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List of United States presidential election endorsements made by The New York Times

Since its founding in 1851, The New York Times has endorsed a candidate for president of the United States in every election in the paper's history. The first endorsement was in 1852 for Winfield Scott and the most recent one was for Joe Biden in 2020. Its first seven endorsements after Scott were for Republicans, and it was not until 1884 that it backed its first Democrat, Grover Cleveland. In total it has endorsed the Democratic candidate twenty eight times, the Republican thirteen times (the last being Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1956), a Whig candidate once (Winfield Scott in 1852), and a third-party candidate once (John M. Palmer in 1896).

Primary election edit

General election edit

Year Candidate Result Endorsement Other major candidate(s) Ref.
1852   Winfield Scott Lost   Franklin Pierce [6]
1856   John C. Frémont Lost James Buchanan Millard Fillmore [7]
1860   Abraham Lincoln Won "Things will go on very much as they have hitherto—except that we shall have honesty and manliness instead of meanness and corruption in the Executive departments, and a decent regard for the opinions of mankind in the tone and talk of the Government on the subject of Slavery."[8]   Stephen A. Douglas   John C. Breckinridge   John Bell [9]
1864 Abraham Lincoln Won "Loyal men can congratulate themselves not only on this clearness of issue between war and peace, but upon the development of the fact that this issue is indeed no other than Union or Disunion."[10] George B. McClellan
1868 Ulysses S. Grant Won "It should be enough that he realizes the need of peace, and upholds a policy which, with many defects, secures the restoration of the Union on the broad basis of order and justice."[11] Horatio Seymour
1872 Ulysses S. Grant Won "Greeley's election would mean the unsettling of business all over the country. Gen. Grant's would instantly lead to the recovery of trade from the excitement of a Presidential election, and insure the continued prosperity of the entire Union."[12] Horace Greeley
1876 Rutherford B. Hayes Won "Mr. Hayes' letter of acceptance was prompt, unequivocal and more pronounced in two or three important particulars than the platform on which he had been nominated."[13] Samuel Tilden
1880 James Garfield Won "The people are asked to choose between a man like this, trained in all the activities and duties of civil life, and one who knows nothing but the camp and the barrack-room. To state this fact is to make the most conclusive argument in favor of the civilian candidate."[14] Winfield S. Hancock
1884 Grover Cleveland Won "Gov. Cleveland has given indisputable proofs that he is independent of partisan tyranny, and that there is not in party rule any power than can disturb or weaken his devotion to the highest interests of the people."[15] James G. Blaine
1888 Grover Cleveland Lost "His great ability is now candidly recognized. His perfect honesty and sincerity are no longer questioned save by reckless and malignant partisans. His successes and his failures, his titles to applause, honor, and respect, and his acts that have called for censure or justified want of confidence are recorded in an open book."[16] Benjamin Harrison
1892 Grover Cleveland Won "Under our Constitution the character of the President is an element of the greatest importance. The powers of the Executive office are very extensive, and its duties of the most and responsible character. The direction of foreign relations is, in the first instance, entirely in his hands."[17] Benjamin Harrison James B. Weaver
1896 John M. Palmer Lost "If the Democrats in this State . . . will vote according to their convictions and their preference, as honest citizens ought always to vote, a majority of the party will be found standing firmly by its ancient faith, and its prospects for the future will be vastly better than if it goes down to ignominious defeat held together by a blind devotion to 'regularity.'"[18] William McKinley William Jennings Bryan
1900 William McKinley Won "There are two questions most prominent this year—what will be the policy of the Republican or of the Democratic Party with reference to our recently acquired possessions, and what the policy of the respective parties as to the currency and finance?"[19] William Jennings Bryan
1904 Alton B. Parker Lost "The antithesis of Roosevelt in temperament and opinion, and quite the equal of the strenuous President in moral courage and political sagacity."[20] Theodore Roosevelt
1908 William Howard Taft Won "We know that public policies, the old and the new alike, will be executed by Mr. Taft reasonably, with calmness, with sanity. He is less impulsive than Mr. Roosevelt, not given to disturbing utterance, averse to spectacular and ill-judged display. We know nothing of the kind about Mr. Bryan, for he has not been tried. We do not know that his mind is unsteady, his principles unsafe."[21] William Jennings Bryan
1912 Woodrow Wilson Won "It is to the interest of the Nation that the Republican party should be preserved as an organized, coherent opposition. The public welfare is not preserved by the collapse of a great party, by the rise of discordant factions in place of a compact organization."[22] William Howard Taft Theodore Roosevelt Eugene V. Debs
1916 Woodrow Wilson Won "No one can deny that he has honorably kept our country at peace amid infinite difficulties and temptations."[23] Charles Evans Hughes
1920 James M. Cox Lost "He is no champion of privilege any more than he is an apostle of revolution. He is a man of affairs, of the soundest common sense and good judgment. In time of peace he would do away with war taxes and, like Mr. Tilden, substitute for them revenues sufficient for the expenditures of Government economically administered."[24] Warren G. Harding
1924 John W. Davis Lost "All the merely petty and spiteful arrows aimed at him have fallen blunted and broken from his shield."[25] Calvin Coolidge Robert M. La Follette, Sr.
1928 Alfred E. Smith Lost "The duty of all to whom the conditions under prohibition seem the most important concern of the nation is plainly to vote for Alfred E. Smith. He is the first leader in a national sense to whom they have been able to turn since enforcement became a scandal and social consequences of prohibition became serious."[26] Herbert Hoover
1932 Franklin D. Roosevelt Won "He has carried a winning personality into his campaigning, but has not degraded his standards as a high-bred and educated man."[27] Herbert Hoover
1936 Franklin D. Roosevelt Won "We believe that in a very fundamental way the President's re-election will provide insurance against radicalism of the sort which the United States has most to fear."[28] Alf Landon
1940 Wendell Willkie Lost "As matters stand, the choice before us has been narrowed to this question: In whose hands, Mr. Roosevelt's or Mr. Willkie's, is the safety of the American people likely to be more secure during the critical test that lies ahead?"[29] Franklin D. Roosevelt
1944 Franklin D. Roosevelt Won "With all the major new policies of the New Deal we have no sympathy. But when we weigh the balance on domestic issues we must ask: What alternatives do Mr. Dewey and the Republicans offer us?"[30] Thomas E. Dewey
1948 Thomas E. Dewey Lost "The Mr. Dewey of 1948, whom we now support, has both a firmer grasp of foreign policy and a more active part in making it than the Mr. Dewey of either 1940 or 1944."[31] Harry S. Truman Strom Thurmond
1952 Dwight D. Eisenhower Won "We would make this choice, despite the fact that we have disagreed, and openly expressed our disagreement, with some of the positions taken by General Eisenhower in the course of this campaign."[32] Adlai E. Stevenson
1956 Dwight D. Eisenhower Won "In the area of many fundamental matters—for example, at home, the difficult problem of school integration, and, abroad, the question of relaxing tensions in the Far East and the Near East—the approach of both these men is to conciliate rather than coerce, to clarify rather than confuse, to unify rather than disrupt."[33] Adlai E. Stevenson
1960 John F. Kennedy Won "Two considerations have carried special weight in determining our judgment. One of these is a matter of foreign policy. The other is a question of assuring a unified direction of the nation's affairs at a difficult moment in history."[34] Richard Nixon
1964 Lyndon B. Johnson Won "Rarely in modern times and never in recent years has there been a campaign in which the issues facing the nation have been so inadequately discussed by the two leading candidates; rarely has a campaign added so little to public knowledge; rarely has its end been so welcome."[35] Barry Goldwater
1968 Hubert H. Humphrey Lost "In the span of this campaign, proof that his judgment is superior to that of Mr. Nixon has been provided by their respective choices for Vice President . . . In the brief period since nomination, Gov. Spiro T. Agnew has already proved from his injudicious, intemperate remarks that he is utterly inadequate."[36] Richard Nixon George Wallace
1972 George McGovern Lost "It is in the incumbent's very deficiencies of spirit, of vision, of purpose and of principle that in our judgment Mr. McGovern stands in most striking and favorable contrast."[37] Richard Nixon
1976 Jimmy Carter Won "He and Senator Mondale have demonstrated both in the broad sweep of political philosophy and in the narrow focus of specific detail a sense of direction and of leadership, based on a humanitarian, socially oriented, essentially liberal approach to most major questions of domestic and foreign policy."[38] Gerald Ford
1980 Jimmy Carter Lost "For all the wobbling, Jimmy Carter has forthrightly often bravely upheld intelligent and humane values on a roster of issues."[39] Ronald Reagan John B. Anderson
1984 Walter Mondale Lost "Walter Mondale has all the dramatic flair of a trigonometry teacher. His Nordic upbringing makes it hard for him to brag. The first debate may have been the high point of his political personality. But there's power in his plainness."[40] Ronald Reagan
1988 Michael Dukakis Lost "George Bush is not the nasty propagandist that his harsh attacks have made him seem. Michael Dukakis is not the unfocused incompetent that his late and lame responses have made him seem. Both are better men, and better potential Presidents than the images they project on television."[41] George H. W. Bush
1992 Bill Clinton Won "Bill Clinton, though highly regarded by other governors, has not previously been tested on the national stage. He has, when pressed, shown a discomfiting tendency to blur truthful clarity. But he, much more than his rivals, manifests qualities of leadership: intellect, years of immersion in government, the capacity to attract first-rate people—and the perseverance that has carried him through a brutal campaign."[42] George H. W. Bush Ross Perot
1996 Bill Clinton Won "The Presidency he once dreamed is still within his reach if he brings the requisite integrity to the next four years."[43] Bob Dole Ross Perot
2000 Al Gore Lost "This is ... the first presidential campaign in recent history centered on an argument over how best to use real, bird-in-the-hand resources to address age-old domestic problems while also defining the United States' role in a world evermore dependent on it for farsighted international leadership."[44] George W. Bush
2004 John Kerry Lost "Time and again, history invited George W. Bush to play a heroic role, and time and again he chose the wrong course. We believe that with John Kerry as president, the nation will do better."[45] George W. Bush
2008 Barack Obama Won "Mr. Obama has met challenge after challenge, growing as a leader and putting real flesh on his early promises of hope and change. He has shown a cool head and sound judgment. We believe he has the will and the ability to forge the broad political consensus that is essential to finding solutions to this nation’s problems."[46] John McCain
2012 Barack Obama Won "President Obama has governed from a deep commitment to the role of government in fostering growth, forming sensible budget policies that are not dedicated to protecting the powerful, and saving the social safety net to protect the powerless."[47] Mitt Romney
2016 Hillary Clinton Lost "Our endorsement is rooted in respect for her intellect, experience and courage."[48] Donald Trump
2020 Joe Biden Won "The former vice president is the leader our nation needs now"[49] Donald Trump [50]

References edit

  1. ^ a b East, Kristen (March 5, 2000). "Primary Endorsements; John McCain and Al Gore". The New York Times. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  2. ^ "A Primary Endorsement". The New York Times. February 26, 2004. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  3. ^ a b "New York Times endorses Clinton, backs McCain over Giuliani". New York: CNN. January 25, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  4. ^ a b East, Kristen (January 30, 2016). "The New York Times endorses Clinton, Kasich". Politico. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  5. ^ LeBlanc, Paul; Turrell, Liz (January 20, 2020). "New York Times editorial board endorses Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar for Democratic nomination". Washington: CNN. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  6. ^ Raymond, Henry J. (August 10, 1852). "THE CAMPAIGN TIMES" (PDF). No. Vol. I No. 279. New-York Daily Times. Retrieved February 20, 2022.
  7. ^ "LATEST INTELLIGENCE" (PDF). No. Vol. V No. 1542. New-York Daily Times. August 28, 1856. Retrieved February 20, 2022.
  8. ^ "What's to Happen" (PDF). The New York Times. 1860.
  9. ^ "New York Times Endorsements Through the Ages". The New York Times. September 23, 2016. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  10. ^ "The End of the Canvass - Its Issues Clearly Made Up" (PDF). The New York Times. 1864.
  11. ^ "Grants Election a Necessity" (PDF). The New York Times. 1868.
  12. ^ "A Few Considerations" (PDF). The New York Times. 1872.
  13. ^ "The Two Candidates" (PDF). The New York Times. 1876.
  14. ^ "Republican Nomination" (PDF). The New York Times. 1880.
  15. ^ "The Man for the Time" (PDF). The New York Times. 1884.
  16. ^ "Mr. Clevelands Renomination" (PDF). The New York Times. 1888.
  17. ^ "The Democratic Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1892.
  18. ^ "The Choice" (PDF). The New York Times. 1896.
  19. ^ "The Choice" (PDF). The New York Times. 1900.
  20. ^ "Approval of Parker's Stand" (PDF). The New York Times. 1904.
  21. ^ "Taft or Bryan?" (PDF). The New York Times. 1908.
  22. ^ "Wilson First, Taft Second" (PDF). The New York Times. 1912.
  23. ^ "Mr. Wilson as a Leader" (PDF). The New York Times. 1916.
  24. ^ "The Cause and the Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1920.
  25. ^ "The Question of Fitness" (PDF). The New York Times. 1924.
  26. ^ "Voting on Prohibition" (PDF). The New York Times. 1928.
  27. ^ "The Roosevelt Campaign" (PDF). The New York Times. 1932.
  28. ^ "A Reasoned Choice" (PDF). The New York Times. 1936.
  29. ^ "The Choice of a Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1940.
  30. ^ "The Choice of a Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1944.
  31. ^ "The Choice of a Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1948.
  32. ^ "A Choice Reaffirmed" (PDF). The New York Times. 1952.
  33. ^ "The Choice of A Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1956.
  34. ^ "The Choice of A Candidate" (PDF). The New York Times. 1960.
  35. ^ "The Campaign Ends" (PDF). The New York Times. 1964.
  36. ^ "Humphrey for President" (PDF). The New York Times. 1968.
  37. ^ "The Presidential Issue" (PDF). The New York Times. 1972.
  38. ^ "The Presidential Choice" (PDF). The New York Times. 1976.
  39. ^ "President Wobble and What Jimmy Carter Has Learned" (PDF). The New York Times. 1980.
  40. ^ "Mondale for President" (PDF). The New York Times. 1984.
  41. ^ "Two Good Men" (PDF). The New York Times. 1988.
  42. ^ "George Bush's Failure. Bill Clinton's Promise" (PDF). The New York Times. 1992.
  43. ^ "Bill Clinton for President" (PDF). The New York Times. 1996.
  44. ^ "Al Gore for President" (PDF). The New York Times. 2000.
  45. ^ "John Kerry for President" (PDF). The New York Times. 2004.
  46. ^ "Barack Obama for President". The New York Times. October 23, 2008.
  47. ^ "Barack Obama for Re-election". The New York Times. October 27, 2012.
  48. ^ "Hillary Clinton for President". The New York Times. September 24, 2016.
  49. ^ "Elect Joe Biden, America". The New York Times.
  50. ^ "Elect Joe Biden, America". The New York Times. October 6, 2020. Retrieved October 6, 2020.

list, united, states, presidential, election, endorsements, made, york, times, since, founding, 1851, york, times, endorsed, candidate, president, united, states, every, election, paper, history, first, endorsement, 1852, winfield, scott, most, recent, biden, . Since its founding in 1851 The New York Times has endorsed a candidate for president of the United States in every election in the paper s history The first endorsement was in 1852 for Winfield Scott and the most recent one was for Joe Biden in 2020 Its first seven endorsements after Scott were for Republicans and it was not until 1884 that it backed its first Democrat Grover Cleveland In total it has endorsed the Democratic candidate twenty eight times the Republican thirteen times the last being Dwight D Eisenhower in 1956 a Whig candidate once Winfield Scott in 1852 and a third party candidate once John M Palmer in 1896 Contents 1 Primary election 1 1 Democratic Party 1 2 Republican Party 2 General election 3 ReferencesPrimary election editDemocratic Party edit Year Endorsement Result Ref 2000 Al Gore Won 1 2004 John Kerry Won 2 2008 Hillary Clinton Lost 3 2012 No endorsement2016 Hillary Clinton Won 4 2020 Elizabeth Warren Lost 5 Amy Klobuchar Lost Republican Party edit Year Endorsement Result Ref 2000 John McCain Lost 1 2004 No endorsement2008 John McCain Won 3 2012 No endorsement2016 John Kasich Lost 4 2020 No endorsementGeneral election editYear Candidate Result Endorsement Other major candidate s Ref 1852 Winfield Scott Lost Franklin Pierce 6 1856 John C Fremont Lost James Buchanan Millard Fillmore 7 1860 Abraham Lincoln Won Things will go on very much as they have hitherto except that we shall have honesty and manliness instead of meanness and corruption in the Executive departments and a decent regard for the opinions of mankind in the tone and talk of the Government on the subject of Slavery 8 Stephen A Douglas John C Breckinridge John Bell 9 1864 Abraham Lincoln Won Loyal men can congratulate themselves not only on this clearness of issue between war and peace but upon the development of the fact that this issue is indeed no other than Union or Disunion 10 George B McClellan1868 Ulysses S Grant Won It should be enough that he realizes the need of peace and upholds a policy which with many defects secures the restoration of the Union on the broad basis of order and justice 11 Horatio Seymour1872 Ulysses S Grant Won Greeley s election would mean the unsettling of business all over the country Gen Grant s would instantly lead to the recovery of trade from the excitement of a Presidential election and insure the continued prosperity of the entire Union 12 Horace Greeley1876 Rutherford B Hayes Won Mr Hayes letter of acceptance was prompt unequivocal and more pronounced in two or three important particulars than the platform on which he had been nominated 13 Samuel Tilden1880 James Garfield Won The people are asked to choose between a man like this trained in all the activities and duties of civil life and one who knows nothing but the camp and the barrack room To state this fact is to make the most conclusive argument in favor of the civilian candidate 14 Winfield S Hancock1884 Grover Cleveland Won Gov Cleveland has given indisputable proofs that he is independent of partisan tyranny and that there is not in party rule any power than can disturb or weaken his devotion to the highest interests of the people 15 James G Blaine1888 Grover Cleveland Lost His great ability is now candidly recognized His perfect honesty and sincerity are no longer questioned save by reckless and malignant partisans His successes and his failures his titles to applause honor and respect and his acts that have called for censure or justified want of confidence are recorded in an open book 16 Benjamin Harrison1892 Grover Cleveland Won Under our Constitution the character of the President is an element of the greatest importance The powers of the Executive office are very extensive and its duties of the most and responsible character The direction of foreign relations is in the first instance entirely in his hands 17 Benjamin Harrison James B Weaver1896 John M Palmer Lost If the Democrats in this State will vote according to their convictions and their preference as honest citizens ought always to vote a majority of the party will be found standing firmly by its ancient faith and its prospects for the future will be vastly better than if it goes down to ignominious defeat held together by a blind devotion to regularity 18 William McKinley William Jennings Bryan1900 William McKinley Won There are two questions most prominent this year what will be the policy of the Republican or of the Democratic Party with reference to our recently acquired possessions and what the policy of the respective parties as to the currency and finance 19 William Jennings Bryan1904 Alton B Parker Lost The antithesis of Roosevelt in temperament and opinion and quite the equal of the strenuous President in moral courage and political sagacity 20 Theodore Roosevelt1908 William Howard Taft Won We know that public policies the old and the new alike will be executed by Mr Taft reasonably with calmness with sanity He is less impulsive than Mr Roosevelt not given to disturbing utterance averse to spectacular and ill judged display We know nothing of the kind about Mr Bryan for he has not been tried We do not know that his mind is unsteady his principles unsafe 21 William Jennings Bryan1912 Woodrow Wilson Won It is to the interest of the Nation that the Republican party should be preserved as an organized coherent opposition The public welfare is not preserved by the collapse of a great party by the rise of discordant factions in place of a compact organization 22 William Howard Taft Theodore Roosevelt Eugene V Debs1916 Woodrow Wilson Won No one can deny that he has honorably kept our country at peace amid infinite difficulties and temptations 23 Charles Evans Hughes1920 James M Cox Lost He is no champion of privilege any more than he is an apostle of revolution He is a man of affairs of the soundest common sense and good judgment In time of peace he would do away with war taxes and like Mr Tilden substitute for them revenues sufficient for the expenditures of Government economically administered 24 Warren G Harding1924 John W Davis Lost All the merely petty and spiteful arrows aimed at him have fallen blunted and broken from his shield 25 Calvin Coolidge Robert M La Follette Sr 1928 Alfred E Smith Lost The duty of all to whom the conditions under prohibition seem the most important concern of the nation is plainly to vote for Alfred E Smith He is the first leader in a national sense to whom they have been able to turn since enforcement became a scandal and social consequences of prohibition became serious 26 Herbert Hoover1932 Franklin D Roosevelt Won He has carried a winning personality into his campaigning but has not degraded his standards as a high bred and educated man 27 Herbert Hoover1936 Franklin D Roosevelt Won We believe that in a very fundamental way the President s re election will provide insurance against radicalism of the sort which the United States has most to fear 28 Alf Landon1940 Wendell Willkie Lost As matters stand the choice before us has been narrowed to this question In whose hands Mr Roosevelt s or Mr Willkie s is the safety of the American people likely to be more secure during the critical test that lies ahead 29 Franklin D Roosevelt1944 Franklin D Roosevelt Won With all the major new policies of the New Deal we have no sympathy But when we weigh the balance on domestic issues we must ask What alternatives do Mr Dewey and the Republicans offer us 30 Thomas E Dewey1948 Thomas E Dewey Lost The Mr Dewey of 1948 whom we now support has both a firmer grasp of foreign policy and a more active part in making it than the Mr Dewey of either 1940 or 1944 31 Harry S Truman Strom Thurmond1952 Dwight D Eisenhower Won We would make this choice despite the fact that we have disagreed and openly expressed our disagreement with some of the positions taken by General Eisenhower in the course of this campaign 32 Adlai E Stevenson1956 Dwight D Eisenhower Won In the area of many fundamental matters for example at home the difficult problem of school integration and abroad the question of relaxing tensions in the Far East and the Near East the approach of both these men is to conciliate rather than coerce to clarify rather than confuse to unify rather than disrupt 33 Adlai E Stevenson1960 John F Kennedy Won Two considerations have carried special weight in determining our judgment One of these is a matter of foreign policy The other is a question of assuring a unified direction of the nation s affairs at a difficult moment in history 34 Richard Nixon1964 Lyndon B Johnson Won Rarely in modern times and never in recent years has there been a campaign in which the issues facing the nation have been so inadequately discussed by the two leading candidates rarely has a campaign added so little to public knowledge rarely has its end been so welcome 35 Barry Goldwater1968 Hubert H Humphrey Lost In the span of this campaign proof that his judgment is superior to that of Mr Nixon has been provided by their respective choices for Vice President In the brief period since nomination Gov Spiro T Agnew has already proved from his injudicious intemperate remarks that he is utterly inadequate 36 Richard Nixon George Wallace1972 George McGovern Lost It is in the incumbent s very deficiencies of spirit of vision of purpose and of principle that in our judgment Mr McGovern stands in most striking and favorable contrast 37 Richard Nixon1976 Jimmy Carter Won He and Senator Mondale have demonstrated both in the broad sweep of political philosophy and in the narrow focus of specific detail a sense of direction and of leadership based on a humanitarian socially oriented essentially liberal approach to most major questions of domestic and foreign policy 38 Gerald Ford1980 Jimmy Carter Lost For all the wobbling Jimmy Carter has forthrightly often bravely upheld intelligent and humane values on a roster of issues 39 Ronald Reagan John B Anderson1984 Walter Mondale Lost Walter Mondale has all the dramatic flair of a trigonometry teacher His Nordic upbringing makes it hard for him to brag The first debate may have been the high point of his political personality But there s power in his plainness 40 Ronald Reagan1988 Michael Dukakis Lost George Bush is not the nasty propagandist that his harsh attacks have made him seem Michael Dukakis is not the unfocused incompetent that his late and lame responses have made him seem Both are better men and better potential Presidents than the images they project on television 41 George H W Bush1992 Bill Clinton Won Bill Clinton though highly regarded by other governors has not previously been tested on the national stage He has when pressed shown a discomfiting tendency to blur truthful clarity But he much more than his rivals manifests qualities of leadership intellect years of immersion in government the capacity to attract first rate people and the perseverance that has carried him through a brutal campaign 42 George H W Bush Ross Perot1996 Bill Clinton Won The Presidency he once dreamed is still within his reach if he brings the requisite integrity to the next four years 43 Bob Dole Ross Perot2000 Al Gore Lost This is the first presidential campaign in recent history centered on an argument over how best to use real bird in the hand resources to address age old domestic problems while also defining the United States role in a world evermore dependent on it for farsighted international leadership 44 George W Bush2004 John Kerry Lost Time and again history invited George W Bush to play a heroic role and time and again he chose the wrong course We believe that with John Kerry as president the nation will do better 45 George W Bush2008 Barack Obama Won Mr Obama has met challenge after challenge growing as a leader and putting real flesh on his early promises of hope and change He has shown a cool head and sound judgment We believe he has the will and the ability to forge the broad political consensus that is essential to finding solutions to this nation s problems 46 John McCain2012 Barack Obama Won President Obama has governed from a deep commitment to the role of government in fostering growth forming sensible budget policies that are not dedicated to protecting the powerful and saving the social safety net to protect the powerless 47 Mitt Romney2016 Hillary Clinton Lost Our endorsement is rooted in respect for her intellect experience and courage 48 Donald Trump2020 Joe Biden Won The former vice president is the leader our nation needs now 49 Donald Trump 50 References edit a b East Kristen March 5 2000 Primary Endorsements John McCain and Al Gore The New York Times Retrieved February 27 2020 A Primary Endorsement The New York Times February 26 2004 Retrieved February 26 2020 a b New York Times endorses Clinton backs McCain over Giuliani New York CNN January 25 2008 Retrieved February 26 2020 a b East Kristen January 30 2016 The New York Times endorses Clinton Kasich Politico Retrieved February 26 2020 LeBlanc Paul Turrell Liz January 20 2020 New York Times editorial board endorses Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar for Democratic nomination Washington CNN Retrieved February 26 2020 Raymond Henry J August 10 1852 THE CAMPAIGN TIMES PDF No Vol I No 279 New York Daily Times Retrieved February 20 2022 LATEST INTELLIGENCE PDF No Vol V No 1542 New York Daily Times August 28 1856 Retrieved February 20 2022 What s to Happen PDF The New York Times 1860 New York Times Endorsements Through the Ages The New York Times September 23 2016 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 4 2017 The End of the Canvass Its Issues Clearly Made Up PDF The New York Times 1864 Grants Election a Necessity PDF The New York Times 1868 A Few Considerations PDF The New York Times 1872 The Two Candidates PDF The New York Times 1876 Republican Nomination PDF The New York Times 1880 The Man for the Time PDF The New York Times 1884 Mr Clevelands Renomination PDF The New York Times 1888 The Democratic Candidate PDF The New York Times 1892 The Choice PDF The New York Times 1896 The Choice PDF The New York Times 1900 Approval of Parker s Stand PDF The New York Times 1904 Taft or Bryan PDF The New York Times 1908 Wilson First Taft Second PDF The New York Times 1912 Mr Wilson as a Leader PDF The New York Times 1916 The Cause and the Candidate PDF The New York Times 1920 The Question of Fitness PDF The New York Times 1924 Voting on Prohibition PDF The New York Times 1928 The Roosevelt Campaign PDF The New York Times 1932 A Reasoned Choice PDF The New York Times 1936 The Choice of a Candidate PDF The New York Times 1940 The Choice of a Candidate PDF The New York Times 1944 The Choice of a Candidate PDF The New York Times 1948 A Choice Reaffirmed PDF The New York Times 1952 The Choice of A Candidate PDF The New York Times 1956 The Choice of A Candidate PDF The New York Times 1960 The Campaign Ends PDF The New York Times 1964 Humphrey for President PDF The New York Times 1968 The Presidential Issue PDF The New York Times 1972 The Presidential Choice PDF The New York Times 1976 President Wobble and What Jimmy Carter Has Learned PDF The New York Times 1980 Mondale for President PDF The New York Times 1984 Two Good Men PDF The New York Times 1988 George Bush s Failure Bill Clinton s Promise PDF The New York Times 1992 Bill Clinton for President PDF The New York Times 1996 Al Gore for President PDF The New York Times 2000 John Kerry for President PDF The New York Times 2004 Barack Obama for President The New York Times October 23 2008 Barack Obama for Re election The New York Times October 27 2012 Hillary Clinton for President The New York Times September 24 2016 Elect Joe Biden America The New York Times Elect Joe Biden America The New York Times October 6 2020 Retrieved October 6 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of United States presidential election endorsements made by The New York Times amp oldid 1197734664, 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