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1972 Republican Party presidential primaries

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from1972 Nevada Republican caucuses)
Selection of Republican US presidential candidate

1972 Republican Party presidential primaries

← 1968March 7 to June 6, 19721976 →
 
CandidateRichard NixonUncommittedJohn M. Ashbrook
Home stateCaliforniaN/AOhio
Contests won1800
Popular vote5,378,704317,048311,543
Percentage86.9%5.1%5.0%

First place finishes by preference primary results

Previous Republican nominee

Richard Nixon

Republican nominee

Richard Nixon

From March 7 to June 6, 1972, voters of theRepublican Party chose its nominee forpresident in the1972 United States presidential election. Incumbent PresidentRichard Nixon was again selected as the nominee through a series ofprimary elections andcaucuses culminating in the1972 Republican National Convention held from August 21 to August 23, 1972, inMiami,Florida.

Candidates

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
CandidateMost recent officeHome stateCampaign

Withdrawal date

Popular voteContests wonRunning mate
Richard NixonPresident of the United States
(1969–1974)
California

California


(Campaign)
Secured nomination:August 23, 1972
5,378,704
(86.9%)
18Spiro Agnew

Withdrew during primaries

[edit]
CandidateMost recent officeHome stateCampaign

Withdrawal date

Popular voteContests won
John M. AshbrookU.S. Representative fromOhio
(1961–1982)
California

Ohio

311,543
(5.0%)
0
Pete McCloskeyU.S. Representative fromCalifornia
(1967–1983)
California

California

132,731
(2.1%)
0

Endorsements

[edit]
List of Richard Nixon 1972 presidential campaign endorsements
Cabinet Members
Senators
Former Representatives
Governors
Former Governors
Celebrities

Polling

[edit]

National polling

[edit]
Poll sourcePublication
John Ashbrook
Pete McCloskey
Richard Nixon
Gallup[9]Feb. 19725%6%83%

Overview of the race

[edit]

Nixon was a popularincumbent president in 1972, as he seemed to have reacheddétente withChina and theUSSR. He shrugged off the first glimmers of that, after the election, because of the massiveWatergate scandal.

Polls showed that Nixon had a strong lead. He was challenged by two minor candidates, liberalPete McCloskey ofCalifornia and conservativeJohn Ashbrook ofOhio. McCloskey ran as an anti-Vietnam war candidate dedicated to a much more clearly liberal position compared to Nixon's ambiguity approach within the party, while Ashbrook was dedicated to a much more clearly conservative position than Nixon and opposed Nixon'sdétente policies towardsChina and theSoviet Union. In theNew Hampshire primary McCloskey's platform of peace garnered 19.7% of the vote to Nixon's 67.9%, with Ashbrook receiving 10.9% and comedian Pat Paulsen receiving 1.1%.[10] Having previously stated that he would withdraw from the race had he not achieved 20% of the vote, McCloskey did so.

Nixon won 1,347 of the 1,348 delegates to the GOP convention, with McCloskey receiving the vote of one delegate fromNew Mexico.[11]

Timeline of the race

[edit]

March 7

[edit]
See also:1972 New Hampshire Republican presidential primary
1972Republican Party primary inNew Hampshire[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)79,23967.6
Paul N. McCloskey23,19019.8
John M. Ashbrook11,3629.7
Others3,4172.9
Total votes117,208100.0

March 14

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inFlorida[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)360,27887
John M. Ashbrook36,6178.8
Paul N. McCloskey17,3124.2
Total votes414,207100

March 21

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inIllinois[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)32,55097
John M. Ashbrook1700.5
Paul N. McCloskey470.1
Others8022.4
Total votes33,569100

April 4

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inWisconsin[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)277,60196.9
Paul N. McCloskey3,6511.3
John M. Ashbrook2,6040.9
"None of the names shown"2,3150.8
Others2730.1
Total votes286,444100

April 25

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inMassachusetts[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)99,15081.2
Paul N. McCloskey16,43513.5
John M. Ashbrook4,8644
Others1,6901.4
Total votes122,139100
1972Republican Party primary inPennsylvania[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)153,88683.3
George C. Wallace20,47211.1
Others10,4435.7
Total votes184,801100

May 2

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inIndiana[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)417,069100
Total votes417,069100
1972Republican Party primary inOhio[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)692,828100
Total votes692,828100

May 4

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inTennessee[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)109,69695.8
John M. Ashbrook2,4192.1
Paul N. McCloskey2,3702.1
Others40
Total votes114,489100

May 6

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inNorth Carolina[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)159,16794.8
Paul N. McCloskey8,7325.2
Total votes167,899100

May 9

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inNebraska[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)179,46492.4
Paul N. McCloskey9,0114.6
John M. Ashbrook4,9962.6
Others8010.4
Total votes194,272100
1972Republican Party primary inWest Virginia[12]
CandidateVotes%
Unpledged delegates at large95,813100
Total votes95,813100

May 16

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inMaryland[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)99,30886.2
Paul N. McCloskey9,2238
John M. Ashbrook6,7185.8
Total votes115,249100
1972Republican Party primary inMichigan[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)321,65295.5
Paul N. McCloskey9,6912.9
Unpledged delegates5,3701.6
Others300
Total votes336,743100

May 23

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inOregon[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)231,15182
Paul N. McCloskey29,36510.4
John M. Ashbrook16,6965.9
Others4,7981.7
Total votes282,010100
1972Republican Party primary inRhode Island[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)4,95388.3
Paul N. McCloskey3376
John M. Ashbrook1753.1
Unpledged delegates at large1462.6
Total votes5,611100

June 6

[edit]
1972Republican Party primary inCalifornia[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)2,058,82590.1
John M. Ashbrook224,9229.8
Others1750
Total votes2,283,922100
1972Republican Party primary inNew Jersey[12]
CandidateVotes%
Unpledged delegates at large215,719100
Total votes215,719100
1972Republican Party primary inNew Mexico[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)49,06788.5
Paul N. McCloskey3,3675.5
"None of the names shown"3,0355.5
Total votes104,536100
1972Republican Party primary inSouth Dakota[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)52,820100
Total votes52,820100

Results by popular vote

[edit]
1972Republican Party presidential primaries[12]
CandidateVotes%
Richard M. Nixon (incumbent)5,378,70486.9
Unpledged delegates317,0485.1
John M. Ashbrook311,5435.0
Paul N. McCloskey132,7312.1
George C. Wallace20,4720.3
"None of the names shown"5,3500.1
Others22,4330.4
Total votes6,188,281100

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Remarks at a "Victory '72" Luncheon in San Francisco, California". 27 September 1972.
  2. ^abcdef"Remarks at a "Salute to the President" Dinner in New York City". 9 November 1971.
  3. ^abcd"Remarks at a "Salute to the President" Dinner in Chicago, Illinois". 9 November 1971.
  4. ^abcdefg"Many Southern Democrats Plan To Back Nixon for Re-election".The New York Times. 13 August 1972.
  5. ^abcdefgh"Nixon Entertain Their Hollywood Backers".The New York Times. 28 August 1972.
  6. ^abcdefghijklmnCritchlow, Donald (2013).When Hollywood was right : how movie stars, studio moguls, and big business remade American politics. New York : Cambridge University Press.ISBN 978-0-521-19918-6 – via Internet Archive.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
  7. ^abcd"Black celebrities have a long history of endorsing Republican presidents".The Washington Post. 3 November 2020.
  8. ^abcd"Nixon's Political Football". 21 October 2021.
  9. ^"US President - R Primaries".OurCampaigns.com. 16 Nov 2004. Retrieved29 Oct 2020.
  10. ^"New Hampshire Finals".The Miami Herald. UPI. March 15, 1972. RetrievedJune 23, 2021.
  11. ^"Nixon Renominated". Partners.nytimes.com. 1972-08-23. Retrieved2016-05-05.
  12. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuKalb, Deborah, ed. (2010).Guide to U.S. Elections (6th ed.). Washington, DC:CQ Press. pp. 412–415.ISBN 9781604265361.
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