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  1. Press conference. As election results came in on Tuesday, November 6, Nixon and his staff monitored results at a suite in the Beverly Hilton Hotel in what was becoming a tighter race than expected.

  2. Richard Nixon’s “last” press conference, (1962) press conference at which Republican politician Richard Nixon, the former U.S. vice president (1953–61), having lost a close race for the presidency to John F. Kennedy (1960) and a run for the governorship of California to incumbent Edmund G. (“Pat”)

    • Fred Frommer
  3. Nov 14, 2017 · 6 November 1962: Vice President Nixon gives his concession following his loss to Edmund “Pat” Brown in the 1962 California Gubernatorial race. He admonished the press in attendance for their disproportionate negative coverage of his campaign, and that this was his “last press conference.” (Richard Nixon Foundation) By Jason Schwartz.

  4. Prime-time conferences begin with the Nixon Administration but are irregular starting with George H.W. Bush. Since Obama's first year in office (2009), there have been no prime-time televised news conferences. In a Joint conference, the President appears together with one or more non-U.S. speakers. A typical example of a Joint conference ...

    President
    Year
    Years(in Office)
    Solo-reg
    Calvin Coolidge
    Totals
    5.59
    407
    Herbert Hoover
    Totals
    4
    268
    Franklin D. Roosevelt
    Totals
    12.12
    881
    Harry S. Truman
    Totals
    7.78
    308
  5. Jul 25, 2010 · The November 7, 1962 press conference is notable for Nixon's unvarnished remarks about the press ...more. Excerpt from the famous "last" press conference Richard Nixon gave after losing the...

    • 3 min
    • 43.4K
    • CONELRAD6401240
  6. Richard Nixon, Press Conference, Nov 7, 1962 Good morning, gentlemen. Now that Mr. Klein has made his statement, and now that all the members of the press are so delighted that I have lost, I'd like to make a statement of my own.

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  8. Aug 4, 2014 · Richard Nixon left the White House in disgrace 40 years ago this month, but the war he launched against journalists has continued under Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and other recent presidents.

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