Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. When George Wallace ran for President in 1968, it was not as a Democrat – which he had done in the 1964 Democratic primaries and would again in the 1972 Democratic primaries – but as a candidate of the American Independent Party.

  2. Oct 25, 2024 · He was elected a judge of the Third Judicial Circuit of Alabama in 1953, and in 1958 he ran unsuccessfully for the governorship, losing the Democratic nomination (which was tantamount to election) to a segregationist candidate who had been endorsed by the Ku Klux Klan.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Green states went to George Wallace in the 1972 Democratic primaries. George Wallace 1972 presidential campaign logo. On January 13, 1972, Wallace declared himself a Democratic candidate. The field included Senator George McGovern, 1968 nominee and former U.S. vice president Hubert Humphrey, and nine other Democratic opponents.

  4. After the assassination of Robert Kennedy in June and the riots surrounding the Democratic convention in Chicago in August, Wallace found himself not far behind the Democratic nominee and sitting Vice President, Hubert Humphrey.

  5. The American Independent Party, which was established in 1967 by Bill and Eileen Shearer, nominated former Alabama Governor George Wallace – whose pro-racial segregation policies had been rejected by the mainstream of the Democratic Party – as the party's candidate for president.

    • New York [a]
    • Republican
    • Richard Nixon
    • Spiro Agnew
  6. Apr 2, 2014 · He managed to still complete the campaign, but ultimately lost the Democratic nomination to George McGovern (who then lost the presidential election to Richard Nixon).

  7. People also ask

  8. When George Wallace ran for President in 1968, it was not as a Democrat – which he had done in the 1964 Democratic primaries and would again in the 1972 Democratic primaries – but as a candidate of the American Independent Party.