 79 Gallup 15 Apr 9 1968 31 35 23 Gallup 15 Apr 23 1968 25 28 33 April 27 Hubert Humphrey enters the raceGallup 15 May 7 1968 40 31 19 June 5 Robert F Kennedy is assassinatedGallup 15 July 23 1968 53 39 Campaign editMarch New Hampshire Kennedy enters Johnson declines edit Running as an antiwar candidate in the New Hampshire primary McCarthy hoped to pressure the Democrats into publicly opposing the Vietnam War Trailing badly in national polls and with little chance to influence delegate selection absent primary wins McCarthy decided to pour most of his resources into New Hampshire the first state to hold a primary election He was boosted by thousands of young college students who volunteered throughout the state who shaved their beards and cut their hair to Get Clean for Gene On March 12 McCarthy was the only person on the ballot as Johnson had not filed and was only a write in candidate McCarthy won 42 of the primary vote to Johnson s 50 an extremely strong showing for such a challenger which gave McCarthy s campaign legitimacy and momentum 16 In addition McCarthy s superior coordination led to a near sweep of the state s twenty four pledged delegates since Johnson had no formal campaign organization in the state a number of competing pro Johnson delegate candidates split his vote allowing McCarthy to take twenty delegates Despite his desire to oppose Johnson directly and the fear that McCarthy would split the anti war vote Kennedy pushed forward with his planned campaign On March 16 Kennedy declared I am today announcing my candidacy for the presidency of the United States I do not run for the presidency merely to oppose any man but to propose new policies I run because I am convinced that this country is on a perilous course and because I have such strong feelings about what must be done and I feel that I m obliged to do all I can 17 However due to his late entry Kennedy s name would not appear on a state ballot until the Indiana primary on May 7 nbsp President Lyndon B Johnson delivers a speech announcing he will not run for re election on March 31 Johnson now had two strong challengers sitting members of the Senate with demonstrated popularity To make matters worse polling in Wisconsin showed McCarthy beating Johnson badly with the latter getting only 12 of the vote 18 Facing declining health and bleak political forecasts in the upcoming primaries 19 Johnson concluded that he could not win the nomination without a major political and personal struggle On March 31 1968 at the end of a televised address on Vietnam he shocked the nation by announcing that he would not seek re election By withdrawing he could avoid the stigma of defeat and could keep control of the party machinery to support Vice President Hubert Humphrey As the year developed it also became clear that Johnson believed he could secure his place in the history books by ending the war before the election in November which would give Humphrey the boost he would need to win 20 21 22 April McCarthy triumphant Humphrey enters edit After Johnson s withdrawal Vice President Hubert Humphrey announced his candidacy on April 27 23 Humphrey s campaign concentrated on winning the delegates in non primary states where party leaders controlled the delegate votes Humphrey did not compete in the primaries leaving favorite sons to win delegates as surrogates notably Senator George A Smathers from Florida Senator Stephen M Young from Ohio and Indiana Governor Roger D Branigin The Wisconsin primary on April 2 was effectively uncontested McCarthy received 56 of the vote Kennedy received 6 as a write in candidate Kennedy was ineligible for the ballot because he entered the race following the filing deadline 24 The Pennsylvania primary on April 23 was similarly a rout for McCarthy who took 71 of the vote 25 Humphrey gained the support of labor unions and big city bosses such as Chicago Mayor Richard J Daley McCarthy rallied students and intellectuals who had been the early activists against the war in Vietnam Kennedy gained support from the poor Catholics African Americans Hispanic Americans and other racial and ethnic minorities Conservative Dixiecrats tended to support either Humphrey or former Alabama Governor George C Wallace who was running in a third party campaign for the general election In the Massachusetts primary on April 30 neither Humphrey nor Kennedy were formally listed on the ballot As a result McCarthy won the popular vote easily and by the rules in place at the time all 72 of the commonwealth s delegates were pledged to him on the first ballot Some analysts viewed Humphrey s unexpectedly strong showing 44 156 write in votes or 18 of the total as a clear victory over Kennedy a Brookline Massachusetts native who polled a meager 28 write in vote in his family s home state 26 May Kennedy momentum McCarthy in Oregon edit On March 27 1968 Kennedy announced his intention to run against McCarthy in the Indiana primary although aides told him that a race in Indiana would be extremely tight and advised him against it 27 At the Indiana Statehouse Kennedy told a cheering crowd that the state was important to his campaign If we can win in Indiana we can win in every other state and win when we go to the convention in August 28 The Indiana primary thus marked the first open entry of Kennedy into the field and pitted him against McCarthy and Governor Roger Branigin a favorite son who had backed Johnson and now impliedly supported Humphrey Audio of Kennedy s Indianapolis speech source source track Problems playing this file See media help During his first campaign stop in Indiana Kennedy delivered two of a trio notable speeches First on April 4 he spoke at Ball State University in Muncie In this speech Kennedy suggested the election would determine the direction that the United States is going to move and that the American people should examine everything Not take anything for granted Kennedy expressed concerns about poverty and hunger lawlessness and violence jobs and economic development and foreign policy He emphasized that Americans had a moral obligation and should make an honest effort to understand one another and move forward together After leaving the stage at Ball State Kennedy boarded a plane for Indianapolis When he arrived he was informed of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr 29 Addressing a crowd gathered for a political rally on the black north side of the city Kennedy gave a heartfelt impromptu speech to the crowd calling for peace and compassion 30 The next day in Cleveland he delivered prepared remarks entitled On the Mindless Menace of Violence elaborating the themes he had addressed in Indianapolis After attending King s funeral in Atlanta Kennedy resumed campaigning in Indiana on April 10 31 Branigan campaigned in nearly all of the state s 92 counties while McCarthy s campaign strategy concentrated on Indiana s rural areas and small towns According to Kennedy s campaign advisor John Bartlow Martin the campaign gained momentum with Kennedy s visits to central and southern Indiana on April 22 and 23 which included a memorable whistle stop railroad trip aboard the Wabash Cannonball 32 Martin urged the candidate to speak out against violence and rioting emphasize his law enforcement experience as former U S Attorney General and promote coordination between the government and private sector to solve domestic issues Kennedy continued to speak out against the war and in support of the cessation of hostilities and reallocating war funds to domestic programs 33 To appeal to conservative voters Kennedy toned down his rhetoric as well 34 McCarthy meanwhile contrasted his approach to conflict of call ing upon everyone to be as fully responsible as they can be against Humphrey s run ning things together indiscriminately and Kennedy s a combination of separate interests or groups 35 On May 7 Kennedy won with 42 percent of the vote Branigan was second with 31 percent of the vote and McCarthy earning 27 percent came in third 36 37 In response to the defeat McCarthy remarked We ve tested the enemy now and we know his techniques we know his weaknesses 38 Campaigning vigorously in the Nebraska primary Kennedy hoped for a major win to give him momentum going into the crucial California primary in June While McCarthy made only one visit to Nebraska Kennedy made numerous appearances 39 Though Kennedy s advisors had been worried about his chances in Nebraska given his lack of credibility on ranching and agriculture policy and the short amount of time to campaign in the state after the Indiana primary 40 Kennedy won on May 14 with 51 4 percent of the vote to McCarthy s 31 percent 39 41 Kennedy won 24 of the 25 counties that he visited ahead of the vote of those the sole county he lost by two votes was home to the University of Nebraska where a plurality of students favored McCarthy 42 Kennedy declared that the results where two anti war candidates collectively earned over 80 percent of the vote were a smashing repudiation of the Johnson Humphrey administration 43 A Newsweek delegate survey taken after the Nebraska primary 44 showed 1 280 delegates 1 312 delegates needed to win the nomination 45 solid or leaning toward Humphrey 714 leaning to Kennedy and 280 favoring McCarthy 46 In contrast to Nebraska the Oregon primary posed several challenges to Kennedy s campaign His campaign organization run by U S Congresswoman Edith Green was not strong and his platform emphasizing poverty hunger and minority issues did not resonate with Oregon voters 47 48 About Kennedy s calls for unity amongst Americans Mills wrote that As far as Oregonians were concerned America had not fallen apart 49 The Kennedy campaign circulated material on McCarthy s record McCarthy had voted against a minimum wage law and repeal of the poll tax in the Voting Rights Act of 1965 The McCarthy campaign responded with charges that Kennedy illegally taped Martin Luther King Jr as United States Attorney General 50 Ten days ahead of the vote Kennedy admitted his message did not appeal well to Oregonians This state is like one giant suburb I appeal best to people who have problems 51 During a speech he gave in California Kennedy also admitted I think that if I get beaten in any primary I am not a very viable candidate further raising the stakes in Oregon 50 Following that comment Kennedy campaigned for sixteen hours a day in the weeks before the election his campaign canvased 50 000 homes 52 On May 28 McCarthy won the Oregon primary with 44 7 percent Kennedy received 38 8 percent of votes 53 After Kennedy s loss was confirmed he sent a terse congratulatory message to McCarthy but asserted that he would remain in the race 54 According to Kennedy biographer Larry Tye the defeat in Oregon proved to Kennedy that he needed to take risks and convinced voters that Kennedy was vulnerable to electoral defeat 51 55 Observers remarked that McCarthy was back in the race as a real contender 56 Meanwhile in the Florida primary also on May 28 a slate of Humphrey delegates led by favorite son George A Smathers easily swept aside McCarthy who managed only four delegates from two Miami congressional districts 57 Humphrey also picked up 83 of the 125 delegates from Pennsylvania 58 following an endorsement from Philadelphia Mayor James Tate 59 and collected delegates from non primary party caucuses and state conventions 60 In April and May Humphrey won the majority of delegates in Delaware Alaska Hawaii Wyoming Arizona Maryland Nevada New Jersey Missouri Maine and Vermont 61 The other candidates criticized this tactic and accused Humphrey of organizing a bossed convention against the wishes of the people 62 June 4 California South Dakota and New Jersey Kennedy assassinated edit nbsp Kennedy campaigning in Los Angeles photo courtesy of John F Kennedy Presidential Library amp Museum Boston McCarthy and Kennedy vigorously campaigned throughout California in the beginning of June with the latter announcing he would exit the race if he lost the state s primary California s winner take all primary became crucial to both Kennedy and McCarthy s campaigns 63 McCarthy stumped the state s many colleges and universities where he was treated as a hero for being the first presidential candidate to oppose the war Kennedy campaigned in the ghettos and barrios of the state s larger cities where he was mobbed by enthusiastic supporters 64 In the South Dakota primary Kennedy also hoped to simultaneously pull off an upset victory over McCarthy and Humphrey both from neighboring Minnesota Humphrey was also a native of Wallace South Dakota 65 On June 1 Kennedy and McCarthy met in a televised debate on ABC s Issues and Answers 66 which observers generally considered a draw 67 It was a conversation rather than a debate said The New York Times and it demonstrated that the two rivals are in substantial agreement on every major issue 68 Though Kennedy considered the debate indecisive and disappointing subsequent polling showed that undecided voters favored his performance by a margin of two to one 69 On June 3 Kennedy made a final dash through the state s major urban centers San Francisco Los Angeles and San Diego along with suburban Long Beach in a single day 70 As his motorcade moved slowly through cheering crowds in San Francisco s Chinatown gun shots appeared to ring out However it was just the sound of celebratory firecrackers 71 The campaign entourage and traveling press were all scared to death recalled Bill Eppridge a Life magazine photographer in the car just ahead of the Kennedys 72 On June 4 Kennedy privately expressed his hope to Theodore H White that victories in the California and South Dakota primaries could persuade party insiders that he was more electable than Humphrey and thus win him crucial support from unpledged delegates Kennedy won the California primary with 46 percent of the vote to McCarthy s 42 percent 73 Author Joseph Palermo referred to the victory as Kennedy s greatest 74 Kennedy also won the South Dakota primary winning approximately 50 percent of the vote 75 McCarthy who that same night defeated Kennedy in the New Jersey primary with 36 of the write in vote 76 made it clear that he would contest the upcoming New York primary on June 18 in Kennedy s adopted state 77 Kennedy assassination edit Main article Assassination of Robert F Kennedy After giving his victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles Kennedy was assassinated in the kitchen service pantry in the early morning of June 5 Sirhan Sirhan a 24 year old Palestinian born Jordanian was arrested Kennedy died 26 hours later at Good Samaritan Hospital At the moment of Kennedy s death the delegate totals were estimated to be 78 Hubert Humphrey 561 Robert F Kennedy 393 Eugene McCarthy 258Kennedy s death threw the Democratic Party into disarray Shaken by the event Humphrey took off two weeks from campaigning He met with President Johnson and the two talked about everything 79 during a three hour meeting The assassination all but guaranteed Humphrey the nomination He commented that he was doing everything I could to win the nomination but God knows I didn t want it that way 80 A large number of Kennedy delegates switched to Humphrey but he lost money from Republican donors concerned about a Kennedy nomination 80 and popular opinion polls shifted in favor of Senator McCarthy 81 In fact Humphrey was booed before 50 000 people on June 19 at the Lincoln Memorial as he was introduced at a Solidarity March for civil rights 82 He tried to defend his record against the liberal detractors 83 but often encountered anti war protesters and hostile crowds while campaigning 62 At the end of June Republican Senator Mark Hatfield of Oregon assessed the race arguing that Humphrey would be the party s nominee for president but criticized him for being too closely aligned with Johnson s policies 84 Schedule and results editStatewide results by winner edit Tablemaker s Note a Date Total pledgeddelegates Contestand total popular vote Delegates won and popular voteHubertHumphrey EugeneMcCarthy RobertKennedy LyndonJohnson FavoriteSon s Uncommitted Other s March 12 0 of 24 New HampshirePres Primary 85 55 464 23 263 41 94 606 WI 1 09 27 520 WI 49 62 4 075 b 7 35 24 of 24 New HampshireDel Primary 85 20 Del 16 315 4 Del 17 444 March 16 22 of 22 NevadaState Convention 86 22 Del March 28 28 of 28 South CarolinaState Convention 87 88 28 Del c d March 30 38 of 38 KansasState Convention 89 38 Del April 2 60 of 60 WisconsinPrimary 90 733 002 3 605 WI 0 49 52 Del 412 160 56 23 46 507 WI 6 35 8 Del 253 696 34 61 11 861 1 62 5 173 WI e 0 71 April 8 22 of 22 AlaskaState Convention 91 22 Del April 20 19 of 19 ArizonaState Convention 92 19 Del April 23 0 of 130 PennsylvaniaPres Primary599 966 51 998 WI 8 67 428 891 71 49 65 430 WI 10 91 21 265 WI 3 54 32 382 f 5 40 130 g of 130 PennsylvaniaDel Primary 93 18 Del 1 5 Del 110 5 Del h April 29 49 of 49 MarylandState Convention 94 49 Del April 30 72 of 72 MassachusettsPrimary 95 248 903 44 156 WI 17 74 72 Del 122 697 49 30 68 604 WI 27 56 6 890 WI 2 77 6 556 i 2 63 May 7 32 of 32 AlabamaDel Primary 96 97 32 Del 0 Del j 63 of 63 IndianaPrimary 98 776 513 209 695 27 01 59 Del k 328 118 42 26 4 Del l 238 700 30 74 115 of 115 OhioPrimary 99 549 140 3 Del 112 Del m 549 140 100 00 23 of 23 Washington D C Primary 100 92 114 34 559 37 52 23 Del 57 555 62 48 May 11 22 of 22 DelawareState Convention 101 16 Del 6 Del 9 of 52 Minnesota7th and 8thDistrict Conventions 102 9 Del 22 of 22 WyomingState Convention 103 22 Del May 12 26 of 26 HawaiiState Convention 104 26 Del May 14 0 of 30 NebraskaPres Primary 105 162 611 12 087 WI 7 43 50 655 31 15 84 102 51 72 9 187 5 65 6 580 WI n 4 04 28 of 30 NebraskaDel Primary 105 1 Del 3 Del 20 Del 4 Del 36 of 38 West VirginiaDel Primary 106 36 Del o May 16 43 of 43 GeorgiaState Convention 107 43 Del May 18 27 of 27 MaineState Convention 108 27 Del p May 25 6 of 35 Colorado1st District Convention 109 3 Del 3 Del 46 of 46 IowaState Convention 110 9 5 Del 5 Del 25 Del 6 5 Del 13 5 of 52 Minnesota3rd 4th and 5thDistrict Conventions 111 13 5 Del 22 of 22 VermontState Convention 112 996 10 Del 399 40 06 5 Del 270 27 11 7 Del 327 32 83 May 26 13 5 of 52 Minnesota1st 2nd and 6thDistrict Conventions 111 13 5 Del May 28 61 of 63 FloridaPrimary 113 512 357 4 Del 147 216 28 73 57 Del q 236 242 46 11 128 899 r 25 16 35 of 35 OregonPrimary 114 373 070 12 421 WI 3 33 35 Del 163 990 43 96 141 631 37 96 45 174 12 11 9 854 WI s 2 64 27 of 27 Rhode IslandState Committee 115 27 Del June 1 60 of 60 MissouriState Convention 116 60 Del June 2 96 of 96 MichiganState Convention 117 96 Del June 4 172 of 174 CaliforniaPrimary 118 3 181 753 1 329 301 41 78 172 Del 1 472 166 46 27 380 286 t 11 95 0 of 82 New JerseyPres Primary 119 27 446 5 578 WI 20 32 9 906 WI 36 09 8 603 WI 31 35 380 WI 1 39 2 979 u 10 85 80 of 82 New JerseyDel Primary 119 120 20 Del 60 Del v 24 of 24 South DakotaPrimary 121 64 287 13 145 20 45 24 Del 31 826 49 51 19 316 30 05 June 6 59 of 59 North CarolinaState Convention 122 59 Del w June 11 0 of 118 IllinoisPres Primary12 038 2 059 WI 17 10 4 646 WI 38 59 162 WI 1 35 5 171 x 42 96 48 of 118 IllinoisDel Primary 123 2 Del 46 Del 104 of 104 TexasState Convention 124 104 Del y June 12 5 of 5 Panama Canal ZoneTerritorial Convention 125 5 Del June 14 36 of 36 LouisianaState Convention 126 36 Del z June 15 25 of 25 IdahoState Convention 127 25 Del 26 of 26 MontanaState Convention 128 24 Del 2 Del June 17 6 of 35 Colorado2nd District Convention 129 5 Del 1 Del aa June 18 123 of 190 New YorkDel Primary 130 131 19 Del 62 Del 42 Del ab June 22 44 of 44 ConnecticutState Convention 132 0 Del ac 44 Del 13 5 of 52 MinnesotaState Convention 133 14 Del June 27 33 of 33 ArkansasState Committee 134 33 Del June 28 68 of 118 IllinoisState Convention 135 68 Del 65 of 190 New YorkState Committee 131 15 5 Del 49 5 Del 51 of 51 TennesseeState Convention 136 51 Del ad June 29 26 of 26 New MexicoState Convention 137 15 Del 11 Del 25 of 25 North DakotaState Convention 138 17 Del 7 Del 1 Del 41 of 41 OklahomaState Convention 139 37 Del 2 7 Del 1 3 Del July 2 24 of 24 MississippiState Convention 140 24 Del ae July 6 6 of 35 Colorado3rd District Convention 141 3 Del 2 Del 1 Del af July 13 6 of 35 ColoradoState Convention 142 2 Del 4 Del ag 6 of 35 Colorado4th District Convention 143 6 Del 47 of 47 WashingtonState Convention 144 32 5 Del 9 5 Del 5 Del July 27 46 of 46 KentuckyState Convention 145 41 Del 5 Del 26 of 26 UtahState Convention 146 20 Del 6 Del ah 63 of 63 VirginiaState Convention 147 63 Del ai Total2 622 pledged delegates7 356 838 votes 258166 463 2 26 379 22 915 565 39 63 340 52 273 322 30 90 12383 590 5 21 6011 024 082 13 92 968 8521 046 7 08 072 770 0 99 Suspected Delegate CountJune 5 1968 148 561 5 21 41 255 9 73 393 5 15 01 310 11 82 99 3 78 2 aj 0 08 Suspected Delegate CountAugust 27 1968 149 1 159 5 44 22 487 5 18 59 179 5 6 85 727 27 73 51 5 ak 1 96 This should not be taken as a finalized list of results While a significant amount of research was done there were a number of Delegates who were not bound by the instruction or Pledged to a candidate and to simplify the data these delegates were considered Uncommitted Many states also held primaries for the delegate positions and these on occasion were where slates or candidates pledged to a certain candidate might be elected however as these elections allowed for a single person to vote for multiple candidates as many as the number of positions being filled it is difficult to determine how many people actually voted in these primaries For this reason while such results may be found they are not included in the popular vote summaries at the bottom of the table Includes 2 532 Write In votes for Richard Nixon at 4 57 506 Write In votes for Paul C Fisher at 0 91 249 votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at 0 45 201 Write In votes for George Wallace at 0 36 and 186 votes for John G Crommelin at 0 34 Committed to Governor Robert McNair of South Carolina Initially uncommitted the delegates met and decided to commit themselves to Governor McNair in April following President Johnson s withdrawal from the race Includes 4 031 Write In votes for George Wallace at 0 55 Includes 24 147 Write In votes for George Wallace at 4 03 3 434 Write In votes for Richard Nixon at 0 57 1 897 Write In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at 0 32 327 Write In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at 0 06 and 21 Write In votes for Governor Raymond Shafer at 0 00 Includes 49 delegate votes that were not apportioned this day Only 61 5 of the delegate votes were elected in the delegate primary 49 of the delegate votes were amongst appointed delegates who had been chosen at another date However it is not currently known when this was Includes 2 275 Write In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at 0 91 1 688 Write In votes for George Wallace at 0 68 and 575 Write In votes for Richard Nixon at 0 23 More than half of the delegation was initially committed to supporting George Wallace some backed down once Wallace made it clear he did not want to be nominated at the Democratic Convention but there remained a significant cadre who wished to do so Those remaining Wallace delegates however were later stripped of their right to sit as delegates given they refused to sign a pledge declaring their support for the Democratic nominee for President This represents the minimum number of delegates Kennedy could have earned based on his performance the delegates themselves and their apportionment were not to be decided until Mid June some time after Kennedy s assassination Committed to Governor Roger Branigin of Indiana Committed to Senator Stephen Young of Ohio Includes 2 731 Write In votes for Richard Nixon at 1 68 1 905 Write In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at 1 17 1 298 Write In votes for George Wallace at 0 80 and 509 Write In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at 0 31 While some delegates mentioned their candidate of choice by state law the delegates were uncommitted Committed to Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine Committed to Senator George Smathers of Florida Represents an Uncommitted slate lead by State Senator Scott Kelly of Lakeland which said it would support either Robert Kennedy or George Wallace Includes 3 082 Write In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at 0 83 2 974 Write In votes for Richard Nixon at 0 80 2 841 Write In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at 0 76 and 957 Write In votes for George Wallace at 0 26 Votes for an Uncommitted slate headed by State Attorney General Thomas Lynch Includes 1 399 Write In votes for George Wallace at 5 10 1 364 Write In votes for Richard Nixon at 4 97 176 Write In votes for Governor Nelson Rockefeller at 0 64 and 40 Write In votes for Governor Ronald Reagan at 0 15 Committed to Governor Richard Hughes of New Jersey Committed to Governor Dan Moore of North Carolina Includes 4 052 Write In votes for Senator Edward Kennedy at 33 66 and 768 Write In votes for George Wallace at 6 38 Committed to Governor John Connally of Texas Committed to Governor John McKeithen of Louisiana This delegate was formally for Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination 30 of these delegates were committed to Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination 9 delegates had initially been apportioned to McCarthy but after the McCarthyites walked out because of the Conventions refusal to name a 10th McCarthy delegates all 9 slots were filled with Uncommitted delegates Committed to Governor Buford Ellington of Tennessee Regulars and Loyalists named opposing delegations to the National Convention with the Loyalists being seated Neither delegation was committed This delegate was formally for Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination These delegates were formally for Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination Four of the delegates were formally supporters of Senator Robert Kennedy before his assassination Committed to Governor Mills Godwin of Virginia Supporting George Wallace of Alabama Supporting Senator George McGovern of South McGovern Total popular vote 150 Eugene McCarthy 2 914 933 38 73 Robert F Kennedy 2 305 148 30 63 Lyndon B Johnson 383 590 5 10 Hubert Humphrey 166 463 2 21 Unpledged 161 143 2 14 Johnson Humphrey surrogates Stephen M Young 549 140 7 30 Thomas C Lynch 380 286 5 05 Roger D Branigin 238 700 3 17 George Smathers 236 242 3 14 Scott Kelly 128 899 1 71 Minor candidates and write ins George Wallace 34 489 0 46 Richard Nixon 13 610 0 18 Ronald Reagan 5 309 0 07 Ted Kennedy 4 052 0 05 Paul C Fisher 506 0 01 John G Crommelin 186 0 00 nbsp Primary Map By County Massachusetts not Included Hubert Humphrey Red Lyndon B Johnson Yellow outside of Florida Robert F Kennedy Purple Eugene McCarthy Green George Wallace Lime Green Roger D Branigin Orange George Smathers Yellow Florida Only Stephen Young BrownDemocratic Convention and antiwar protests editWhen the 1968 Democratic National Convention opened in Chicago thousands of young antiwar activists from around the nation gathered in the city to protest the Vietnam War In a clash covered on live television Americans were shocked to see Chicago Police officers brutally beating antiwar protesters While the protesters chanted the whole world is watching the police used clubs and tear gas to beat back the protesters leaving many of them bloody and dazed The tear gas even wafted into numerous hotel suites In one of them Humphrey was watching the proceedings on television Meanwhile the convention itself was marred by the strong armed tactics of Chicago Mayor Richard J Daley who was seen on television angrily cursing Connecticut Senator Abraham Ribicoff who had made a speech at the convention denouncing the excesses of the Chicago police in the riots In the end the nomination itself was anticlimactic with Humphrey handily beating McCarthy and McGovern on the first ballot The convention then chose Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine as Humphrey s running mate However the tragedy of the antiwar riots crippled the Humphrey campaign from the start and it never fully recovered White pp 377 378 151 The Final Ballot Presidential tally Vice Presidential tally Hubert Humphrey 1759 25 Edmund S Muskie 1942 5Eugene McCarthy 601 Not Voting 604 25George S McGovern 146 5 Julian Bond 152 48 5Channing Phillips 67 5 David Hoeh 4Daniel K Moore 17 5 Edward M Kennedy 3 5Edward M Kennedy 12 75 Eugene McCarthy 3 0Paul E Bear Bryant 1 5 Others 16 25James H Gray 0 5George Wallace 0 5Source Keating Holland All the Votes Really CNN 153 Endorsements edit Hubert Humphrey President Johnson Mayor Richard J Daley of Chicago Former President Harry S Truman of Missouri Entertainer Frank SinatraRobert F Kennedy Senator Ralph Yarborough of Texas 150 Senator Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut 150 Senator George McGovern of South Dakota 154 Senator Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts the candidate s brother Governor Harold E Hughes of Iowa 155 Senator Vance Hartke of Indiana 150 Writer Norman Mailer 150 Labor Leader Cesar Chavez 150 Actress Shirley MacLaine Actress Angie Dickinson Actress Stefanie Powers Actor Peter Lawford the candidate s brother in law Actor Bill Cosby Musician Sammy Davis Jr Musician Andy Williams Musician and actress Claudine Longet Musicians Sonny amp Cher Musicians The Byrds Musician Bobby Darin Artist Andy Warhol Astronaut John Glenn NFL football Lamar Lundy NFL football Rosey Grier NFL football Deacon Jones Film and television director John Frankenheimer Documentary film director Charles Guggenheim Actor Warren Beatty Actor Tony Curtis Actor Jack Lemmon Actor Gregory Peck Actor Robert Vaughn 156 Eugene McCarthy Representative Don Edwards of California 150 Actor Paul Newman 156 Actor Gene Wilder Actor Dustin Hoffman Musicians Simon amp GarfunkelGeorge McGovern during convention Senator Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut 151 Senator Joseph S Clark of Pennsylvania 157 Governor Harold E Hughes of Iowa 151 See also editRepublican Party presidential primaries 1968References edit Nash Knowlton 1984 History on the Run The Trenchcoat Memoirs of a Foreign Correspondent Toronto Canada McClelland amp Stewart pp 103 104 ISBN 0 7710 6700 3 Donaldson Gary 2003 Liberalism s Last Hurrah The Presidential Campaign of 1964 Armonk NY M E Sharpe p 103 ISBN 0 7656 1119 8 Bohrer John R May 24 2017 Robert Kennedy s Secret Campaign to Become Lyndon Johnson s Vice President Daily Beast Retrieved December 26 2022 Donaldson Gary 2003 Liberalism s Last Hurrah The Presidential Campaign of 1964 Armonk NY M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 1119 8 Sabato Larry J 2014 The Kennedy Half Century The Presidency Assassination and Lasting Legacy of John F Kennedy Bloomsbury USA pp 269 271 ISBN 978 1620402825 Shesol Jeff 1998 Mutual Contempt Lyndon Johnson Robert Kennedy and the Feud that Defined a Decade W W Norton p 179 Thomas 2000 p 297 Gould Lewis L 1968 The Election That Changed America Chicago 1993 pp 20 21 Sandbrook Dominic 2007 12 18 Eugene McCarthy The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 188 ISBN 978 0 307 42577 5 Thomas 2000 p 351 Thomas 2000 p 357 a b Thomas p 357 a b Clark Thurston June 2008 The Last Good Campaign Vanity Fair Archived from the original on 2014 12 20 Retrieved 31 Dec 2022 Excerpt from The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and the 82 Days that Inspired America New York Henry Holt 2008 by Thurston Clark Schlesinger 1978 p 884 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x US President D Primaries Polling OurCampaigns com 16 Nov 2004 Retrieved 25 Apr 2020 McCarthy nearly upsets LBJ in New Hampshire primary March 12 1968 Politico Kennedy Robert F Robert F Kennedy s Announcement of his candidacy for president Archived 2012 02 05 at the Wayback Machine speech Washington D C 1968 03 16 Retrieved 31 Dec 2022 Could Trump Lose the Republican Nomination Here s the History of Primary Challenges to Incumbent Presidents Time Cook Rhodes 2000 United States Presidential Primary Elections 1968 1996 A Handbook of Election Statistics Washington D C CQ Press p 797 ISBN 9781568024516 Dallek 1998 p page needed Woods 2006 p page needed Gould 1993 p page needed Solberg Carl 1984 Hubert Humphrey A Biography New York W W Norton p 332 ISBN 9780393018066 McCarthy Wins Easily in Wisconsin Primary St Petersburg Times April 3 1968 Retrieved 26 November 2023 McCarthy Takes Primary Daily Collegian University Park PA vol 68 no 109 p 1 April 24 1968 archived from the original on March 21 2012 Richardson Darcy G 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign p 81 Herbers John March 28 1968 Kennedy to Enter Indiana s Primary The New York Times Retrieved 23 Apr 2021 Boomhower 2008 p 43 Boomhower 2008 pp 62 63 Boomhower 2008 pp 67 68 Boomhower 2008 p 76 Boomhower 2008 pp 83 91 Boomhower 2008 p 78 Thomas 2000 p 369 Wicker Tom May 10 1968 New Kennedy Emphasis On View in India Pittsburgh Post Gazette Pittsburgh Pennsylvania p 6 permanent dead link Thomas 2000 p 375 PBS American Experience Shock Year 1968 May 7 Indiana Primary PBS Archived from the original on 2016 08 23 Retrieved 23 Apr 2023 Tarot Cards Hoosier Style Time May 17 1968 Archived from the original on September 17 2005 a b Thomas 2000 p 377 Clarke 2008 pp 194 95 Dooley Brian 1996 Robert Kennedy The Final Years New York St Martin s Press p 128 ISBN 9780312161309 Mills 1998 p 428 Schlesinger 1978 p 929 Newfield Jack 1969 RFK A Memoir p 267 Gould 1993 p 104 Richardson Darcy G 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign p 84 Dooley p 129 Schlesinger p 906 Mills 1998 pp 430 432 a b Gould 1993 p 73 a b New Robert F Kennedy biography examines historic loss in Oregon presidential primary oregonlive com July 5 2016 Archived from the original on September 14 2016 Richardson Darcy 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign iUniverse p 100 Thomas 2000 p 382 Korman Seymour May 29 1968 McCarthy Defeats Bobby Chicago Tribune Oregonian OregonLive Douglas Perry The May 16 2016 Robert F Kennedy s epic battle for Oregon Historic photos oregonlive a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Marder George May 29 1968 Kennedy s campaign strategy damaged seriously by Oregon primary defeat The Bulletin Bend Deschutes County Oregon p 3 permanent dead link Smathers Takes 57 Delegates McCarthy 4 Evening Independent St Petersburg Florida vol 61 no 178 p 2A May 29 1968 Offner Arnold A 2018 Hubert Humphrey The Conscience of the Country Yale University Press p 280 Humphrey Gathering Pennsylvania Delegates St Petersburg Times St Petersburg Florida vol 84 no 309 p 6A May 28 1968 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point p 84 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point p 84 a b Solberg p 343 Remembering Robert F Kennedy California Secretary of State Richardson Darcy G 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign p 85 STATE S NATIVE SON TAKES SOUND LICKING The Lead Daily Call Lead South Dakota June 5 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point Enigma Books p 86 Schlesinger pp 910 912 Wainstock Dennis 2012 Election Year 1968 The Turning Point Enigma Books p 89 Mills 1998 p 443 Schlesinger p 912 Schlesinger p 912 Thomas pp 24 25 Clarke Thurston 2008 The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America Henry Holt and Co p 268 Palermo Joseph A 2001 In His Own Right The Political Odyssey of Senator Robert F Kennedy Columbia University Press p 245 Clarke Thurston 2008 The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America Henry Holt and Co p 266 Primaries caucuses and conventions Classic races for the presidential nomination Oocities com Archived from the original on 2009 10 27 Retrieved 2010 06 17 Richardson Darcy G 2002 A Nation Divided The 1968 Presidential Campaign p 108 Smith Jeffrey K 2010 Bad Blood Lyndon B Johnson Robert F Kennedy and the Tumultuous 1960s p 266 Solberg p 341 a b Solberg p 340 Bartlett C June 14 1968 Delaware Sample The Spokesman Review Spokane Washington vol 86 no 31 p 4 Pearson Drew Anderson Jack June 24 1968 Humphrey Efforts Forgotten The Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia vol 84 no 149 p 4 McGill Ralph July 6 1968 Irreconcilable Liberals Do Humphrey Disservice Pittsburgh Post Gazette Pittsburgh Pennsylvania vol 41 no 293 p 6 Mark Hatfield Fails to Convince Eugene Register Guard Eugene Oregon vol 101 no 248 p 10A June 27 1968 a b JOHNSON MARGIN CUT TO 230 VOTES The New York Times New York New York March 16 1972 Retrieved October 4 2023 NEVADA DEMOCRATS ELECT PRO JOHNSON DELEGATION TO CONVENTION The Reno Gazette Journal Reno Nevada March 18 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 SOUTH CAROLINA DEMOCRATS PICK NEGRO DELEGATES The New York Times New York New York March 28 1968 Retrieved October 6 2023 CAROLINA DELEGATES GIVEN TO GOV M NAIR The New York Times New York New York April 11 1968 Retrieved October 6 2023 KANSAS SKIRMISH WON BY KENNEDY The New York Times New York New York March 31 1968 Retrieved October 6 2023 M CARTHY WINS WISCONSIN POLLS 57 TO JOHNSON S 35 G O P GIVES 80 TO NIXON The New York Times New York New York April 3 1972 Retrieved October 4 2023 KANSAS SKIRMISH WON BY KENNEDY The New York Times New York New York March 31 1968 Retrieved October 6 2023 HUMPHREY WINS STATE DELEGATES The Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona April 21 1968 Retrieved October 8 2023 MCCARTHY GETS 24 DELEGATES The Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia Pennsylvania April 26 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 HUMPHREY S CAMP BUOYED BY UNIT RULE The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland April 30 1968 Retrieved October 8 2023 ROCKY UPSETS VOLPE NIXON MCCARTHY TOPS JFK RECORD The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts May 1 1972 Retrieved October 4 2023 WALLACE DELEGATES IN LEAD The Birmingham Post Herald Birmingham Alabama June 5 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 ALABAMANS LOSE ACTION ON SEATING The Dothan Eagle Dothan Alabama August 27 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 KENNEDY WINS IN INDIANA BRANIGIN AHEAD OF M CARTHY NIXON DRAWS STRONG VOTE The New York Times New York New York May 8 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 MCCARTHY DELEGATES The New York Times New York New York May 9 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 KENNEDY CAPTURES CAPITAL S DELEGATES The New York Times New York New York May 8 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 16 DELAWARE VOTES PLEDGED TO HUMPHREY The New York Times New York New York May 12 1968 Retrieved October 7 2023 HUMPHREY SLATES WIN 2 DISTRICTS The St Cloud Times Saint Cloud Minnesota July 7 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 WYOMING HOLDS TWO CONVENTIONS The Fort Collins Coloradoan Fort Collins Colorado May 12 1968 Retrieved October 8 2023 HUMPHREY DEFEATS RIVALS BLOC TO WIN MOST HAWAII DELEGATES The New York Times New York New York May 13 1968 Retrieved October 8 2023 a b KENNEDY GETS MOST DELEGATES The Grand Island Independent Grand Island Nebraska May 16 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 WEST VIRGINIA VOTING IS CLOSE JOHN ROCKEFELLER 4TH IS VICTOR The New York Times New York New York May 15 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 UNPLEDGED SLATE VOTED IN GEORGIA The New York Times New York New York May 17 1968 Retrieved October 7 2023 HUMPHREY GAINS VICTORY IN MAINE The New York Times New York New York May 19 1968 Retrieved October 6 2023 DENVER DEMOCRATS SELECT MCCARTHY KENNEDY SLATE The Fort Collins Coloradoan Fort Collins Colorado May 26 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 KENNEDY WINNER IN IOWA CONTEST The New York Times New York New York May 26 1968 Retrieved October 6 2023 a b HUMPHREY SCORES IN 3 DISTRICTS The St Cloud Times Saint Cloud Minnesota May 27 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 HUMPHREY WINS DELEGATE PLURALITY AT CONVENTION The Burlington Free Press Burlington Vermont May 27 1968 Retrieved October 7 2023 COLLINS TAKES LEAD IN FLORIDA SENATORIAL CONTEST The New York Times New York New York May 29 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 GENE UPSETS BOBBY NIXON GETS 73 The Capital Journal Salem Oregon May 29 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 RFK TO GET 12 VOTES FROM STATE DELEGATES The Newport Daily News Newport Rhode Island May 29 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 HUMPHREY WINS MISSOURI VOTES The New York Times New York New York May 17 1968 Retrieved October 8 2023 DEMOCRATS PICK MICHIGAN SLATE The New York Times New York New York May 17 1968 Retrieved October 8 2023 STATE VICTORY GAVE KENNEDY POWERFUL DELEGATE STRENGTH The Stockton Evening and Sunday Record Stockton California June 5 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 a b REGULAR DEMS KO OPPONENTS The Jersey Journal Jersey City New Jersey June 5 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 GOV HUGHES SLATE WINS 60 DELEGATES The Press of Atlantic City Atlantic City New Jersey June 7 1972 Retrieved October 9 2023 STATE S NATIVE SON TAKES SOUND LICKING The Lead Daily Call Lead South Dakota June 5 1972 Retrieved October 5 2023 HHH COMES OUT TOPS AS STATE DEMO S CHOICE The Robesonian Lumberton North Carolina June 7 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 REGULAR DEMS KO OPPONENTS The New York Times New York New York June 13 1972 Retrieved October 10 2023 FREE HAND GIVEN CONNALLY ON VOTES The Forth Worth Star Telegram Fort Worth Texas June 12 1968 Retrieved October 4 2023 PRO HUMPHREY DELEGATION IS SELECTED BY CANAL ZONE The New York Times New York New York June 14 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 LOUISIANA S CONVENTION DELEGATES ARE SOLIDLY BEHIND BIDS OF NIXON HUMPHREY The Town Talk Alexandria Louisiana June 13 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 DELEGATES TO CONVENTION AT DEMOCRATIC ASSEMBLY VOICE HUBERT SENTIMENT The Idaho Statesman Boise Idaho June 16 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 HUBERT NETS 24 OF 26 DELEGATES The Montana Standard Butte Montana June 16 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 PRO MCCARTHY DELEGATES CHOSEN BY SECOND DISTRICT The Daily Sentinel Grand Junction Colorado June 18 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 MCCARTHY DELEGATES WIN MAJORITY OF RACES HERE O DWYER BEATS NICKERSON The New York Times New York New York June 19 1972 Retrieved October 10 2023 a b 300 MCCARTHYITES STAGE A WALKOUT AT STATE MEETING The New York Times New York New York June 29 1972 Retrieved October 10 2023 200 M CARTHY MEN BOLT IN HARTFORD The New York Times New York New York June 23 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 HUMPHREY GAINS 14 IN MINNESOTA DELEGATE TEST The New York Times New York New York June 23 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 DEMO DELEGATE BATTLE FIZZLES The Courier News Blytheville Arkansas June 28 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 UNCOMMITTED SLATE OF DELEGATES PICKED BY STATE DEMOCRATS The Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune June 29 1972 Retrieved October 10 2023 ELLINGTON WINS NOD FOR HHH The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee July 29 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 N M DEMOCRATS GIVE EDGE TO HUMPHREY The Albuquerque Journal Albuquerque New Mexico June 30 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 SEVEN OF N D DELEGATES ARE MCCARTHY MEN The Bismark Tribune Bismark North Dakota June 30 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 HUMPHREY S BACKERS CONTROL CONVENTION BUT PREVENT WALKOUT The Daily Oklahoman Oklahoma City Oklahoma June 30 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 STATE DEMOS FACING THREAT OF CHALLENGE The Sun Herald Biloxi Mississippi July 3 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 COLORADO THIRD DISTRICT DEMOCRATS OKAY UNITY SLATE The Fort Collins Coloradoan Fort Collins Colorado July 7 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 MCCARTHY WINS DELEGATE VICTORY AT STATE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION The Daily Sentinel Grand Junction Colorado July 14 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 FOURTH DISTRICT BACKS VICE PRESIDENT The Fort Collins Coloradoan Fort Collins Colorado July 14 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 HUMPHREY GROUP GAINS IN TACOMA The Spokesman Review Spokane Washington July 14 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 HUMPHREY BEATS MCCARTHY 41 5 IN STATE DELEGATE FIGHT The Courier News Blytheville Arkansas July 28 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 UTAH DEMOS SUPPORT HUMPHREY The Ogden Standard Examiner Ogden Utah July 30 1968 Retrieved October 10 2023 MODERATES LIBERALS SCORE AT STATE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION The Danville Register and Bee Danville Virginia July 28 1968 Retrieved October 9 2023 A PALL SETTLES OVER CAMPAIGN The Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois June 6 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 HUBERT RIDES ON GROWING VICTORY TIDE The Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois June 6 1968 Retrieved October 11 2023 a b c d e f g US President D Primaries Race Mar 12 1968 Our Campaigns Retrieved 2010 06 17 a b c US President D Convention Race Aug 26 1968 Our Campaigns Retrieved 2010 06 17 Not eligible to serve as Vice President because he was only 28 years old AllPolitics 1996 GOP NRC All The Votes Really Cnn com Retrieved 2010 06 17 SD US President D Primary Race Jun 04 1968 Our Campaigns Retrieved 2010 06 17 Candidate Harold Everett Hughes Our Campaigns Retrieved 2010 06 17 a b CA US President D Primary Race Jun 04 1968 Our Campaigns Retrieved 2010 06 17 The Rise of a Prairie Statesman The Life and Times of George McGovern p 405 Sources cited edit Boomhower Ray E 2008 Robert F Kennedy and the 1968 Indiana Primary Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253350893 Clarke Thurston 2008 The Last Campaign Robert F Kennedy and 82 Days That Inspired America Henry Holt and Co ISBN 978 0805077926 Dallek Robert 16 April 1998 Flawed Giant Lyndon Johnson and His Times 1961 1973 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 982670 4 Gould Lewis L 1993 1968 The Election that Changed America Ivan R Dee ISBN 978 1 56663 010 8 Mills Judie 1998 Robert Kennedy Millbrook Press ISBN 978 1562942502 Schlesinger Arthur M 1978 Robert Kennedy and His Times Vol 2 book club ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Thomas Evan 2000 Robert F Kennedy His Life New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0684834801 Woods Randall 1 August 2006 LBJ Architect of American Ambition Free Press ISBN 978 0 684 83458 0 Further reading editAlterman Eric The Cause The Fight for American Liberalism from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama Penguin 2013 Boomhower Ray E 2020 Fighting the Good Fight John Bartlow Martin and Hubert Humphrey s 1968 Presidential Campaign Indiana Magazine of History Vol 116 no 1 pp 1 29 Chester Lewis Hodgson Godfrey Page Bruce An American Melodrama The Presidential Campaign of 1968 The Viking Press 1969 Johns Andrew L The Price of Loyalty Hubert Humphrey s Vietnam Conflict Rowman amp Littlefield 2020 Nelson Justin A Drafting Lyndon Johnson The President s Secret Role in the 1968 Democratic Convention Presidential Studies Quarterly 30 4 2000 688 713 Nelson Michael The Historical Presidency Lost Confidence The Democratic Party the Vietnam War and the 1968 Election Presidential Studies Quarterly 48 3 2018 570 585 Sandbrook Dominic 2007 Eugene McCarthy The Rise and Fall of Postwar American Liberalism ISBN 9780307425775 Small Melvin The Doves Ascendant The American Antiwar Movement in 1968 South Central Review 16 1999 43 52 online Solberg Carl Hubert Humphrey A Biography Norton 1984 White Theodore H The Making of the President 1968 1969 Portals nbsp Politics nbsp United States nbsp 1960s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1968 Democratic Party presidential primaries amp oldid 1204865174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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