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Wikipedia

List of United States Democratic Party presidential tickets

This is a list of American electoral candidates for the offices of President of the United States and Vice President of the United States of the modern Democratic Party, either duly preselected and nominated, or the presumptive nominees of a future preselection and election. Opponents who received over one percent of the popular vote or ran an official campaign that received Electoral College votes are listed. Offices held prior to Election Day are included, and those held on Election Day have an italicized end date.

19th century edit

1828, 1832 edit

Presidential
nominee
1828 (won), 1832 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Andrew Jackson of TN
(1767–1845)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
John C. Calhoun of SC
(1782–1850)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Martin Van Buren of NY
(1782–1862)
 
Opponent(s)
John Quincy Adams (National Republican)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Jackson: 178 (68.2%)
  • Adams: 83 (31.8%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)[1]
  • Calhoun: 171 (65.5%)
  • Rush: 83 (31.8%)
  • Smith: 7 (2.7%)
Popular vote
  • Jackson/Calhoun: 642,553 (55.9%)
  • Adams/Rush: 500,897 (43.7%)
Opponent(s)
Richard Rush (National Republican)
Opponent(s)
Henry Clay (Whig)
William Wirt (Anti-Masonic)
Electoral vote (President)[2]
  • Jackson: 219 (76.0%)
  • Clay: 49 (17.0%)
  • Floyd: 11 (3.8%)
  • Wirt: 7 (2.4%)
  • None: 2 (0.7%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Van Buren: 189 (65.6%)
  • Sargent: 49 (17.0%)
  • Wilkins: 30 (10.4%)
  • Lee: 11 (3.8%)
  • Ellmaker: 7 (2.4%)
  • None: 2 (0.7%)
Popular vote
  • Jackson/Van Buren: 701,780 (54.7%)
  • Clay/Sargent: 484,205 (36.9%)
  • Wirt/Ellmaker: 100,715 (7.8%)
Opponent(s)
John Sergeant (Whig)
Amos Ellmaker (Anti-Masonic)

1836, 1840 edit

Presidential
nominee
1836 (won), 1840 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Martin Van Buren of NY
(1782–1862)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
Richard Johnson of KY
(1780–1850)
 
Opponent(s)
William Harrison (Northern Whig)
Hugh White (Southern Whig)
Electoral vote (President)[3]
  • Van Buren: 170 (57.8%)
  • Harrison: 73 (24.8%)
  • White: 26 (8.8%)
  • Webster: 14 (4.8%)
  • Magnum: 11 (3.7%)
Contingent vote (Vice President)
  • Johnson 33 (63.5%)
  • Granger: 16 (30.8%)
  • Blank: 3 (5.8%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Johnson 147 (50.0%)
  • Granger: 77 (26.2%)
  • Tyler: 47 (16.0%)
  • Smith: 23 (7.8%)
Popular vote
  • Van Buren/Johnson: 764,176 (50.8%)
  • Harrison/Granger: 550,816 (36.6%)
  • White/Tyler: 146,109 (9.7%)
  • Webster/Granger: 41,201 (2.7%)
Opponent(s)
Francis Granger (Northern Whig)
John Tyler (Southern Whig)
Opponent(s)
William Harrison (Whig)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Harrison: 234 (79.6%)
  • Van Buren: 60 (20.4%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Tyler: 234 (79.6%)
  • Johnson: 48 (16.3%)
  • Tazewell: 11 (3.7%)
  • Polk: 1 (0.3%)
Popular vote
  • Harrison/Tyler: 1,275,390 (52.9%)
  • Van Buren/Johnson: 1,128,854 (46.8%)
Opponent(s)
John Tyler (Whig)

1844 edit

Presidential
nominee
1844 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
James Polk of TN
(1795–1849)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Silas Wright of NY[4]
(1795–1847)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
George Dallas of PA
(1792–1864)
 
Opponent(s)
Henry Clay (Whig)
James Birney (Liberty)
Electoral vote
  • Polk/Dallas: 170 (61.8%)
  • Clay/Frelinghuysen: 105 (38.2%)
Popular vote
  • Polk/Dallas: 1,339,494 (49.5%)
  • Clay/Frelinghuysen: 1,300,004 (49.1%)
  • Birney/Morris: 62,103 (2.3%)
Opponent(s)
Theodore Frelinghuysen (Whig)
Thomas Morris (Liberty)

1848 edit

Presidential
nominee
1848 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Lewis Cass of MI
(1782–1866)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
William Butler of KY
(1791–1880)
 
Opponent(s)
Zachary Taylor (Whig)
Martin Van Buren (Free Soil)
Electoral vote
  • Taylor/Fillmore: 163 (56.2%)
  • Cass/Butler: 127 (43.8%)
Popular vote
  • Taylor/Fillmore: 1,361,393 (47.1%)
  • Cass/Butler: 1,223,460 (42.5%)
  • Van Buren/Adams 291,501 (10.1%)
Opponent(s)
Millard Fillmore (Whig)
Charles Adams (Free Soil)

1852 edit

Presidential
nominee
1852 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Franklin Pierce of NH
(1804–1869)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
William King of AL
(1786–1853)
 
Opponent(s)
Winfield Scott (Whig)
John Hale (Free Soil)
Electoral vote
  • Pierce/King: 254 (85.8%)
  • Scott/Graham: 42 (14.2%)
Popular vote
  • Pierce/King: 1,607,510 (50.8%)
  • Scott/Graham: 1,386,942 (43.9%)
  • Hale/Julian: 155,210 (4.9%)
Opponent(s)
William Graham (Whig)
George Julian (Free Soil)

1856 edit

Presidential
nominee
1856 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
James Buchanan of PA
(1791–1868)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
John Breckinridge of KY
(1821–1875)
 
Opponent(s)
John Frémont (Republican)
Millard Fillmore (Know Nothing)
Electoral vote
  • Buchanan/Breckinridge: 174 (58.8%)
  • Frémont/Dayton: 114 (38.5%)
  • Fillmore/Donelson: 8 (2.7%)
Popular vote
  • Buchanan/Breckinridge: 1,836,072 (45.3%)
  • Frémont/Dayton: 1,342,345 (33.1%)
  • Fillmore/Donelson: 873,053 (21.5%)
Opponent(s)
William Dayton (Republican)
Andrew Donelson (Know Nothing)

1860 edit

Presidential
nominee
1860 (lost)[5] Vice presidential
nominee
Stephen Douglas of IL
(1813–1861)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
Herschel Johnson of GA
(1812–1880)
 
Opponent(s)
Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
John Breckinridge (Southern Democrats)
John Bell (Constitutional Union)
Electoral vote
  • Lincoln/Hamlin: 180 (59.4%)
  • Breckinridge/Lane: 72 (23.8%)
  • Bell/Everett: 39 (12.9%)
  • Douglas/Johnson: 12 (4.0%)
Popular vote
  • Lincoln/Hamlin: 1,865,908 (39.7%)
  • Douglas/Johnson: 1,380,202 (29.5%)
  • Breckinridge/Lane: 848,019 (18.2%)
  • Bell/Everett: 590,901 (12.7%)
Opponent(s)
Hannibal Hamlin (Republican)
Joe Lane (Southern Democrats)
Edward Everett (Constitutional Union)

1864 edit

Presidential
nominee
1864 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
George McClellan of NJ
(1826–1885)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
George Pendleton of OH
(1825–1889)
 
Opponent(s)
Abraham Lincoln (Constitutional Union)
Electoral vote
  • Lincoln/Johnson: 212 (91.0%)[6]
  • McClellan/Pendleton: 21 (9.0%)[7]
Popular vote
  • Lincoln/Johnson: 2,218,388 (55.0%)
  • McClellan/Pendleton: 1,812,807 (45.0%)
Opponent(s)
Andrew Johnson (Constitutional Union)

1868 edit

Presidential
nominee
1868 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Horatio Seymour of NY
(1810–1886)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Francis Blair of MO
(1821–1875)
 
Opponent(s)
Ulysses S. Grant (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Grant/Colfax: 214 (72.8%)
  • Seymour/Blair: 80 (27.2%)
Popular vote
  • Grant/Colfax: 3,013,421 (52.7%)
  • Seymour/Blair: 2,706,829 (47.3%)
Opponent(s)
Schuyler Colfax (Republican)

1872 edit

Presidential
nominee
1872 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Horace Greeley of NY
(1811–1872)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
Gratz Brown of MO
(1826–1885)
 
Opponent(s)
Ulysses S. Grant (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Grant/Wilson: 286 (81.3%)[8]
  • Greeley/Brown: 66 (18.8%)*[9][10]
Popular vote
  • Grant/Wilson: 3,598,235 (55.6%)
  • Greely/Brown: 2,834,761 (43.8%)
Opponent(s)
Henry Wilson (Republican)

1876 edit

Presidential
nominee
1876 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Samuel Tilden of NY
(1814–1886)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Thomas Hendricks of IN
(1819–1885)
 
Opponent(s)
Rutherford Hayes (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Hayes/Wheeler: 185 (50.1%)
  • Tilden/Hendricks: 184 (49.9%)
Popular vote
  • Tilden/Hendricks: 4,288,546 (50.9%)
  • Hayes/Wheeler: 4,034,311 (47.9%)
Opponent(s)
William Wheeler (Republican)

1880 edit

Presidential
nominee
1880 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Winfield Hancock of PA
(1824–1886)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
William English of IN
(1822–1896)
 
Opponent(s)
James Garfield (Republican)
James Weaver (Greenback)
Electoral vote
  • Garfield/Arthur: 214 (58.0%)
  • Hancock/English: 155 (42.0%)
Popular vote
  • Garfield/Arthur: 4,446,158 (48.3%)
  • Hancock/English: 4,444,260 (48.2%)
  • Weaver/Chambers: 308,649 (3.4%)
Opponent(s)
Chester Arthur (Republican)
Barzillai Chambers (Greenback)

1884, 1888, 1892 edit

Presidential
nominee
1884 (won), 1888 (lost), 1892 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Grover Cleveland of NY
(1837–1908)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
Thomas Hendricks of IN
(1819–1885)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Allen Thurman of OH
(1813–1895)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Adlai Stevenson of IL
(1835–1914)
 
Opponent(s)
James Blaine (Republican)
St. John (Prohibition)
Benjamin Butler (Greenback)
Electoral vote
  • Cleveland/Hendricks: 219 (54.6%)
  • Blaine/Logan: 182 (45.4%)
Popular vote
  • Cleveland/Hendricks: 4,914,482 (48.9%)
  • Blaine/Logan: 4,856,905 (48.3%)
  • St. John/Daniel: 147,482 (1.5%)
  • Butler/West: 134,294 (1.3%)
Opponent(s)
John Logan (Republican)
William Daniel (Prohibition)
Absolom West (Greenback)
Opponent(s)
Benjamin Harrison (Republican)
Clinton Fisk (Prohibition)
Alson Streeter (Union Labor)
Electoral vote
  • Harrison/Morton: 233 (58.1%)
  • Cleveland/Thurman: 168 (41.9%)
Popular vote
  • Cleveland/Thurman: 5,534,488 (48.6%)
  • Harrison/Morton: 5,443,892 (47.8%)
  • Fisk/Brooks: 249,819 (2.2%)
  • Streeter/Cunningham: 146,602 (1.3%)
Opponent(s)
Levi Morton (Republican)
John Brooks (Prohibition)
Charles Cunningham (Union Labor)
Opponent(s)
Benjamin Harrison (Republican)
James Weaver (Populist)
John Bidwell (Prohibition)
Electoral vote
  • Cleveland/Stevenson: 277 (62.4%)
  • Harrison/Reid: 145 (32.7%)
  • Weaver/Field: 22 (5.0%)
Popular vote
  • Cleveland/Stevenson: 5,556,918 (46.0%)
  • Harrison/Reid: 5,176,108 (43.0%)
  • Weaver/Field: 1,041,028 (8.5%)
  • Bidwell/Cranfill: 270,879 (2.2%)
Opponent(s)
Whitelaw Reid (Republican)
James Field (Populist)
James Cranfill (Prohibition)

1896, 1900 edit

Presidential
nominee
1896 (lost), 1900 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
William Jennings Bryan of NE
(1860–1925)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
  • None
Higher education
  • None
Arthur Sewall of ME
(1835–1900)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Adlai Stevenson of IL
(1835–1914)
 
Opponent(s)
William McKinley (Republican)
Electoral vote (President)
  • McKinley: 271 (60.6%)
  • Bryan: 176 (39.4%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Hobart: 271 (60.6%)
  • Sewall: 149 (33.3%)
  • Watson: 27 (6.0%)
Popular vote
  • McKinley/Hobart: 7,102,246 (51.0%)
  • Bryan/Sewall-Watson: 6,492,559 (46.7%)
Opponent(s)
Garret Hobart (Republican)
Thomas E. Watson (Populist)
Opponent(s)
William McKinley (Republican)
John Woolley (Prohibition)
Electoral vote
  • McKinley/Roosevelt: 292 (65.3%)
  • Bryan/Stevenson: 155 (34.7%)
Popular vote
  • McKinley/Roosevelt: 7,228,864 (51.6%)
  • Bryan/Stevenson: 6,370,932 (45.5%)
  • Woolley/Metcalf: 210,864 (1.5%)
Opponent(s)
Theodore Roosevelt (Republican)
Henry Metcalf (Prohibition)

20th century edit

1904 edit

Presidential
nominee
1904 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Alton Parker of NY
(1852–1926)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Henry Davis of WV
(1823–1916)
 
Opponent(s)
Theodore Roosevelt (Republican)
Gene Debs (Socialist)
Silas Swallow (Prohibition)
Electoral vote
  • Roosevelt/Fairbanks: 336 (70.6%)
  • Parker/Davis: 140 (29.4%)
Popular vote
  • Roosevelt/Fairbanks: 7,630,457 (56.4%)
  • Parker/Davis: 5,083,880 (37.6%)
  • Debs/Hanford: 402,810 (3.0%)
  • Swallow/Carroll: 259,102 (1.9%)
Opponent(s)
Charles Fairbanks (Republican)
Ben Hanford (Socialist)
George Carroll (Prohibition)

1908 edit

Presidential
nominee
1908 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
William Jennings Bryan of NE
(1860–1925)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
John Kern of IN
(1849–1917)
 
Opponent(s)
William Taft (Republican)
Gene Debs (Socialist)
Eugene Chafin (Prohibition)
Electoral vote
  • Taft/Sherman: 321 (66.5%)
  • Parker/Davis: 162 (33.5%)
Popular vote
  • Taft/Sherman: 7,678,335 (51.6%)
  • Bryan/Kern: 6,408,979 (43.0%)
  • Debs/Hanford: 420,852 (2.8%)
  • Chafin/Watkins: 254,087 (1.7%)
Opponent(s)
Jim Sherman (Republican)
Ben Hanford (Socialist)
Aaron Watkins (Prohibition)

1912, 1916 edit

Presidential
nominee
1912 (won), 1916 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Woodrow Wilson of NJ
(1856–1924)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Thomas Marshall of IN
(1854–1925)
 
Opponent(s)
William Taft (Republican)
Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive)
Gene Debs (Socialist)
Eugene Chafin (Prohibition)
Electoral vote
  • Wilson/Marshall: 435 (81.9%)
  • Roosevelt/Johnson: 88 (16.6%)
  • Taft/Butler: 8 (1.5%)
Popular vote
  • Wilson/Marshall: 6,296,284 (41.8%)
  • Roosevelt/Johnson: 4,122,721 (24.7%)
  • Taft/Butler: 3,486,242 (23.2%)
  • Debs/Seidel: 901,551 (6.0%)
  • Chafin/Watkins: 208,156 (1.7%)
Opponent(s)
Nicholas Butler (Republican)
Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
Emil Seidel (Socialist)
Aaron Watkins (Prohibition)
Opponent(s)
Charles Hughes (Republican)
Allan Benson (Socialist)
Frank Hanly (Prohibition)
Electoral vote
  • Wilson/Marshall: 277 (52.2%)
  • Hughes/Fairbanks: 254 (47.8%)
Popular vote
  • Wilson/Marshall: (49.2%)
  • Hughes/Fairbanks: 8,548,728 (46.1%)
  • Benson/Kirkpatrick: 590,524 (3.2%)
  • Hanly/Landrith: 221,302 (1.2%)
Opponent(s)
Charles Fairbanks (Republican)
Kirk Kirkpatrick (Socialist)
Ira Landrith (Prohibition)

1920 edit

Presidential
nominee
1920 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
James Cox of OH
(1870–1957)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
Franklin D. Roosevelt of NY
(1882–1945)
 
Opponent(s)
Warren G. Harding (Republican)
Gene Debs (Socialist)
Parley Christensen (Farmer-Labor)
Electoral vote
  • Harding/Coolidge: 404 (76.1%)
  • Cox/Roosevelt: 127 (23.9%)
Popular vote
  • Harding/Coolidge: 16,144,093 (60.3%)
  • Cox/Roosevelt: 9,139,661 (34.2%)
  • Debs/Stedman: 913,693 (3.4%)
  • Christensen/Hayes: 265,398 (1.0%)
Opponent(s)
Calvin Coolidge (Republican)
Stedy Stedman (Socialist)
Max Hayes (Farmer-Labor)

1924 edit

Presidential
nominee
1924 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
John Davis of WV
(1873–1955)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Charles Bryan of NE
(1867–1945)
 
Opponent(s)
Calvin Coolidge (Republican)
Robert La Follette (Progressive)
Electoral vote
  • Coolidge/Dawes: 382 (71.9%)
  • Davis/Bryan: 136 (25.6%)
  • La Follette/Wheeler: 13 (2.4%)
Popular vote
  • Coolidge/Dawes: 15,723,789 (54.0%)
  • Davis/Bryan: 8,386,242 (28.8%)
  • La Follette/Wheeler: 4,831,706 (16.6%)
Opponent(s)
Charles Dawes (Republican)
Burton Wheeler (Progressive)

1928 edit

Presidential
nominee
1928 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Al Smith of NY
(1873–1944)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
  • None
Prior public experience
Higher education
Joe Robinson of AR
(1872–1937)
 
Opponent(s)
Herbert Hoover (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Hoover/Curtis: 444 (83.6%)
  • Smith/Robinson: 87 (16.4%)
Popular vote
  • Hoover/Curtis: 21,427,123: (58.2%)
  • Smith/Robinson: 15,015,464 (40.8%)
Opponent(s)
Charles Curtis (Republican)

1932, 1936, 1940, 1944 edit

Presidential
nominee
1932 (won), 1936 (won), 1940 (won), 1944 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Franklin D. Roosevelt of NY
(1882–1945)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Jack Garner of TX
(1868–1967)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Henry Wallace of IA
(1888–1965)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Harry S. Truman of MO
(1884–1972)
 
Opponent(s)
Herbert Hoover (Republican)
Norman Thomas (Socialist)
Electoral vote
  • Roosevelt/Garner: 472 (88.9%)
  • Hoover/Curtis: 59 (11.1%)
Popular vote
  • Roosevelt/Garner: 22,821,277 (57.4%)
  • Hoover/Curtis: 15,761,254 (39.7%)
  • Thomas/Maurer: 884,885 (2.2%)
Opponent(s)
Charles Curtis (Republican)
James Maurer (Socialist)
Opponent(s)
Alf Landon (Republican)
William Lemke (Union)
Electoral vote
  • Roosevelt/Garner: 523 (98.5%)
  • Landon/Knox: 8 (1.5%)
Popular vote
  • Roosevelt/Garner: 27,752,648 (60.8%)
  • Landon/Knox: 16,681,862 (36.5%)
  • Lemke/O'Brien: 892,378 (2.0%)
Opponent(s)
Frank Knox (Republican)
Thomas O'Brien (Union)
Opponent(s)
Wendell Willkie (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Roosevelt/Wallace: 449 (84.6%)
  • Willkie/McNary: 82 (15.4%)
Popular vote
  • Roosevelt/Wallace 27,313,945: (54.7%)
  • Willkie/McNary: (44.8%)
Opponent(s)
Charles L. McNary (Republican)
Opponent(s)
Thomas Dewey (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Roosevelt/Truman: 432 (81.4%)
  • Dewey/Bicker: 99 (18.6%)
Popular vote
  • Roosevelt/Truman: 25,612,916 (53.4%)
  • Dewey/Bicker: 22,017,929 (45.3%)
Opponent(s)
John Bricker (Republican)

1948 edit

Presidential
nominee
1948 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Harry S. Truman of MO
(1884–1972)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Alben Barkley of KY
(1877–1956)
 
Opponent(s)
Thomas Dewey (Republican)
Strom Thurmond (Dixiecrat)
Henry Wallace (Progressive)
Electoral vote
  • Truman/Barkley: 303 (57.1%)
  • Dewey/Warren: 189 (35.6%)
  • Thurmond/Wright: 39 (7.3%)
Popular vote
  • Truman/Barkley: 24,179,347 (49.6%)
  • Dewey/Warren: 21,991,292 (45.1%)
  • Thurmond/Wright: 1,175,930 (2.4%)
  • Wallace/Taylor: 1,157,328 (2.3%)
Opponent(s)
Earl Warren (Republican)
Fielding Wright (Dixiecrat)
Glen Taylor (Progressive)

1952, 1956 edit

Presidential
nominee
1952 (lost), 1956 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Adlai Stevenson II of IL
(1900–1965)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
John Sparkman of AL
(1899–1985)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Estes Kefauver of TN
(1903–1963)
 
Opponent(s)
Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Eisenhower/Nixon: 442 (83.2%)
  • Stevenson/Sparkman: 89 (16.8%)
Popular vote
  • Eisenhower/Nixon: 34,075,529 (55.2%)
  • Stevenson/Sparkman: 27,375,090 (44.2%)
Opponent(s)
Richard Nixon (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Eisenhower/Nixon: 457 (86.1%)[11]
  • Stevenson/Kefauver: 73 (13.7%)
  • Jones/Talmadge: 1 (0.2%)
Popular vote
  • Eisenhower/Nixon: 35,579,180 (57.4%)
  • Stevenson/Kefauver: 26,028,028 (42.0%)

1960 edit

Presidential
nominee
1960 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
John F. Kennedy of MA
(1917–1963)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Lyndon B. Johnson of TX
(1908–1973)
 
Opponent(s)
Richard Nixon (Republican)
Harry F. Byrd (Southern
Democrats
)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Kennedy: 303 (56.4%)
  • Nixon: 219 (40.8%)
  • Byrd: 15 (2.8%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Johnson: 303 (56.4%)
  • Lodge: 219 (40.8%)
  • Thurmond: 14 (2.6%)
  • Goldwater: 1 (0.2%)
Popular vote
  • Kennedy/Johnson: 34,220,984 (49.7%)
  • Nixon/Lodge: 34,108,157 (49.6%)
  • Byrd/Thurmond: 116,248 (0.2%)
Opponent(s)
Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (Republican)
Strom Thurmond (Southern
Democrats
)

1964 edit

Presidential
nominee
1964 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Lyndon B. Johnson of TX
(1908–1973)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Hubert Humphrey of MN
(1911–1978)
 
Opponent(s)
Barry Goldwater (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Johnson/Humphrey: 486 (90.3%)
  • Goldwater/Miller: 52 (9.7%)
Popular vote
  • Johnson/Humphrey: 43,127,041 (61.1%)
  • Goldwater/Miller: 27,175,754 (38.5%)
Opponent(s)
William E. Miller (Republican)

1968 edit

Presidential
nominee
1968 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Hubert Humphrey of MN
(1911–1978)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Edmund Muskie of ME
(1914–1996)
 
Opponent(s)
Richard Nixon (Republican)
George Wallace (American
Independent
)
Electoral vote
  • Nixon/Agnew: 301 (55.9%)
  • Humphrey/Muskie: 191 (35.5%)
  • Wallace/LeMay: 46 (8.6%)
Popular vote
  • Nixon/Agnew: 31,783,783 (43.4%)
  • Humphrey/Muskie: 31,271,839 (42.7%)
  • Wallace/LeMay: 9,901,118 (13.5%)
Opponent(s)
Spiro Agnew (Republican)
Curtis LeMay (American
Independent
)

1972 edit

Presidential
nominee
1972 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
George McGovern of SD
(1922–2012)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Tom Eagleton of MO[12]
(1929–2007)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Sargent Shriver of MD
(1915–2011)
 
Opponent(s)
Richard Nixon (Republican)
John G. Schmitz (American
Independent
)
Electoral vote
Popular vote
  • Nixon/Agnew: 47,168,710 (60.6%)
  • McGovern/Shriver 29,173,222 (37.5%)
  • Schmitz/Anderson: 1,100,868 (1.4%)
Opponent(s)
Spiro Agnew (Republican)
Thomas J. Anderson (American
Independent
)

1976, 1980 edit

Presidential
nominee
1976 (won), 1980 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Jimmy Carter of GA
(born 1924)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Walter Mondale of MN
(1928–2021)
 
Opponent(s)
Gerald Ford (Republican)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Carter: 297 (55.2%)
  • Ford: 240 (44.6%)[14]
  • Reagan: 1 (0.2%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Mondale: 297 (55.2%)
  • Dole: 241 (44.8%)
Popular vote
  • Carter/Mondale: 40,831,881 (50.1%)
  • Ford/Dole: 39,148,634 (48.0%)
Opponent(s)
Bob Dole (Republican)
Opponent(s)
Ronald Reagan (Republican)
John B. Anderson (Independent)
Ed Clark (Libertarian)
Electoral vote
  • Reagan/Bush: 489 (90.9%)
  • Carter/Mondale: 49 (9.1%)
Popular vote
  • Reagan/Bush: 43,903,230 (50.8%)
  • Carter/Mondale: 35,480,115 (41.0%)
  • Anderson/Lucey: 5,719,850 (6.6%)
  • Clark/Koch: 921,128 (1.1%)
Opponent(s)
George H. W. Bush (Republican)
Patrick Lucey (Independent)
David Koch (Libertarian)

1984 edit

Presidential
nominee
1984 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Walter Mondale of MN
(1928–2021)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Geraldine Ferraro of NY
(1935–2011)
 
Opponent(s)
Ronald Reagan (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Reagan/Bush: 525 (97.6%)
  • Mondale/Ferraro: 13 (2.4%)
Popular vote
  • Reagan/Bush: 54,455,472 (58.8%)
  • Mondale/Ferraro: 37,577,352 (40.6%)
Opponent(s)
George H. W. Bush (Republican)

1988 edit

Presidential
nominee
1988 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Michael Dukakis of MA
(born 1933)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Lloyd Bentsen of TX
(1921–2006)
 
Opponent(s)
George H. W. Bush (Republican)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Bush: 426 (79.2%)
  • Dukakis: 111 (20.6%)[15]
  • Bentsen: 1 (0.2%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Quayle: 426 (79.2%)
  • Bentsen: 111 (20.6%)[15]
  • Dukakis: 1 (0.2%)
Popular vote
  • Bush/Quayle: 48,886,097 (53.4%)
  • Dukakis/Bentsen: 41,809,074 (45.7%)
Opponent(s)
Dan Quayle (Republican)

1992, 1996 edit

Presidential
nominee
1992 (won), 1996 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Bill Clinton of AR
(born 1946)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Al Gore of TN
(born 1948)
 
Opponent(s)
George H. W. Bush (Republican)
Ross Perot (Independent)
Electoral vote
  • Clinton/Gore: 370 (68.8%)
  • Bush/Quayle: 168 (31.2%)
Popular vote
  • Clinton/Gore: 44,909,806 (43.0%)
  • Bush/Quayle: 39,104,550 (37.5%)
  • Perot/Stockdale: 19,743,821 (18.9%)
Opponent(s)
Dan Quayle (Republican)
James Stockdale (Independent)
Opponent(s)
Bob Dole (Republican)
Ross Perot (Reform)
Electoral vote
  • Clinton/Gore: 379 (70.4%)
  • Dole/Kemp: 159 (29.6%)
Popular vote
  • Clinton/Gore: 47,401,185 (49.2%)
  • Dole/Kemp: 39,197,469 (40.7%)
  • Perot/Choate: 8,085,294 (8.4%)
Opponent(s)
Jack Kemp (Republican)
Pat Choate (Reform)

21st century edit

2000 edit

Presidential
nominee
2000 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Al Gore of TN
(born 1948)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Joe Lieberman of CT
(born 1942)
 
Opponent(s)
George W. Bush (Republican)
Ralph Nader (Green)
Electoral vote
  • Bush/Cheney: 271 (50.4%)
  • Gore/Lieberman: 266 (49.4%)[16]
Popular vote
  • Gore/Lieberman: 50,999,897 (48.4%)
  • Bush/Cheney: 50,456,002 (47.9%)
  • Nader/LaDuke: 2,882,955 (2.7%)
Opponent(s)
Dick Cheney (Republican)
Winona LaDuke (Green)

2004 edit

Presidential
nominee
2004 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
John Kerry of MA
(born 1943)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
John Edwards of NC
(born 1953)
 
Opponent(s)
George W. Bush (Republican)
Electoral vote (President)
  • Bush: 286 (53.2%)
  • Kerry: 251 (46.7%)[17]
  • Edwards: 1 (0.2%)
Electoral vote (Vice President)
  • Cheney: 286 (53.2%)
  • Edwards: 252 (46.8%)
Popular vote
  • Bush/Cheney: 62,040,610 (50.7%)
  • Kerry/Edwards: 59,028,444 (48.3%)
Opponent(s)
Dick Cheney (Republican)

2008, 2012 edit

Presidential
nominee
2008 (won), 2012 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Barack Obama of IL
(born 1961)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Joe Biden of DE
(born 1942)
 
Opponent(s)
John McCain (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Obama/Biden: 365 (67.8%)
  • McCain/Palin: 173 (32.2%)
Popular vote
  • Obama/Biden: 69,498,516 (52.9%)
  • McCain/Palin: 59,948,323 (45.7%)
Opponent(s)
Sarah Palin (Republican)
Opponent(s)
Mitt Romney (Republican)
Electoral vote
  • Obama/Biden: 332 (61.7%)
  • Romney/Ryan: 206 (38.3%)
Popular vote
  • Obama/Biden: 65,915,796 (51.1%)
  • Romney/Ryan: 60,933,500 (47.2%)
  • Johnson/Gray: 1,275,971 (1.0%)
Opponent(s)
Paul Ryan (Republican)

2016 edit

Presidential
nominee
2016 (lost) Vice presidential
nominee
Hillary Clinton of NY
(born 1947)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Tim Kaine of VA
(born 1958)
 
Opponent(s)
Donald Trump (Republican)
Gary Johnson (Libertarian)
Jill Stein (Green)
Electoral vote (President)[18]
Electoral vote (Vice President)
Popular vote
  • Clinton/Kaine: 65,853,516 (48.2%)
  • Trump/Pence: 62,984,825 (46.1%)
  • Johnson/Weld: 4,489,221 (3.3%)
  • Stein/Baraka: 1,457,216 (1.1%)
Opponent(s)
Mike Pence (Republican)
Bill Weld (Libertarian)
Ajamu Baraka (Green)

2020 edit

Presidential
nominee
2020 (won) Vice presidential
nominee
Joe Biden of DE
(born 1942)
 
Prior public experience
Higher education
Prior public experience
Higher education
Kamala Harris of CA
(born 1964)
 
Opponent(s)
Donald Trump (Republican)
Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian)
Electoral vote
  • Biden/Harris: 306 (56.9%)
  • Trump/Pence: 232 (43.1%)
Popular vote
  • Biden/Harris: 81,268,924 (51.3%)
  • Trump/Pence: 74,216,154 (46.9%)
  • Jorgensen/Cohen: 1,865,724 (1.2%)
Opponent(s)
Mike Pence (Republican)
Spike Cohen (Libertarian)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ If not for unpledged electors, Rush would have won 178 (68.2%) votes.
  2. ^ South Carolina's delegates were selected by the state legislature and not by popular vote, which went to the Nullifier ticket of Floyd/Lee, which did not campaign, while 30 Pennsylvania delegates voted Wilkins for Vice President. Two Maryland delegates did not cast votes.
  3. ^ The Whig Party ran regional candidates in 1836. William H. Harrison and Francis Granger ran in Northern states, while Hugh Lawson White and John Tyler ran in Southern states. Daniel Webster was on the ballot in Massachusetts and Willie Person Mangum received votes from the Electoral College without being on the ballot.
  4. ^ Wright declined after being nominated by the convention.
  5. ^ Douglas and Johnson were chosen at the national nominating convention after most of the Southern delegations walked out, who held a separate national nominating convention to nominate Breckinridge and Lane.
  6. ^ If not for 17 invalidated electors from Union-occupied Louisiana and Tennessee, Lincoln and Johnson would have won 229 (91.6%) votes.
  7. ^ If not for 17 invalidated electors from Union-occupied Louisiana and Tennessee, McClellan and Pendleton would have won 8.4% of the votes.
  8. ^ If not for the 14 invalidated electors from voting irregularities in Arkansas and Louisiana, Grant and Wilson would have won 300 (82.0%) votes.
  9. ^ Greeley died after the election but before the Electoral College convened, and was not replaced for the vote. The ticket's intended delegates were scattered.
  10. ^ If not for the 14 invalidated electors for Grant and Wilson from voting irregularities in Arkansas and Louisiana, Greeley and Brown's 66 votes would have been 18.0%.
  11. ^ If not for a faithless elector, Eisenhower and Nixon would have won 458 (86.3%) in 1956.
  12. ^ Eagleton withdrew from the ticket and was replaced by Shriver.
  13. ^ a b If not for a faithless elector, Nixon and Agnew would have won 521 (96.8%) Electoral College votes.
  14. ^ If not for a faithless elector, Ford would have won 241 (44.8%) votes.
  15. ^ a b A faithless elector swapped their votes for President and Vice President in the Electoral College, otherwise the Dukakis/Bentsen ticket would have won 112 (20.8%) votes.
  16. ^ An elector from the District of Columbia abstained from casting a vote for the Gore/Lieberman ticket, otherwise Gore would have won 267 (49.6%) votes.
  17. ^ A faithless elector voted Edwards for President and Vice President in the Electoral College, otherwise Kerry would have won 252 (46.8%) votes.
  18. ^ If not for faithless electors, Trump and Pence would have won 306 (56.9%) Electoral College votes each, while Clinton and Kaine would have won 232 (43.1%) votes.

list, united, states, democratic, party, presidential, tickets, this, list, american, electoral, candidates, offices, president, united, states, vice, president, united, states, modern, democratic, party, either, duly, preselected, nominated, presumptive, nomi. This is a list of American electoral candidates for the offices of President of the United States and Vice President of the United States of the modern Democratic Party either duly preselected and nominated or the presumptive nominees of a future preselection and election Opponents who received over one percent of the popular vote or ran an official campaign that received Electoral College votes are listed Offices held prior to Election Day are included and those held on Election Day have an italicized end date Contents 1 19th century 1 1 1828 1832 1 2 1836 1840 1 3 1844 1 4 1848 1 5 1852 1 6 1856 1 7 1860 1 8 1864 1 9 1868 1 10 1872 1 11 1876 1 12 1880 1 13 1884 1888 1892 1 14 1896 1900 2 20th century 2 1 1904 2 2 1908 2 3 1912 1916 2 4 1920 2 5 1924 2 6 1928 2 7 1932 1936 1940 1944 2 8 1948 2 9 1952 1956 2 10 1960 2 11 1964 2 12 1968 2 13 1972 2 14 1976 1980 2 15 1984 2 16 1988 2 17 1992 1996 3 21st century 3 1 2000 3 2 2004 3 3 2008 2012 3 4 2016 3 5 2020 4 See also 5 Notes19th century edit1828 1832 edit Presidentialnominee 1828 won 1832 won Vice presidentialnomineeAndrew Jackson of TN 1767 1845 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1796 1797 U S Senate 1797 1798 1823 1825 Chair of the Senate Military Affairs Committee 1823 1825 Justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court 1798 1804 Governor of Florida 1821 President 1829 1837 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceSouth Carolina House of Representatives 1808 1809 U S House of Representatives 1811 1817 U S Secretary of War 1817 1825 Vice President 1825 1832 Higher educationYale University Litchfield Law School John C Calhoun of SC 1782 1850 nbsp Prior public experienceNew York Senate 1813 1820 Attorney General of New York 1815 1819 U S Senate 1821 1828 Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1823 1828 Governor of New York 1829 U S Secretary of State 1829 1831 U S Minister to the United Kingdom 1831 1832 Higher educationNone Martin Van Buren of NY 1782 1862 nbsp Opponent s John Quincy Adams National Republican Electoral vote President Jackson 178 68 2 Adams 83 31 8 Electoral vote Vice President 1 Calhoun 171 65 5 Rush 83 31 8 Smith 7 2 7 Popular voteJackson Calhoun 642 553 55 9 Adams Rush 500 897 43 7 Opponent s Richard Rush National Republican Opponent s Henry Clay Whig William Wirt Anti Masonic Electoral vote President 2 Jackson 219 76 0 Clay 49 17 0 Floyd 11 3 8 Wirt 7 2 4 None 2 0 7 Electoral vote Vice President Van Buren 189 65 6 Sargent 49 17 0 Wilkins 30 10 4 Lee 11 3 8 Ellmaker 7 2 4 None 2 0 7 Popular voteJackson Van Buren 701 780 54 7 Clay Sargent 484 205 36 9 Wirt Ellmaker 100 715 7 8 Opponent s John Sergeant Whig Amos Ellmaker Anti Masonic 1836 1840 edit Presidentialnominee 1836 won 1840 lost Vice presidentialnomineeMartin Van Buren of NY 1782 1862 nbsp Prior public experienceNew York Senate 1813 1820 Attorney General of New York 1815 1819 U S Senate 1821 1828 Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1823 1828 Governor of New York 1829 U S Secretary of State 1829 1831 U S Minister to the United Kingdom 1831 1832 Vice President 1833 1837 President 1837 1841 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceKentucky House of Representatives 1804 1806 1819 U S House of Representatives 1807 1819 1829 1837 Chair of the House Claims Committee 1810 1811 Chair of the War Department Expenditures Committee 1817 1819 Chair of the House Post Office Committee 1829 1832 Chair of the House Military Affairs Committee 1832 1837 U S Senate 1819 1829 Chair of the Senate Post Office Committee 1829 1832 Vice President 1837 1841 Higher educationTransylvania University Richard Johnson of KY 1780 1850 nbsp Opponent s William Harrison Northern Whig Hugh White Southern Whig Electoral vote President 3 Van Buren 170 57 8 Harrison 73 24 8 White 26 8 8 Webster 14 4 8 Magnum 11 3 7 Contingent vote Vice President Johnson 33 63 5 Granger 16 30 8 Blank 3 5 8 Electoral vote Vice President Johnson 147 50 0 Granger 77 26 2 Tyler 47 16 0 Smith 23 7 8 Popular voteVan Buren Johnson 764 176 50 8 Harrison Granger 550 816 36 6 White Tyler 146 109 9 7 Webster Granger 41 201 2 7 Opponent s Francis Granger Northern Whig John Tyler Southern Whig Opponent s William Harrison Whig Electoral vote President Harrison 234 79 6 Van Buren 60 20 4 Electoral vote Vice President Tyler 234 79 6 Johnson 48 16 3 Tazewell 11 3 7 Polk 1 0 3 Popular voteHarrison Tyler 1 275 390 52 9 Van Buren Johnson 1 128 854 46 8 Opponent s John Tyler Whig 1844 edit Presidentialnominee 1844 won Vice presidentialnomineeJames Polk of TN 1795 1849 nbsp Prior public experienceTennessee House of Representatives 1823 1825 U S House of Representatives 1825 1839 Chair of the House Ways and Means Committee 1833 1835 Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1835 1839 Governor of Tennessee 1839 1841 Higher educationUniversity of North Carolina Chapel Hill BA Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1827 1829 Comptroller of New York 1829 1833 U S Senate 1833 1844 Chair of the Senate Finance Committee 1836 1841 Higher educationMiddlebury College BA Silas Wright of NY 4 1795 1847 nbsp Prior public experienceMayor of Philadelphia PA 1828 1829 U S Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania 1829 1831 Attorney General of Pennsylvania 1833 1835 U S Minister to Russia 1837 1839 U S Senate 1839 1841 Chair of the Senate Naval Affairs Committee 1832 1833 Higher educationPrinceton University BA George Dallas of PA 1792 1864 nbsp Opponent s Henry Clay Whig James Birney Liberty Electoral votePolk Dallas 170 61 8 Clay Frelinghuysen 105 38 2 Popular votePolk Dallas 1 339 494 49 5 Clay Frelinghuysen 1 300 004 49 1 Birney Morris 62 103 2 3 Opponent s Theodore Frelinghuysen Whig Thomas Morris Liberty 1848 edit Presidentialnominee 1848 lost Vice presidentialnomineeLewis Cass of MI 1782 1866 nbsp Prior public experienceOhio House of Representatives 1806 Governor of Michigan 1813 1831 U S Secretary of War 1831 1836 U S Minister to France 1836 1842 U S Senate 1845 1848 Chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee 1847 1848 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceKentucky House of Representatives 1817 1818 U S House of Representatives 1839 1843 Higher educationTransylvania University BA William Butler of KY 1791 1880 nbsp Opponent s Zachary Taylor Whig Martin Van Buren Free Soil Electoral voteTaylor Fillmore 163 56 2 Cass Butler 127 43 8 Popular voteTaylor Fillmore 1 361 393 47 1 Cass Butler 1 223 460 42 5 Van Buren Adams 291 501 10 1 Opponent s Millard Fillmore Whig Charles Adams Free Soil 1852 edit Presidentialnominee 1852 won Vice presidentialnomineeFranklin Pierce of NH 1804 1869 nbsp Prior public experienceNew Hampshire House of Representatives 1829 1833 Speaker of the New Hampshire House of Representatives 1831 1833 U S House of Representatives 1833 1837 U S Senate 1837 1842 Chair of the Senate Pensions Committee 1839 1841 U S Attorney for the District of New Hampshire 1845 Higher educationBowdoin College Northampton Law School Prior public experienceNorth Carolina House of Representatives 1807 1809 U S House of Representatives 1811 1816 U S Senate 1819 1844 1848 1852 Chair of the Senate Public Lands Committee 1831 1832 Chair of the Senate Commerce Committee 1832 1833 1837 1841 President pro tempore of the U S Senate 1836 1841 1850 1852 Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 1849 1850 Chair of the Senate Pensions Committee 1849 1850 U S Minister to France 1844 1846 Higher educationUniversity of North Carolina Chapel Hill BA William King of AL 1786 1853 nbsp Opponent s Winfield Scott Whig John Hale Free Soil Electoral votePierce King 254 85 8 Scott Graham 42 14 2 Popular votePierce King 1 607 510 50 8 Scott Graham 1 386 942 43 9 Hale Julian 155 210 4 9 Opponent s William Graham Whig George Julian Free Soil 1856 edit Presidentialnominee 1856 won Vice presidentialnomineeJames Buchanan of PA 1791 1868 nbsp Prior public experiencePennsylvania House of Representatives 1814 1816 U S House of Representatives 1821 1831 Chair of the House Judiciary Committee 1829 1831 U S Minister to Russia 1832 1833 U S Senate 1834 1845 Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 1836 1841 U S Secretary of State 1845 1849 U S Minister to the United Kingdom 1853 1856 Higher educationDickinson College BA Prior public experienceKentucky House of Representatives 1849 1851 U S House of Representatives 1851 1855 Higher educationCentre College BA Princeton University Transylvania University John Breckinridge of KY 1821 1875 nbsp Opponent s John Fremont Republican Millard Fillmore Know Nothing Electoral voteBuchanan Breckinridge 174 58 8 Fremont Dayton 114 38 5 Fillmore Donelson 8 2 7 Popular voteBuchanan Breckinridge 1 836 072 45 3 Fremont Dayton 1 342 345 33 1 Fillmore Donelson 873 053 21 5 Opponent s William Dayton Republican Andrew Donelson Know Nothing 1860 edit Presidentialnominee 1860 lost 5 Vice presidentialnomineeStephen Douglas of IL 1813 1861 nbsp Prior public experienceIllinois House of Representatives 1836 1838 Secretary of State of Illinois 1840 1841 Associate Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court 1841 1843 U S House of Representatives 1843 1847 Chair of the House Territories Committee 1845 1847 U S Senate 1847 1861 Chair of the Senate Territories Committee 1847 1858 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceU S Senate 1848 1849 Chair of the Senate District of Columbia Committee 1848 1849 Governor of Georgia 1853 1857 Higher educationUniversity of Georgia BA Herschel Johnson of GA 1812 1880 nbsp Opponent s Abraham Lincoln Republican John Breckinridge Southern Democrats John Bell Constitutional Union Electoral voteLincoln Hamlin 180 59 4 Breckinridge Lane 72 23 8 Bell Everett 39 12 9 Douglas Johnson 12 4 0 Popular voteLincoln Hamlin 1 865 908 39 7 Douglas Johnson 1 380 202 29 5 Breckinridge Lane 848 019 18 2 Bell Everett 590 901 12 7 Opponent s Hannibal Hamlin Republican Joe Lane Southern Democrats Edward Everett Constitutional Union 1864 edit Presidentialnominee 1864 lost Vice presidentialnomineeGeorge McClellan of NJ 1826 1885 nbsp Prior public experienceCommanding General of the U S Army 1861 1862 Higher educationUniversity of Pennsylvania U S Military Academy BS Prior public experienceOhio Senate 1854 1856 U S House of Representatives 1857 1865 Higher educationUniversity of Cincinnati Heidelberg University George Pendleton of OH 1825 1889 nbsp Opponent s Abraham Lincoln Constitutional Union Electoral voteLincoln Johnson 212 91 0 6 McClellan Pendleton 21 9 0 7 Popular voteLincoln Johnson 2 218 388 55 0 McClellan Pendleton 1 812 807 45 0 Opponent s Andrew Johnson Constitutional Union 1868 edit Presidentialnominee 1868 lost Vice presidentialnomineeHoratio Seymour of NY 1810 1886 nbsp Prior public experienceNew York Assembly 1842 1944 1845 Speaker of the New York Assembly 1845 Governor of New York 1853 1854 1863 1864 Higher educationHobart College Norwich University BA Prior public experienceAttorney General of New Mexico 1847 Missouri House of Representatives 1852 1856 U S House of Representatives 1857 1859 1860 1861 1864 Chair of the House Armed Services Committee 1861 1862 Higher educationYale University University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Princeton University BA Transylvania University Francis Blair of MO 1821 1875 nbsp Opponent s Ulysses S Grant Republican Electoral voteGrant Colfax 214 72 8 Seymour Blair 80 27 2 Popular voteGrant Colfax 3 013 421 52 7 Seymour Blair 2 706 829 47 3 Opponent s Schuyler Colfax Republican 1872 edit Presidentialnominee 1872 lost Vice presidentialnomineeHorace Greeley of NY 1811 1872 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1848 1849 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceMissouri House of Representatives 1852 1858 U S Senate 1863 1867 Chair of the Senate Audit Committee 1865 1866 Chair of the Senate Public Grounds Committee 1866 1867 Governor of Missouri 1871 1873 Higher educationTransylvania University Yale University BA University of Louisville LLB Gratz Brown of MO 1826 1885 nbsp Opponent s Ulysses S Grant Republican Electoral voteGrant Wilson 286 81 3 8 Greeley Brown 66 18 8 9 10 Popular voteGrant Wilson 3 598 235 55 6 Greely Brown 2 834 761 43 8 Opponent s Henry Wilson Republican 1876 edit Presidentialnominee 1876 lost Vice presidentialnomineeSamuel Tilden of NY 1814 1886 nbsp Prior public experienceNew York Assembly 1846 1847 1872 Chair of the New York Democratic Party 1866 1874 Governor of New York 1875 1876 Higher educationYale University New York University Prior public experienceIndiana House of Representatives 1848 1850 U S House of Representatives 1851 1855 Chair of the House Mileage Committee 1851 1853 Chair of the House Invalid Pensions Committee 1853 1855 Commissioner of the General Land Office 1855 1859 U S Senate 1863 1869 Governor of Indiana 1873 1877 Higher educationHanover College BA Thomas Hendricks of IN 1819 1885 nbsp Opponent s Rutherford Hayes Republican Electoral voteHayes Wheeler 185 50 1 Tilden Hendricks 184 49 9 Popular voteTilden Hendricks 4 288 546 50 9 Hayes Wheeler 4 034 311 47 9 Opponent s William Wheeler Republican 1880 edit Presidentialnominee 1880 lost Vice presidentialnomineeWinfield Hancock of PA 1824 1886 nbsp Prior public experienceCommander of the Fifth Military District 1867 1868 Higher educationU S Military Academy BS Prior public experienceIndiana House of Representatives 1851 1853 Speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives 1852 U S House of Representatives 1853 1861 Chair of the House Post Office Committee 1857 1859 Higher educationHanover College William English of IN 1822 1896 nbsp Opponent s James Garfield Republican James Weaver Greenback Electoral voteGarfield Arthur 214 58 0 Hancock English 155 42 0 Popular voteGarfield Arthur 4 446 158 48 3 Hancock English 4 444 260 48 2 Weaver Chambers 308 649 3 4 Opponent s Chester Arthur Republican Barzillai Chambers Greenback 1884 1888 1892 edit Presidentialnominee 1884 won 1888 lost 1892 won Vice presidentialnomineeGrover Cleveland of NY 1837 1908 nbsp Prior public experienceMayor of Buffalo NY 1882 Governor of New York 1883 1885 President 1885 1889 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceIndiana House of Representatives 1848 1850 U S House of Representatives 1851 1855 Chair of the House Mileage Committee 1851 1853 Chair of the House Invalid Pensions Committee 1853 1855 Commissioner of the General Land Office 1855 1859 U S Senate 1863 1869 Governor of Indiana 1873 1877 Higher educationHanover College BA Thomas Hendricks of IN 1819 1885 nbsp Prior public experienceOhio Supreme Court 1852 1856 Associate Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court 1852 1854 Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court 1854 1856 U S Senate 1869 1881 Chair of the Senate Private Land Claims Committee 1872 1879 President pro tempore of the U S Senate 1879 1880 Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1879 1881 Higher educationNone Allen Thurman of OH 1813 1895 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1875 1877 1879 1881 Higher educationIllinois Wesleyan University Centre College BA Adlai Stevenson of IL 1835 1914 nbsp Opponent s James Blaine Republican St John Prohibition Benjamin Butler Greenback Electoral voteCleveland Hendricks 219 54 6 Blaine Logan 182 45 4 Popular voteCleveland Hendricks 4 914 482 48 9 Blaine Logan 4 856 905 48 3 St John Daniel 147 482 1 5 Butler West 134 294 1 3 Opponent s John Logan Republican William Daniel Prohibition Absolom West Greenback Opponent s Benjamin Harrison Republican Clinton Fisk Prohibition Alson Streeter Union Labor Electoral voteHarrison Morton 233 58 1 Cleveland Thurman 168 41 9 Popular voteCleveland Thurman 5 534 488 48 6 Harrison Morton 5 443 892 47 8 Fisk Brooks 249 819 2 2 Streeter Cunningham 146 602 1 3 Opponent s Levi Morton Republican John Brooks Prohibition Charles Cunningham Union Labor Opponent s Benjamin Harrison Republican James Weaver Populist John Bidwell Prohibition Electoral voteCleveland Stevenson 277 62 4 Harrison Reid 145 32 7 Weaver Field 22 5 0 Popular voteCleveland Stevenson 5 556 918 46 0 Harrison Reid 5 176 108 43 0 Weaver Field 1 041 028 8 5 Bidwell Cranfill 270 879 2 2 Opponent s Whitelaw Reid Republican James Field Populist James Cranfill Prohibition 1896 1900 edit Presidentialnominee 1896 lost 1900 lost Vice presidentialnomineeWilliam Jennings Bryan of NE 1860 1925 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1891 1895 Higher educationIllinois College BA Northwestern University LLB Prior public experienceNoneHigher educationNone Arthur Sewall of ME 1835 1900 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1875 1877 1879 1881 Vice President 1893 1897 Higher educationIllinois Wesleyan University Centre College BA Adlai Stevenson of IL 1835 1914 nbsp Opponent s William McKinley Republican Electoral vote President McKinley 271 60 6 Bryan 176 39 4 Electoral vote Vice President Hobart 271 60 6 Sewall 149 33 3 Watson 27 6 0 Popular voteMcKinley Hobart 7 102 246 51 0 Bryan Sewall Watson 6 492 559 46 7 Opponent s Garret Hobart Republican Thomas E Watson Populist Opponent s William McKinley Republican John Woolley Prohibition Electoral voteMcKinley Roosevelt 292 65 3 Bryan Stevenson 155 34 7 Popular voteMcKinley Roosevelt 7 228 864 51 6 Bryan Stevenson 6 370 932 45 5 Woolley Metcalf 210 864 1 5 Opponent s Theodore Roosevelt Republican Henry Metcalf Prohibition 20th century edit1904 edit Presidentialnominee 1904 lost Vice presidentialnomineeAlton Parker of NY 1852 1926 nbsp Prior public experienceChief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals 1898 1904 Higher educationUnion University New York LLB Prior public experienceWest Virginia House of Delegates 1865 1869 West Virginia Senate 1869 1871 U S Senate 1871 1883 Chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee 1879 1881 Higher educationNone Henry Davis of WV 1823 1916 nbsp Opponent s Theodore Roosevelt Republican Gene Debs Socialist Silas Swallow Prohibition Electoral voteRoosevelt Fairbanks 336 70 6 Parker Davis 140 29 4 Popular voteRoosevelt Fairbanks 7 630 457 56 4 Parker Davis 5 083 880 37 6 Debs Hanford 402 810 3 0 Swallow Carroll 259 102 1 9 Opponent s Charles Fairbanks Republican Ben Hanford Socialist George Carroll Prohibition 1908 edit Presidentialnominee 1908 lost Vice presidentialnomineeWilliam Jennings Bryan of NE 1860 1925 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1891 1895 Higher educationIllinois College BA Northwestern University LLB Prior public experienceIndiana Senate 1893 1897 Higher educationUniversity of Michigan LLB John Kern of IN 1849 1917 nbsp Opponent s William Taft Republican Gene Debs Socialist Eugene Chafin Prohibition Electoral voteTaft Sherman 321 66 5 Parker Davis 162 33 5 Popular voteTaft Sherman 7 678 335 51 6 Bryan Kern 6 408 979 43 0 Debs Hanford 420 852 2 8 Chafin Watkins 254 087 1 7 Opponent s Jim Sherman Republican Ben Hanford Socialist Aaron Watkins Prohibition 1912 1916 edit Presidentialnominee 1912 won 1916 won Vice presidentialnomineeWoodrow Wilson of NJ 1856 1924 nbsp Prior public experienceGovernor of New Jersey 1911 1913 President 1913 1921 Higher educationDavidson College Princeton University BA University of Virginia Johns Hopkins University MA PhD Prior public experienceGovernor of Indiana 1909 1913 Vice President 1913 1921 Higher educationWabash College BA Thomas Marshall of IN 1854 1925 nbsp Opponent s William Taft Republican Theodore Roosevelt Progressive Gene Debs Socialist Eugene Chafin Prohibition Electoral voteWilson Marshall 435 81 9 Roosevelt Johnson 88 16 6 Taft Butler 8 1 5 Popular voteWilson Marshall 6 296 284 41 8 Roosevelt Johnson 4 122 721 24 7 Taft Butler 3 486 242 23 2 Debs Seidel 901 551 6 0 Chafin Watkins 208 156 1 7 Opponent s Nicholas Butler Republican Hiram Johnson Progressive Emil Seidel Socialist Aaron Watkins Prohibition Opponent s Charles Hughes Republican Allan Benson Socialist Frank Hanly Prohibition Electoral voteWilson Marshall 277 52 2 Hughes Fairbanks 254 47 8 Popular voteWilson Marshall 49 2 Hughes Fairbanks 8 548 728 46 1 Benson Kirkpatrick 590 524 3 2 Hanly Landrith 221 302 1 2 Opponent s Charles Fairbanks Republican Kirk Kirkpatrick Socialist Ira Landrith Prohibition 1920 edit Presidentialnominee 1920 lost Vice presidentialnomineeJames Cox of OH 1870 1957 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1909 1913 Governor of Ohio 1913 1915 1917 1921 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceNew York Senate 1911 1913 Assistant Secretary of the Navy 1913 1920 Higher educationHarvard University BA Columbia University Franklin D Roosevelt of NY 1882 1945 nbsp Opponent s Warren G Harding Republican Gene Debs Socialist Parley Christensen Farmer Labor Electoral voteHarding Coolidge 404 76 1 Cox Roosevelt 127 23 9 Popular voteHarding Coolidge 16 144 093 60 3 Cox Roosevelt 9 139 661 34 2 Debs Stedman 913 693 3 4 Christensen Hayes 265 398 1 0 Opponent s Calvin Coolidge Republican Stedy Stedman Socialist Max Hayes Farmer Labor 1924 edit Presidentialnominee 1924 lost Vice presidentialnomineeJohn Davis of WV 1873 1955 nbsp Prior public experienceWest Virginia House of Delegates 1899 U S House of Representatives 1911 1913 U S Solicitor General 1913 1918 U S Ambassador to the United Kingdom 1918 1921 Higher educationWashington and Lee University BA LLB Prior public experienceMayor of Lincoln NE 1915 1917 Governor of Nebraska 1923 1925 Higher educationIllinois College University of Chicago Charles Bryan of NE 1867 1945 nbsp Opponent s Calvin Coolidge Republican Robert La Follette Progressive Electoral voteCoolidge Dawes 382 71 9 Davis Bryan 136 25 6 La Follette Wheeler 13 2 4 Popular voteCoolidge Dawes 15 723 789 54 0 Davis Bryan 8 386 242 28 8 La Follette Wheeler 4 831 706 16 6 Opponent s Charles Dawes Republican Burton Wheeler Progressive 1928 edit Presidentialnominee 1928 lost Vice presidentialnomineeAl Smith of NY 1873 1944 nbsp Prior public experienceNew York Assembly 1904 1915 Majority Leader of the New York Assembly 1912 1914 1915 Minority Leader of the New York Assembly 1912 Speaker of the New York Assembly 1913 New York City Council 1917 1918 President of the New York City Council 1917 1918 Governor of New York 1919 1920 1923 1928 Higher educationNone Prior public experienceArkansas House of Representatives 1895 1987 U S House of Representatives 1903 1912 Chair of the House Public Lands Committee 1911 1912 Governor of Arkansas 1913 U S Senate 1913 1937 Chair of the Senate Treasury Department Expenditures Committee 1913 1917 Chair of the Senate Claims Committee 1917 1919 Senate Majority Leader 1923 1933 Higher educationUniversity of Arkansas University of Virginia Joe Robinson of AR 1872 1937 nbsp Opponent s Herbert Hoover Republican Electoral voteHoover Curtis 444 83 6 Smith Robinson 87 16 4 Popular voteHoover Curtis 21 427 123 58 2 Smith Robinson 15 015 464 40 8 Opponent s Charles Curtis Republican 1932 1936 1940 1944 edit Presidentialnominee 1932 won 1936 won 1940 won 1944 won Vice presidentialnomineeFranklin D Roosevelt of NY 1882 1945 nbsp Prior public experienceNew York Senate 1911 1913 Assistant Secretary of the Navy 1913 1920 Governor of New York 1929 1932 President 1933 1945 Higher educationHarvard University BA Columbia University Prior public experienceTexas House of Representatives 1898 1902 U S House of Representatives 1903 1933 House Minority Leader 1929 1931 Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1931 1933 Vice President 1933 1941 Higher educationVanderbilt University Jack Garner of TX 1868 1967 nbsp Prior public experienceU S Secretary of Agriculture 1933 1940 Higher educationIowa State University BS Henry Wallace of IA 1888 1965 nbsp Prior public experiencePresiding Judge of Jackson County MO 1927 1935 U S Senate 1935 1945 Chair of the Senate National Defense Program Committee 1941 1944 Higher educationSpalding s Commercial College University of Missouri Kansas City Harry S Truman of MO 1884 1972 nbsp Opponent s Herbert Hoover Republican Norman Thomas Socialist Electoral voteRoosevelt Garner 472 88 9 Hoover Curtis 59 11 1 Popular voteRoosevelt Garner 22 821 277 57 4 Hoover Curtis 15 761 254 39 7 Thomas Maurer 884 885 2 2 Opponent s Charles Curtis Republican James Maurer Socialist Opponent s Alf Landon Republican William Lemke Union Electoral voteRoosevelt Garner 523 98 5 Landon Knox 8 1 5 Popular voteRoosevelt Garner 27 752 648 60 8 Landon Knox 16 681 862 36 5 Lemke O Brien 892 378 2 0 Opponent s Frank Knox Republican Thomas O Brien Union Opponent s Wendell Willkie Republican Electoral voteRoosevelt Wallace 449 84 6 Willkie McNary 82 15 4 Popular voteRoosevelt Wallace 27 313 945 54 7 Willkie McNary 44 8 Opponent s Charles L McNary Republican Opponent s Thomas Dewey Republican Electoral voteRoosevelt Truman 432 81 4 Dewey Bicker 99 18 6 Popular voteRoosevelt Truman 25 612 916 53 4 Dewey Bicker 22 017 929 45 3 Opponent s John Bricker Republican 1948 edit Presidentialnominee 1948 won Vice presidentialnomineeHarry S Truman of MO 1884 1972 nbsp Prior public experiencePresiding Judge of Jackson County MO 1927 1935 U S Senate 1935 1945 Chair of the Senate National Defense Program Committee 1941 1944 Vice President 1945 President 1945 1953 Higher educationSpalding s Commercial College University of Missouri Kansas City Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1913 1927 U S Senate 1927 1949 Senate Majority Leader 1937 1947 Senate Minority Leader 1947 1949 Chair of the Joint Inaugural Ceremonies Committee 1948 Higher educationMarvin College BA Emory University University of Virginia Alben Barkley of KY 1877 1956 nbsp Opponent s Thomas Dewey Republican Strom Thurmond Dixiecrat Henry Wallace Progressive Electoral voteTruman Barkley 303 57 1 Dewey Warren 189 35 6 Thurmond Wright 39 7 3 Popular voteTruman Barkley 24 179 347 49 6 Dewey Warren 21 991 292 45 1 Thurmond Wright 1 175 930 2 4 Wallace Taylor 1 157 328 2 3 Opponent s Earl Warren Republican Fielding Wright Dixiecrat Glen Taylor Progressive 1952 1956 edit Presidentialnominee 1952 lost 1956 lost Vice presidentialnomineeAdlai Stevenson II of IL 1900 1965 nbsp Prior public experienceGovernor of Illinois 1949 1953 Higher educationPrinceton University BA Northwestern University JD Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1937 1946 House Majority Whip 1946 U S Senate 1946 1979 Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee 1955 1967 Higher educationUniversity of Alabama BA LLB John Sparkman of AL 1899 1985 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1939 1949 U S Senate 1949 1963 Chair of the Senate Interstate Commerce Crime Committee 1950 1951 Higher educationUniversity of Tennessee Knoxville BA Yale University LLB Estes Kefauver of TN 1903 1963 nbsp Opponent s Dwight D Eisenhower Republican Electoral voteEisenhower Nixon 442 83 2 Stevenson Sparkman 89 16 8 Popular voteEisenhower Nixon 34 075 529 55 2 Stevenson Sparkman 27 375 090 44 2 Opponent s Richard Nixon Republican Electoral voteEisenhower Nixon 457 86 1 11 Stevenson Kefauver 73 13 7 Jones Talmadge 1 0 2 Popular voteEisenhower Nixon 35 579 180 57 4 Stevenson Kefauver 26 028 028 42 0 1960 edit Presidentialnominee 1960 won Vice presidentialnomineeJohn F Kennedy of MA 1917 1963 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1947 1953 U S Senate 1953 1960 Chair of the Senate Reception Room Committee 1956 1959 Higher educationPrinceton University Harvard University BA Stanford University Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1937 1949 U S Senate 1949 1961 Chair of the Senate Reception Room Committee 1955 1956 Chair of the Senate Space Committee 1958 1961 Senate Majority Whip 1951 1953 Senate Minority Leader 1953 1955 Senate Majority Leader 1955 1961 Higher educationSouthwest Texas State Teachers College BA Lyndon B Johnson of TX 1908 1973 nbsp Opponent s Richard Nixon Republican Harry F Byrd SouthernDemocrats Electoral vote President Kennedy 303 56 4 Nixon 219 40 8 Byrd 15 2 8 Electoral vote Vice President Johnson 303 56 4 Lodge 219 40 8 Thurmond 14 2 6 Goldwater 1 0 2 Popular voteKennedy Johnson 34 220 984 49 7 Nixon Lodge 34 108 157 49 6 Byrd Thurmond 116 248 0 2 Opponent s Henry Cabot Lodge Jr Republican Strom Thurmond SouthernDemocrats 1964 edit Presidentialnominee 1964 won Vice presidentialnomineeLyndon B Johnson of TX 1908 1973 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1937 1949 U S Senate 1949 1961 Chair of the Senate Reception Room Committee 1955 1957 Chair of the Senate Space Committee 1958 1961 Senate Majority Whip 1951 1953 Senate Minority Leader 1953 1955 Senate Majority Leader 1955 1961 Vice President 1961 1963 President 1963 1969 Higher educationSouthwest Texas State Teachers College BA Prior public experienceMayor of Minneapolis MN 1945 1948 U S Senate 1949 1964 Senate Majority Whip 1961 1964 Chair of the Senate Disarmament Committee 1955 1959 Higher educationCapitol College of Pharmacy University of Minnesota BA Louisiana State University MA Hubert Humphrey of MN 1911 1978 nbsp Opponent s Barry Goldwater Republican Electoral voteJohnson Humphrey 486 90 3 Goldwater Miller 52 9 7 Popular voteJohnson Humphrey 43 127 041 61 1 Goldwater Miller 27 175 754 38 5 Opponent s William E Miller Republican 1968 edit Presidentialnominee 1968 lost Vice presidentialnomineeHubert Humphrey of MN 1911 1978 nbsp Prior public experienceMayor of Minneapolis MN 1945 1948 U S Senate 1949 1964 Senate Majority Whip 1961 1964 Chair of the Senate Disarmament Committee 1955 1959 Vice President 1965 1969 Higher educationCapitol College of Pharmacy University of Minnesota BA Louisiana State University MA Prior public experienceMaine House of Representatives 1947 1951 Minority Leader of the Maine House of Representatives 1949 1951 Governor of Maine 1955 1959 U S Senate 1959 1980 Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee 1967 1969 Higher educationBates College BA Cornell University LLB Edmund Muskie of ME 1914 1996 nbsp Opponent s Richard Nixon Republican George Wallace AmericanIndependent Electoral voteNixon Agnew 301 55 9 Humphrey Muskie 191 35 5 Wallace LeMay 46 8 6 Popular voteNixon Agnew 31 783 783 43 4 Humphrey Muskie 31 271 839 42 7 Wallace LeMay 9 901 118 13 5 Opponent s Spiro Agnew Republican Curtis LeMay AmericanIndependent 1972 edit Presidentialnominee 1972 lost Vice presidentialnomineeGeorge McGovern of SD 1922 2012 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1957 1961 Director of Food for Peace 1961 1962 U S Senate 1963 1981 Chair of the Senate Nutrition Committee 1968 1977 Higher educationDakota Wesleyan University BA Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary Northwestern University MA PhD Prior public experienceAttorney General of Missouri 1961 1965 Lieutenant Governor of Missouri 1965 1968 U S Senate 1968 1987 Higher educationAmherst College BA University of Oxford Harvard University LLB Tom Eagleton of MO 12 1929 2007 nbsp Prior public experienceDirector of the Peace Corps 1961 1966 Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity 1964 1968 U S Ambassador to France 1968 1970 Higher educationYale University BA LLB Sargent Shriver of MD 1915 2011 nbsp Opponent s Richard Nixon Republican John G Schmitz AmericanIndependent Electoral voteNixon Agnew 520 96 7 13 McGovern Shriver 17 3 2 Hospers Nathan 1 0 2 13 Popular voteNixon Agnew 47 168 710 60 6 McGovern Shriver 29 173 222 37 5 Schmitz Anderson 1 100 868 1 4 Opponent s Spiro Agnew Republican Thomas J Anderson AmericanIndependent 1976 1980 edit Presidentialnominee 1976 won 1980 lost Vice presidentialnomineeJimmy Carter of GA born 1924 nbsp Prior public experienceGeorgia Senate 1963 1967 Governor of Georgia 1971 1975 President 1977 1981 Higher educationGeorgia Southwestern State University Georgia Institute of Technology United States Naval Academy BS Prior public experienceAttorney General of Minnesota 1960 1964 U S Senate 1964 1976 Chair of the Senate Equal Education Opportunity Committee 1969 1973 Vice President 1977 1981 Higher educationMacalester College University of Minnesota BA JD Walter Mondale of MN 1928 2021 nbsp Opponent s Gerald Ford Republican Electoral vote President Carter 297 55 2 Ford 240 44 6 14 Reagan 1 0 2 Electoral vote Vice President Mondale 297 55 2 Dole 241 44 8 Popular voteCarter Mondale 40 831 881 50 1 Ford Dole 39 148 634 48 0 Opponent s Bob Dole Republican Opponent s Ronald Reagan Republican John B Anderson Independent Ed Clark Libertarian Electoral voteReagan Bush 489 90 9 Carter Mondale 49 9 1 Popular voteReagan Bush 43 903 230 50 8 Carter Mondale 35 480 115 41 0 Anderson Lucey 5 719 850 6 6 Clark Koch 921 128 1 1 Opponent s George H W Bush Republican Patrick Lucey Independent David Koch Libertarian 1984 edit Presidentialnominee 1984 lost Vice presidentialnomineeWalter Mondale of MN 1928 2021 nbsp Prior public experienceAttorney General of Minnesota 1960 1964 U S Senate 1964 1976 Chair of the Senate Equal Education Opportunity Committee 1969 1973 Vice President 1977 1981 Higher educationMacalester College University of Minnesota BA JD Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1979 1985 Secretary of the House Democratic Caucus 1981 1985 Higher educationMarymount Manhattan College BA Fordham University JD Geraldine Ferraro of NY 1935 2011 nbsp Opponent s Ronald Reagan Republican Electoral voteReagan Bush 525 97 6 Mondale Ferraro 13 2 4 Popular voteReagan Bush 54 455 472 58 8 Mondale Ferraro 37 577 352 40 6 Opponent s George H W Bush Republican 1988 edit Presidentialnominee 1988 lost Vice presidentialnomineeMichael Dukakis of MA born 1933 nbsp Prior public experienceMassachusetts House of Representatives 1965 1971 Governor of Massachusetts 1975 1979 1983 1991 Chair of the Democratic Governors Association 1986 1987 Higher educationSwarthmore College BA Harvard University JD Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1948 1955 U S Senate 1971 1993 Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee 1983 1985 Chair of the Joint Economic Committee 1983 1985 Chair of the Senate Finance Committee 1987 1993 Higher educationUniversity of Texas at Austin LLB Lloyd Bentsen of TX 1921 2006 nbsp Opponent s George H W Bush Republican Electoral vote President Bush 426 79 2 Dukakis 111 20 6 15 Bentsen 1 0 2 Electoral vote Vice President Quayle 426 79 2 Bentsen 111 20 6 15 Dukakis 1 0 2 Popular voteBush Quayle 48 886 097 53 4 Dukakis Bentsen 41 809 074 45 7 Opponent s Dan Quayle Republican 1992 1996 edit Presidentialnominee 1992 won 1996 won Vice presidentialnomineeBill Clinton of AR born 1946 nbsp Prior public experienceAttorney General of Arkansas 1977 1979 Governor of Arkansas 1979 1981 1983 1992 Chair of the National Governors Association 1986 1987 Chair of the Democratic Governors Association 1987 1988 President 1993 2001 Higher educationGeorgetown University BS University College Oxford Yale University JD Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1977 1985 U S Senate 1985 1993 Vice President 1993 2001 Higher educationHarvard University BA Vanderbilt University Al Gore of TN born 1948 nbsp Opponent s George H W Bush Republican Ross Perot Independent Electoral voteClinton Gore 370 68 8 Bush Quayle 168 31 2 Popular voteClinton Gore 44 909 806 43 0 Bush Quayle 39 104 550 37 5 Perot Stockdale 19 743 821 18 9 Opponent s Dan Quayle Republican James Stockdale Independent Opponent s Bob Dole Republican Ross Perot Reform Electoral voteClinton Gore 379 70 4 Dole Kemp 159 29 6 Popular voteClinton Gore 47 401 185 49 2 Dole Kemp 39 197 469 40 7 Perot Choate 8 085 294 8 4 Opponent s Jack Kemp Republican Pat Choate Reform 21st century edit2000 edit Presidentialnominee 2000 lost Vice presidentialnomineeAl Gore of TN born 1948 nbsp Prior public experienceU S House of Representatives 1977 1985 U S Senate 1985 1993 Vice President 1993 2001 Higher educationHarvard University BA Vanderbilt University Prior public experienceConnecticut Senate 1971 1981 Majority Leader of the Connecticut Senate 1975 1981 Attorney General of Connecticut 1983 1989 U S Senate 1989 2013 Higher educationYale University BA LLB Joe Lieberman of CT born 1942 nbsp Opponent s George W Bush Republican Ralph Nader Green Electoral voteBush Cheney 271 50 4 Gore Lieberman 266 49 4 16 Popular voteGore Lieberman 50 999 897 48 4 Bush Cheney 50 456 002 47 9 Nader LaDuke 2 882 955 2 7 Opponent s Dick Cheney Republican Winona LaDuke Green 2004 edit Presidentialnominee 2004 lost Vice presidentialnomineeJohn Kerry of MA born 1943 nbsp Prior public experienceLieutenant Governor of Massachusetts 1983 1985 U S Senate 1985 2013 Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee 1987 1989 Chair of the Senate POW MIA Affairs Committee 1991 1993 Ranking Member of the Senate Small Business Committee 1997 2001 2003 2007 Chair of the Senate Small Business Committee 2001 2003 Higher educationYale University BA Boston College JD Prior public experienceU S Senate 1999 2005 Higher educationClemson University North Carolina State University BA University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill JD John Edwards of NC born 1953 nbsp Opponent s George W Bush Republican Electoral vote President Bush 286 53 2 Kerry 251 46 7 17 Edwards 1 0 2 Electoral vote Vice President Cheney 286 53 2 Edwards 252 46 8 Popular voteBush Cheney 62 040 610 50 7 Kerry Edwards 59 028 444 48 3 Opponent s Dick Cheney Republican 2008 2012 edit Presidentialnominee 2008 won 2012 won Vice presidentialnomineeBarack Obama of IL born 1961 nbsp Prior public experienceIllinois Senate 1997 2004 U S Senate 2005 2008 President 2009 2017 Higher educationOccidental College Columbia University BA Harvard University JD Prior public experienceU S Senate 1973 2009 Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1981 1987 1995 1997 Ranking Member of the Senate Narcotics Caucus 1985 1987 1995 2001 2003 2007 Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1987 1995 Chair of the Senate Narcotics Caucus 1987 1995 2001 2003 2007 2009 Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 1997 2001 2003 2007 Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 2001 2003 2007 2009 Vice President 2009 2017 Higher educationUniversity of Delaware BA Syracuse University JD Joe Biden of DE born 1942 nbsp Opponent s John McCain Republican Electoral voteObama Biden 365 67 8 McCain Palin 173 32 2 Popular voteObama Biden 69 498 516 52 9 McCain Palin 59 948 323 45 7 Opponent s Sarah Palin Republican Opponent s Mitt Romney Republican Electoral voteObama Biden 332 61 7 Romney Ryan 206 38 3 Popular voteObama Biden 65 915 796 51 1 Romney Ryan 60 933 500 47 2 Johnson Gray 1 275 971 1 0 Opponent s Paul Ryan Republican 2016 edit Presidentialnominee 2016 lost Vice presidentialnomineeHillary Clinton of NY born 1947 nbsp Prior public experienceChair of the Legal Services Corporation 1978 1980 First Lady of Arkansas 1979 1981 1983 1992 First Lady of the United States 1993 2001 U S Senate 2001 2009 Chair of the Senate Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee 2005 2007 U S Secretary of State 2009 2013 Higher educationWellesley College BA Yale University JD Prior public experienceMayor of Richmond VA 1998 2001 Lieutenant Governor of Virginia 2002 2006 Governor of Virginia 2006 2010 Chair of the Democratic National Committee 2009 2011 U S Senate 2013 present Higher educationUniversity of Missouri BA Harvard University JD Tim Kaine of VA born 1958 nbsp Opponent s Donald Trump Republican Gary Johnson Libertarian Jill Stein Green Electoral vote President 18 Trump 304 56 5 Clinton 227 42 2 Powell 3 0 6 Kasich 1 0 2 Paul 1 0 2 Sanders 1 0 2 Spotted Eagle 1 0 2 Electoral vote Vice President Pence 305 56 7 Kaine 227 42 2 Warren 2 0 4 Cantwell 1 0 2 Collins 1 0 2 Fiorina 1 0 2 LaDuke 1 0 2 Popular voteClinton Kaine 65 853 516 48 2 Trump Pence 62 984 825 46 1 Johnson Weld 4 489 221 3 3 Stein Baraka 1 457 216 1 1 Opponent s Mike Pence Republican Bill Weld Libertarian Ajamu Baraka Green 2020 edit Presidentialnominee 2020 won Vice presidentialnomineeJoe Biden of DE born 1942 nbsp Prior public experienceU S Senate 1973 2009 Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1981 1987 1995 1997 Ranking Member of the Senate Narcotics Caucus 1985 1987 1995 2001 2003 2007 Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee 1987 1995 Chair of the Senate Narcotics Caucus 1987 1995 2001 2003 2007 2009 Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 1997 2001 2003 2007 Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 2001 2003 2007 2009 Vice President 2009 2017 Higher educationUniversity of Delaware BA Syracuse University JD Prior public experienceDistrict Attorney of San Francisco CA 2004 2011 Attorney General of California 2011 2017 U S Senate 2017 2021 Higher educationHoward University BA University of California Hastings JD Kamala Harris of CA born 1964 nbsp Opponent s Donald Trump Republican Jo Jorgensen Libertarian Electoral voteBiden Harris 306 56 9 Trump Pence 232 43 1 Popular voteBiden Harris 81 268 924 51 3 Trump Pence 74 216 154 46 9 Jorgensen Cohen 1 865 724 1 2 Opponent s Mike Pence Republican Spike Cohen Libertarian See also editList of Democratic National Conventions History of the United States Democratic Party List of United States National Republican Whig Party presidential tickets List of United States Republican Party presidential tickets List of United States Green Party presidential tickets List of United States Libertarian Party presidential tickets List of Federalist Party presidential tickets List of Democratic Republican Party presidential tickets List of United States major third party and independent presidential tickets List of United States Democratic Party presidential candidatesNotes edit If not for unpledged electors Rush would have won 178 68 2 votes South Carolina s delegates were selected by the state legislature and not by popular vote which went to the Nullifier ticket of Floyd Lee which did not campaign while 30 Pennsylvania delegates voted Wilkins for Vice President Two Maryland delegates did not cast votes The Whig Party ran regional candidates in 1836 William H Harrison and Francis Granger ran in Northern states while Hugh Lawson White and John Tyler ran in Southern states Daniel Webster was on the ballot in Massachusetts and Willie Person Mangum received votes from the Electoral College without being on the ballot Wright declined after being nominated by the convention Douglas and Johnson were chosen at the national nominating convention after most of the Southern delegations walked out who held a separate national nominating convention to nominate Breckinridge and Lane If not for 17 invalidated electors from Union occupied Louisiana and Tennessee Lincoln and Johnson would have won 229 91 6 votes If not for 17 invalidated electors from Union occupied Louisiana and Tennessee McClellan and Pendleton would have won 8 4 of the votes If not for the 14 invalidated electors from voting irregularities in Arkansas and Louisiana Grant and Wilson would have won 300 82 0 votes Greeley died after the election but before the Electoral College convened and was not replaced for the vote The ticket s intended delegates were scattered If not for the 14 invalidated electors for Grant and Wilson from voting irregularities in Arkansas and Louisiana Greeley and Brown s 66 votes would have been 18 0 If not for a faithless elector Eisenhower and Nixon would have won 458 86 3 in 1956 Eagleton withdrew from the ticket and was replaced by Shriver a b If not for a faithless elector Nixon and Agnew would have won 521 96 8 Electoral College votes If not for a faithless elector Ford would have won 241 44 8 votes a b A faithless elector swapped their votes for President and Vice President in the Electoral College otherwise the Dukakis Bentsen ticket would have won 112 20 8 votes An elector from the District of Columbia abstained from casting a vote for the Gore Lieberman ticket otherwise Gore would have won 267 49 6 votes A faithless elector voted Edwards for President and Vice President in the Electoral College otherwise Kerry would have won 252 46 8 votes If not for faithless electors Trump and Pence would have won 306 56 9 Electoral College votes each while Clinton and Kaine would have won 232 43 1 votes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of United States Democratic Party presidential tickets amp oldid 1185011199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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