Rutherford Decker
Rutherford Losey Decker was an American politician who was a longtime member and a Presidential nominee of Prohibition Party in 1960, and the president of the National Association of Evangelicals from 1946 to 1948.
Decker was born in Elmira, New York. He was a missionary at the American Baptist Home Mission Society, and preached in Fort Morgan, Colorado and in Denver, Colorado. He also preached at the Temple Baptist Church in Kansas City, Missouri, until he retired in the 1960s.
A lifelong resident of Missouri, he was nominated for President with party chairman Earle Harold Munn as his running-mate.
Decker and Munn finished fifth with 46,203 votes. Munn succeeded Decker as a presidential nominee in 1964. They appeared on ballots in 11 states: Alabama, Delaware, Michigan, California, Massachusetts, Texas, Tennessee, New Mexico, Kansas, Indiana and Montana. Decker and Munn did not receive over 1% of the vote in any of these states.
He died in September 1972 at the age of 68.
Electoral history
United States presidential election, 1960
- John F. Kennedy/Lyndon B. Johnson - 34,226,731 and 303 electoral votes
- Richard Nixon/Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. - 34,108,157 and 219 electoral votes
- Harry Byrd/Strom Thurmond/Barry Goldwater - 15 electoral votes
- Eric Hass/Georgia Cozzini - 47,522
- Rutherford Decker/Earle Harold Munn - 46,203
- Orval E. Faubus/John G. Crommelin - 44,984