List of presidential nominating conventions in the United States

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These lists are a companion to the Wikipedia article entitled United States presidential nominating convention.

Elec-
tion
Party City Year Presidential
nominee
Notes
1832 Anti-Masonic Baltimore, Maryland 1831 William Wirt usually considered the first U.S. political party nominating convention
1836 Anti-Masonic Philadelphia 1836 no candidate nominated
1840 Anti-Masonic Philadelphia 1838 William Henry Harrison (Whig) By 1840, Anti-Masons had been largely absorbed into the Whig Party
Liberty Albany, New York 1840 James G. Birney first U.S. anti-slavery political party
1844 Liberty Buffalo, New York 1843 James G. Birney
Tyler Democratic Baltimore 1844 John Tyler Nominated sitting President Tyler in May 1844 but Tyler withdrew from running in August 1844. [Also known as the National Democratic or Democratic Republican Party]
1848 Free Soil Utica & Buffalo,
New York
1848 Martin Van Buren
& Charles Francis Adams Sr.
united Liberty Party supporters with anti-slavery Democrats and Whigs
1852 Free Soil Pittsburgh 1852 John P. Hale Most Free-Soilers joined the Republican Party after its foundation in 1854.
1856 American Philadelphia 1856 Millard Fillmore (Whig) The anti-immigrant American (or Know Nothing) Party endorsed Fillmore in February 1856, followed by the Whigs in September.

Major-party conventions

The two right-hand columns show nominations by notable conventions not shown elsewhere. Some of the nominees (e.g. the Whigs before 1860 and Theodore Roosevelt in 1912) received very large votes, while others who received less than 1% of the total national popular vote are listed to show historical continuity or transition. [For example, the Equal Rights Party convention of 1872 nominated the first national ticket to include either a woman (Victoria Woodhull) or an African-American (Frederick Douglass), although this ticket received no votes at all.]

Many important candidates are not shown here because they were never endorsed by a national party convention (e.g. William Henry Harrison in 1836, George C. Wallace in 1968, John B. Anderson in 1980 and Ross Perot in 1992); for a list by year of all notable candidates (at least one Electoral vote or 0.1% of the popular vote), please see List of United States presidential candidates.

Note that there is no organizational continuity between the American Parties of 1856 and 1972, the Union Parties of 1860, 1864, 1888, 1900 and 1936, or the Progressive Parties of 1912–16, 1924 and 1948–52.

Presidential winner in bold.
Vice-presidential nominees in small type preceded by "&".
People's [Middle of the Road] = "Middle of the Road" faction of the People's Party, who opposed fusing with the Democrats after 1896.
Elec-
tion
Democratic
convention
Democratic
nominees
Republican
convention
Republican
nominees
Other
conventions
Other
nominees
1832 Baltimore, Maryland Andrew Jackson
& Martin Van Buren
Baltimore (National Republican, 1831) Henry Clay
& John Sergeant
1836 Baltimore (1835) Martin Van Buren
& Richard M. Johnson
1840 Baltimore Martin Van Buren
[no vice-presidential nominee]
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (Whig, 1839) William Henry Harrison
& John Tyler
1844 Baltimore James K. Polk
& George M. Dallas
Baltimore (Whig) Henry Clay
& Theodore Frelinghuysen
1848 Baltimore Lewis Cass
& William O. Butler
Philadelphia (Whig) Zachary Taylor
& Millard Fillmore
1852 Baltimore Franklin Pierce
& William R. King
Baltimore (Whig) Winfield Scott
& William R. Graham
1856 Cincinnati James Buchanan
& John C. Breckinridge
Philadelphia John C. Frémont
& William L. Dayton
Baltimore (Whig) Millard Fillmore
& Andrew Donelson
1860 Baltimore
and
Charleston, South Carolina
Stephen A. Douglas
& Herschel V. Johnson (Official);
John C. Breckinridge
& Joseph Lane (Southern)
Chicago Abraham Lincoln
& Hannibal Hamlin
Baltimore
(Constitutional Union)
John Bell
& Edward Everett
1864 Chicago George B. McClellan
& George H. Pendleton
Baltimore
(National Union)
Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
& Andrew Johnson (War Democrat}
Cleveland
(Radical Democratic)
John C. Frémont (Republican) — withdrew
& John Cochrane (War Democrat)
1868 New York City Horatio Seymour
& Francis P. Blair, Jr
Chicago Ulysses S. Grant
& Schuyler Colfax
1872 Baltimore Horace Greeley
& B. Gratz Brown
(Liberal Republican)
Philadelphia Ulysses S. Grant
& Henry Wilson
Cincinnati, Ohio
(Liberal Republican)
Horace Greeley
& B. Gratz Brown
Louisville, Kentucky
(Straight-Out Democratic)
Charles O'Conordeclined
& John Quincy Adams II
New York (Equal Rights)[1][2] Victoria Woodhull
& Frederick Douglass
1876 St. Louis Samuel J. Tilden & Thomas A. Hendricks Cincinnati Rutherford B. Hayes & William A. Wheeler Indianapolis (Greenback) Peter Cooper
& Samuel F. Cary
1880 Cincinnati Winfield S. Hancock & William H. English Chicago James A. Garfield & Chester Alan Arthur Chicago (Greenback) James B. Weaver
& Barzillai J. Chambers
1884 Chicago Grover Cleveland
& Thomas A. Hendricks
Chicago James G. Blaine
& John A. Logan
indianapolis (Greenback) Benjamin F. Butler
& Absolom M. West
1888 St. Louis Grover Cleveland
& Allen G. Thurman
Chicago Benjamin Harrison
& Levi P. Morton
Cincinnati (Union Labor) Alson Streeter
& Charles E. Cunningham
1892 Chicago Grover Cleveland
& Adlai Stevenson I
Minneapolis Benjamin Harrison
& Whitelaw Reid
Omaha, Nebraska (People's) James B. Weaver
& James G. Field
1896 Chicago William Jennings Bryan
& Arthur Sewall
St. Louis William McKinley & Garret Hobart St. Louis (People's) Wm J. Bryan (Dem.) & Thomas E. Watson (People's)
St. Louis (National Silver Party)Wm J. Bryan (Dem.) & Arthur Sewall (Dem.)
Indianapolis (National [Gold] Democratic) John M. Palmer & Simon Bolivar Buckner
1900 Kansas City William Jennings Bryan
& Adlai Stevenson I
Philadelphia William McKinley
& Theodore Roosevelt
Sioux Falls, South Dakota (People's) William Jennings Bryan (Dem.)
& Adlai Stevenson I
(Dem.)
Cincinnati
(People's [Middle of the Road] )
Wharton Barker
& Ignatius Donnelly
Baltimore (Union Reform) Seth Ellis
& Samuel T. Nicholson
1904 St. Louis Alton B. Parker
& Henry G. Davis
Chicago Theodore Roosevelt
& Charles W. Fairbanks
Springfield Illinois
(People's [Middle of the Road] )
Thomas E. Watson
& Thomas Tibbles
1908 Denver William Jennings Bryan
& John W. Kern
Chicago William Howard Taft
& James S. Sherman
St. Louis
(People's [Middle of the Road] )
Thomas E. Watson
& Samuel Williams
Chicago (Independence) Thomas L. Hisgen
& John T. Graves
1912 Baltimore Woodrow Wilson
& Thomas R. Marshall
Chicago William Howard Taft
& James S. Sherman
Chicago (Progressive) Theodore Roosevelt
& Hiram Johnson
1916 St. Louis Woodrow Wilson
& Thomas R. Marshall
Chicago Charles Evans Hughes
& Charles W. Fairbanks
Chicago (Progressive) [Theodore Roosevelt] — intended nomination declined beforehand
1920 San Francisco James M. Cox
& Franklin Roosevelt
Chicago Warren G. Harding
& Calvin Coolidge
Chicago (Farmer-Labor) Parley P. Christensen
& Max Hayes
1924 New York City John W. Davis
& Charles W. Bryan
Cleveland Calvin Coolidge
& Charles Dawes
Cincinnati (Progressive) Robert La Follette, Sr.
& Burton K. Wheeler
1928 Houston
(Texas)
Al Smith
& Joseph T. Robinson
Kansas City, Missouri Herbert Hoover
& Charles Curtis
Chicago (Farmer-Labor) Frank E. Webb[3]
& Will Vereen
1932 Chicago Franklin Roosevelt
& John Nance Garner
Chicago Herbert Hoover
& Charles Curtis
Omaha (Farmer-Labor) Frank E. Webb
& Jacob S. Coxey Sr.[4]
1936 Philadelphia Franklin Roosevelt
& John Nance Garner
Cleveland Alf Landon
& Frank Knox
Cleveland (Union) William Lemke
& Thomas C. O'Brien
1940 Chicago Franklin Roosevelt
& Henry A. Wallace
Philadelphia Wendell Willkie
& Charles McNary
1944 Chicago Franklin Roosevelt
& Harry Truman
Chicago Thomas E. Dewey
& John Bricker
1948 Philadelphia Harry S. Truman
& Alben Barkley
Philadelphia Thomas E. Dewey
& Earl Warren
Philadelphia (Progressive) Henry A. Wallace
& Glen Taylor
Birmingham (States' Rights Democratic) Strom Thurmond
& Fielding Wright
1952 Chicago Adlai Stevenson II
& John Sparkman
Chicago Dwight D. Eisenhower
& Richard Nixon
Chicago (Progressive) Vincent Hallinan
& Charlotta Bass
1956 Chicago Adlai Stevenson II
& Estes Kefauver
San Francisco Dwight D. Eisenhower
& Richard Nixon
Richmond, Virginia (States' Rights) T. Coleman Andrews
& Thomas Werdel
1960 Los Angeles John F. Kennedy
& Lyndon Johnson
Chicago Richard Nixon
& Henry Cabot Lodge
Dayton, Ohio (National States' Rights) Orval Faubus
& John G. Crommelin
1964 Atlantic City
(New Jersey)
Lyndon B. Johnson
& Hubert Humphrey
San Francisco Barry Goldwater
& William E. Miller
1968 Chicago Hubert Humphrey
& Edmund Muskie
Miami Beach
(Florida)
Richard Nixon
& Spiro Agnew
Ann Arbor, Mich. (Peace & Freedom) Eldridge Cleaver
& Peggy Terry
1972 Miami Beach George McGovern
& Thomas Eagleton[5]
Miami Beach Richard Nixon
& Spiro Agnew
Louisville, Kentucky (American Party) John G. Schmitz
& Thomas J. Anderson
St Louis (People's Party) Benjamin Spock
& Julius Hobson
1976 New York City Jimmy Carter
& Walter Mondale
Kansas City, Missouri Gerald Ford
& Robert Dole
Chicago (American Independent Party) Lester Maddox
& William Dyke
Salt Lake City, Utah (American Party) Thomas J. Anderson
& Rufus Shackleford
1980 New York City Jimmy Carter
& Walter Mondale
Detroit Ronald Reagan
& George H. W. Bush
Cleveland (Citizens) Barry Commoner
& LaDonna Harris
1984 San Francisco Walter Mondale
& Geraldine Ferraro
Dallas Ronald Reagan
& George H.W. Bush
Saint Paul, Minnesota (Citizens) Sonia Johnson
& Richard J. Walton
1988 Atlanta Michael Dukakis
& Lloyd Bentsen
New Orleans George H. W. Bush
& Dan Quayle
1992 New York City Bill Clinton
& Al Gore
Houston
(Texas))
George H.W. Bush
& Dan Quayle
Washington, D.C. (Natural Law Party) John Hagelin
& Mike Tompkins
1996 Chicago Bill Clinton
& Al Gore
San Diego Robert Dole
& Jack Kemp
Long Beach & Valley Forge (Reform) Ross Perot
& Pat Choate
2000 Los Angeles Al Gore
& Joe Lieberman
Philadelphia George W. Bush
& Dick Cheney
Long Beach, California (Reform) Pat Buchanan
& Ezola Foster
2004 Boston John Kerry
& John Edwards
New York City George W. Bush
& Dick Cheney
Irving, Texas (Reform)[6] Ralph Nader (ind.)
& Peter Camejo (ind.)
2008 Denver
(Colorado)
Barack Obama
& Joe Biden
Saint Paul
(Minnesota)
John McCain
& Sarah Palin
2012 Charlotte
(North Carolina)
Barack Obama
& Joe Biden
Tampa
(Florida)
Mitt Romney
& Paul Ryan
2016 Philadelphia Hillary Clinton
& Tim Kaine
Cleveland
(Ohio)
Donald Trump
& Mike Pence
2020 Milwaukee
(Wisconsin)
Joe Biden
& Kamala Harris
Charlotte
(North Carolina)
Donald Trump
& Mike Pence
2024 Chicago Kamala Harris
& Tim Walz
Milwaukee Donald Trump
& JD Vance

Third-party conventions since 1872

Prohibition and socialist parties

The Prohibition Party was organized in 1869. At the 1896 Prohibition Party convention in Pittsburgh, the majority of delegates supported a "narrow-gauge" platform confined to the prohibition of alcohol, while a "broad-gauge" minority — who also wanted to advocate for Free Silver and other reforms — broke away to form the National Party.

The Socialist Party of America (1901–1972) resulted from a merger of the Social Democratic Party (founded 1898) with dissenting members of the Socialist Labor Party (founded 1876). The Socialist Party of America stopped running its own candidates for president after 1956, but a minority of SPA members who disagreed with this policy broke away in 1973 to form the Socialist Party USA (SPUSA).

Note that the years refer to the relevant presidential election and not necessarily to the date of a convention making a nomination for that election. Some nominating conventions meet in the year before an election.

Elec-
tion
Prohibition Party convention Prohibition Party nominee Socialist Labor Party convention Socialist Labor Party nominee Social Democratic or Socialist Party convention Social Democratic or Socialist Party nominee
1872Columbus, OhioJames Black
1876ClevelandGreen Clay Smith
1880ClevelandNeal Dow
1884PittsburghJohn St. John
1888IndianapolisClinton B. Fisk
1892CincinnatiJohn BidwellNew York CitySimon Wing
1896Pittsburgh (Prohibition Party)Joshua LeveringNew York CityCharles Matchett
Pittsburgh (National Party) Charles Eugene Bentley
1900ChicagoJohn G. WoolleyNew York CityJoseph F. MalloneyIndianapolis (SDP)Eugene V. Debs
1904IndianapolisSilas C. SwallowNew York CityCharles H. CorreganChicago (SPA)Eugene V. Debs
1908ColumbusEugene W. ChafinNew York CityAugust GillhausChicago (SPA)Eugene V. Debs
1912Atlantic CityEugene W. ChafinNew York CityArthur E. ReimerIndianapolis (SPA)Eugene V. Debs
1916St. PaulJ. Frank HanlyNew York CityArthur E. Reimer(mail ballot)(Allan L. Benson)
1920Lincoln, NebraskaAaron WatkinsNew York CityWilliam Wesley CoxNew York City (SPA)Eugene V. Debs
1924ColumbusHerman P. FarisNew York CityFrank T. JohnsCleveland (SPA)Robert La Follette, Sr. (Progressive)
1928ChicagoWilliam F. VarneyNew York CityVerne L. ReynoldsNew York City (SPA)Norman Thomas
1932IndianapolisWilliam D. UpshawNew York CityVerne L. ReynoldsMilwaukee (SPA)Norman Thomas
1936Niagara Falls, New YorkD. Leigh ColvinNew York CityJohn W. AikenCleveland (SPA)Norman Thomas
1940ChicagoRoger W. BabsonNew York CityJohn W. AikenWashington, D.C. (SPA)Norman Thomas
1944IndianapolisClaude A. WatsonNew York CityEdward A. TeichertReading (SPA)Norman Thomas
1948Winona Lake, IndianaClaude A. WatsonNew York CityEdward A. TeichertReading (SPA)Norman Thomas
1952IndianapolisStuart HamblenNew York CityEric HassCleveland (SPA)Darlington Hoopes
1956Milford, IndianaEnoch A. HoltwickNew York CityEric HassChicago (SPA)Darlington Hoopes
1960Winona Lake, 1959Rutherford DeckerNew York CityEric Hass
1964ChicagoE. Harold MunnNew York CityEric Hass
1968DetroitE. Harold MunnBrooklynHenning A. Blomen
1972Wichita, KansasE. Harold MunnDetroitLouis Fisher
1976Wheat Ridge, ColoradoBenjamin C. BubarSouthfield, MichiganJules LevinMilwaukee (SPUSA)Frank P. Zeidler
1980BirminghamBenjamin C. Bubar  Milwaukee (SPUSA)David McReynolds
1984Mandan, North DakotaEarl Dodge  Milwaukee (SPUSA)Sonia Johnson (Citizens')
1988Springfield, IllinoisEarl Dodge  Milwaukee (SPUSA)Willa Kenoyer
1992MinneapolisEarl Dodge  Chicago (SPUSA)J. Quinn Brisben
1996DenverEarl Dodge  Cambridge (SPUSA 1995)Mary Cal Hollis
2000Bird-in-Hand, PennsylvaniaEarl Dodge  Milwaukee (SPUSA)David McReynolds
2004Fairfield Glade, TennesseeGene Amondson  Chicago (SPUSA)Walt Brown
2008IndianapolisGene Amondson  St. Louis (SPUSA)Brian Moore
2012Cullman, AlabamaJack Fellure  Los Angeles (SPUSA)Stewart Alexander
2016(conference call)(James Hedges)  Milwaukee (SPUSA)Mimi Soltysik
2020(conference call)(Phil Collins)  Newark (SPUSA 2019)Howie Hawkins (Green)
2024Buffalo (2023)Michael Wood  (Zoom call, SPUSA, 2023)(Bill Stodden)

Workers', Communist and Socialist Workers parties

The Communist Party was formed by Leninists who had left the Socialist Party of America in 1919. The Socialist Workers Party was formed by Communists who followed Leon Trotsky rather than Joseph Stalin and briefly joined the Socialist Party before forming their own party in 1937.

Specific details about how SWP presidential candidates were nominated in 1960 and after 1992 are sparse and unclear; clarifications are welcome. A list of the party's presidential and vice-presidential nominees from 1948 to the present can be found at Socialist Workers Party (United States)#Presidential elections.

Election Communist Party convention Communist nominee SWP convention Socialist Workers
Party
nominee
1924Chicago [Workers Party]William Z. Foster
1928New York City
[Workers (Communist) Party]
William Z. Foster
1932ChicagoWilliam Z. Foster
1936New York CityEarl Browder
1940New York CityEarl Browder
1944New York City
(Communist Political Association)
no candidate nominated
1948New York CityHenry A. Wallace (Progressive)New York CityFarrell Dobbs
1952Vincent Hallinan (Progressive)New York CityFarrell Dobbs
1956New York CityFarrell Dobbs
1960(Farrell Dobbs)
1964New York CityClifton DeBerry
1968New York CityCharlene MitchellNew York CityFred Halstead
1972New York CityGus HallDetroitLinda Jenness
1976ChicagoGus HallOberlin, OhioPeter Camejo
1980DetroitGus HallOberlin, OhioAndrew Pulley [7]
1984Cleveland, OhioGus HallNew York CityMelvin T. Mason
1988New York CityJames Warren
1992ChicagoJames Warren

Libertarian, Green, and Constitution Parties

In 1999, the United States Taxpayers' Party changed its name to the Constitution Party.

The individual article about a Libertarian convention or about a Green Party convention after 1996 is linked to its respective city in the table below. Cities linked for Constitution and U.S. Taxpayers' Party conventions lead to individual sections of Constitution Party National Convention.

Elec-
tion
Libertarian Party convention Libertarian Party nominee Green Party convention Green Party nominee U.S. Taxpayers' or Constitution Party convention U.S. Taxpayers' or Constitution Party nominee
1972 Denver John Hospers
1976 New York Roger MacBride
1980 Los Angeles Ed Clark
1984 New York (1983) David Bergland
1988 Seattle (1987) Ron Paul
1992 Chicago (1991) André Marrou New Orleans (US Taxpayers') Howard Phillips
1996 Washington, D.C. Harry Browne Los Angeles Ralph Nader San Diego (US Taxpayers') Howard Phillips
2000 Anaheim Harry Browne Denver Ralph Nader St. Louis (Constitution, 1999) Howard Phillips
2004 Atlanta Michael Badnarik Milwaukee David Cobb Valley Forge, Pa. (Constitution) Michael Peroutka
2008 Denver Bob Barr Chicago Cynthia McKinney Kansas City (Constitution) Chuck Baldwin
2012 Las Vegas Gary Johnson Baltimore Jill Stein Nashville (Constitution) Virgil Goode
2016 Orlando Gary Johnson Houston Jill Stein Salt Lake City (Constitution) Darrell Castle
2020 (Online) (Jo Jorgensen) (Online) (Howie Hawkins) (Online) (Constitution) (Don Blankenship)
2024 Washington, D.C. Chase Oliver (Online) (Jill Stein) Salt Lake City (Constitution) Randall Terry

Location of the Party Convention in Relation to Election Winner

The list below shows the location of the party convention, along with the winner of the election. Bold font indicates that party won the presidential election. If the party won the state where the convention was held — but not necessarily that city itself — the box is shaded. (For example, while the 1948 Democratic, Progressive and Republican conventions were all held in Philadelphia, the city itself narrowly voted for Democratic President Harry Truman, while the state of Pennsylvania as a whole voted for the Republican candidate, Thomas Dewey. In this table the 1948 Republican box is shaded, but the Democratic one is not.).[8] Other parties are only listed if they garnered electoral college votes.[9]

Election Democratic Convention Republican Convention Other Party Convention
1832 Baltimore, Maryland (Jackson) Baltimore, Maryland (National Republican, 1831)
1836 Baltimore, Maryland (1835) (Van Buren)
1840 Baltimore, Maryland Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (Whig, 1839) (WH Harrison)
1844 Baltimore, Maryland (Polk) Baltimore, Maryland (Whig)
1848 Baltimore, Maryland Baltimore, Maryland (Whig) (Taylor)
1852 Baltimore, Maryland (Pierce) Baltimore, Maryland (Whig)
1856 Cincinnati, Ohio (Buchanan) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Baltimore, Maryland (American)
1860 Charleston, South Carolina & Baltimore, Maryland[10] Chicago, Illinois (Lincoln) Baltimore, Maryland (Constitutional Union)
1864 Chicago, Illinois Baltimore, Mayland (National Union) (Lincoln)
1868 New York City Chicago, Illinois (Grant)
1872 Baltimore, Maryland Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Grant) Cincinnati. Ohio (Liberal Republican)
1876 St. Louis, Missouri Cincinnati, Ohio (Hayes)
1880 Cincinnati, Ohio Chicago, Illinois (Garfield)
1884 Chicago, Illinois (Cleveland) Chicago, Illinois
1888 St. Louis, Missouri Chicago, Illinois (B. Harrison)
1892 Chicago, Illinois (Cleveland) Minneapolis, Minnesota Omaha, Nebraska (People's)
1896 Chicago, Illinois St. Louis, Missouri (McKinley) St. Louis, Missouri (People's)
1900 Kansas City, Missouri Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (McKinley)
1904 St. Louis, Missouri Chicago, Illinois (T. Roosevelt)
1908 Denver, Colorado Chicago, Illinois (Taft)
1912 Baltimore, Maryland (Wilson) Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois (Progressive)
1916 St. Louis, Missouri (Wilson) Chicago, Illinois
1920 San Francisco, California Chicago, Illinois (Harding)
1924 New York City Cleveland, Ohio (Coolidge) Cincinnati, Ohio (Progressive)
1928 Houston, Texas Kansas City, Missouri (Hoover)
1932 Chicago, Illinois (FDR) Chicago, Illinois
1936 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (FDR) Cleveland, Ohio
1940 Chicago, Illinois (FDR) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1944 Chicago, Illinois (FDR) Chicago, Illinois
1948 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Truman) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Birmingham, Alabama (States' Rights Democratic)
1952 Chicago, Illinois Chicago, Illinois (Ike)
1956 Chicago, Illinois San Francisco, California (Ike)
1960 Los Angeles, California (JFK) Chicago, Illinois
1964 Atlantic City, New Jersey (LBJ) San Francisco, California
1968 Chicago, Illinois Miami Beach, Florida (Nixon)
1972 Miami Beach, Florida Miami Beach, Florida (Nixon)
1976 New York City (Carter) Kansas City, Missouri
1980 New York City Detroit, Michigan {Reagan)
1984 San Francisco, California Dallas, Texas {Reagan)
1988 Atlanta, Georgia New Orleans, Louisiana (GHW Bush)
1992 New York City (Bill Clinton) Houston, Texas
1996 Chicago, Illinois (Bill Clinton) San Diego, California
2000 Los Angeles, California Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (GW Bush)
2004 Boston, Massachusetts New York City (GW Bush)
2008 Denver, Colorado (Obama) Saint Paul, Minnesota
2012 Charlotte, North Carolina (Obama) Tampa, Florida
2016 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Cleveland, Ohio (Trump)
2020 Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Biden) Charlotte, North Carolina
2024 Chicago, Illinois Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Trump)

See also

References

Sources (partial list)

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