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U.S. presidential election, 1976

Presidential electoral votes by state.
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Presidential electoral votes by state.

The U.S. presidential election of 1976 followed the resignation of President Richard M. Nixon in the wake of the Watergate scandal. It pitted incumbent President Gerald Ford against the relatively unknown former governor of Georgia, Jimmy Carter. Ford was saddled with a slow economy and paid a political price for his pardon of Nixon. Carter ran as an outsider and a reformer and narrowly eked out a victory.

Contents

Nominations

Democratic Party nomination

During a primary season with a long list of candidates, Carter rose from being unknown nationally to become the frontrunner, with Udall coming second in a number of close primaries. Carter won primaries first in his native Georgia, then in Alabama and Indiana, and quickly had a national campaign suitable of defeating challenges from Jackson and Church, and a late challenge from Jerry Brown.

Republican Party nomination

Incumbent president Ford, appointed to the vice presidency after the resignation of Spiro Agnew and then elevated to the presidency by the resignation of Richard M. Nixon, was the only U.S. President never to have been elected president or vice president. A centrist, he faced an uprising from the well-organized conservative faction of the party led by Reagan. In a tightly-fought two-way race, Reagan was unable to overcome fears that he was inexperienced and out of the mainstream, and the incumbent Ford won. He picked Kansas Senator Bob Dole as his vice-presidential candidate.

General election

Campaign

Ford and Carter in debate
Ford and Carter in debate.

Jimmy Carter ran as an honest outsider and reformer, which many voters found attractive in the wake of the Watergate scandal. President Ford, although personally unconnected with Watergate, was seen by many as too close to the discredited Richard Nixon administration, especially after Ford granted Nixon a presidential pardon.

Carter led consistently in the polls as Ford was never able to shake voter dissatisfaction following Watergate. Ford was seen as the winner of the first debate, looking more presidential, but during the second debate Ford made an important blunder when he stated that "there is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe and there never will be under a Ford administration". In the end, Ford eliminated most of Carter's lead in a dramatic surge, but Carter still narrowly won the election. Carter was the first Democrat since Adlai Stevenson in 1956 to carry the states of the Deep South, and the first since Lyndon Johnson in 1964 to carry an unquestionable majority of southern states; in fact, he carried all but Virginia. It would be 16 more years before any Southern state (minus Georgia) endorsed a Democrat for president when Bill Clinton, a fellow Southerner, ran for president in 1992.

The election was held on November 2, 1976.

Had Ford won the election, he would have been disqualified by the provisions of the 22nd amendment from running in 1980 because he served more than two years of Nixon's term.

Results


|- | Eugene J. McCarthy | (none) | Minnesota | style="text-align:right;" | 756,691 | style="text-align:right;" | 0.9% | style="text-align:right;" | 0 |  (b) |  (b) | style="text-align:right;" | 0

|- | Roger MacBride | Libertarian | Vermont | style="text-align:right;" | 173,011 | style="text-align:right;" | 0.2% | style="text-align:right;" | 0 | David Bergland | California | style="text-align:right;" | 0

|- | Lester Maddox | American Independent | Georgia | style="text-align:right;" | 170,531 | style="text-align:right;" | 0.2% | style="text-align:right;" | 0 | William D. Dyke | Wisconsin | style="text-align:right;" | 0

|- | Thomas J. Anderson | American |  (c) | style="text-align:right;" | 160,773 | style="text-align:right;" | 0.2% | style="text-align:right;" | 0 | Rufus Shackelford |   | style="text-align:right;" | 0 (a) A rogue Republican elector from Washington State gave Ronald Reagan one electoral vote.
(b) The running mate of McCarthy varied from state to state, possibly in an effort to attract local voters similar to that tried by the Whigs in 1836, but this reasoning is an unverified theory.
(c) Wikipedia research has not yet determined whether Anderson's home state was Tennessee or Texas at the time of the 1976 election.

Source: U.S. Office of the Federal Register

See also

Last updated: 05-16-2005 05:19:28
Last updated: 05-13-2005 07:56:04