1968 Republican National Convention


The 1968 Republican National Convention was held at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida, USA, from August 5 to August 8, 1968, to select the party's nominee in the general election. It nominated former Vice President of the United States Richard Nixon for President of the United States and then Governor of Maryland Spiro Agnew for vice president. It was the fourth time Nixon had been nominated on the Republican ticket as either its vice presidential or presidential candidate. Symbolic of the South's changing political affiliation, this was the first Republican National Convention held in a prior Confederate State.

Political context

Former Vice President Richard Nixon, emerged as the frontrunner again for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. Nixon had been the Republican Party nominee in the 1960 presidential election, and lost to Democratic Party candidate John F. Kennedy.
The so-called "New Nixon" in the 1968 presidential election devised a "Southern strategy," taking advantage of the region's opposition to racial integration and other progressive/liberal policies of the Democratic Party and President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Nixon was nominated on the first ballot with 692 votes to 277 votes for Nelson Rockefeller, 182 votes for California Governor Ronald Reagan and the rest scattered. He was able to secure the nomination to the support of many Southern delegates, after he and his subordinates made concessions to Strom Thurmond and Harry Dent on civil rights, the Supreme Court, and the selection of a vice presidential candidate.
Nixon decided not to re-select his 1960 running mate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., and House Minority Leader Gerald Ford of Michigan proposed New York City New York City|Mayor] John Lindsay for vice president. Nixon turned instead to another perceived moderate, Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew. Agnew, former Baltimore County Executive in the Baltimore City suburbs, and since Governor of Maryland, had come to Republican leaders and Nixon's attention when he summoned several Black civic, religious, and political leaders in Baltimore to the local State Office Building complex, following the disastrous April 1968 riots which enveloped Black sections of East and West Baltimore in the wake of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee. Agnew complained of the Black leaders' lack of support after a number of what he perceived to be positive projects, programs and support by his Republican administration for the minority communities in the city. Agnew's biting comments caused many in the audience to walk out. Agnew was seen as a candidate who could appeal to Rockefeller Republicans, was acceptable to Southern Conservatives, and had a solid law-and-order record.
In his acceptance speech, Nixon deplored the state of the union and urged a return to law and order both at home and abroad:
Nixon also said that he had "a good teacher", referring to Eisenhower, and made the delegates happy with the statement "Let's win this one for Ike!" Eisenhower was not present during Nixon's speech nor during any part of the convention. Due to failing health, he was under doctor's orders not to travel, but addressed the convention by telephone. He died the following March.

Balloting

The following were placed into nomination:

The Republican Convention Tally results

This was the last time during the 20th Century that two siblings received votes at a convention.
PresidentVice PresidentVice-Presidential votes
Richard M. Nixon6921238Spiro T. Agnew1119
Nelson Rockefeller27793George Romney186
Ronald Reagan1822John V. Lindsay10
Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes55Massachusetts Senator Edward Brooke1
Michigan Governor George Romney50James A. Rhodes1
New Jersey Senator Clifford Case22Not Voting16
Kansas Senator Frank Carlson20
Arkansas Governor Winthrop Rockefeller18
Hawaii Senator Hiram Fong14
Harold Stassen2
New York City Mayor John V. Lindsay1

Results by state

The balloting by state was as follows:
State
Alabama 14 12
Alaska 11 1
Arizona 16
Arkansas 18
California 86
Colorado 14 3 1
Connecticut 4 12
Delaware 9 3
Florida 32 1 1
Georgia 21 2 7
Hawaii 14
Idaho 9 5
Illinois 50 5 3
Indiana 26
Iowa 13 8 3
Kansas 20
Kentucky 22 2
Louisiana 19 7
Maine 7 7
Maryland 18 8
Massachusetts 34
Michigan 4 44
Minnesota 9 15 1 1
Mississippi 20
Missouri 16 5 3
Montana 11 3
Nebraska 16
Nevada 9 3
New Hampshire 8
New Jersey 18 22
New Mexico 8 1 5
New York 4 88
North Carolina 9 1 16
North Dakota 5 2 1
Ohio 2 55 1
Oklahoma 14 1 7
Oregon 18
Pennsylvania 22 41 1
Rhode Island 14
South Carolina 22
South Dakota 14
Tennessee 28
Texas 41 15
Utah 2 6
Vermont 9 3
Virginia 22 2
Washington 15 3 6
West Virginia 11 3
Wisconsin 30
Wyoming 12
District of Columbia 6 3
Puerto Rico 5
U.S. Virgin Islands 2 1
Total 692 277 182 55 50 22 20 18 14 2 1