Richard Nixon 1972 presidential campaign
American political campaign
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1972 presidential campaign of Richard Nixon was a successful re-election campaign for President Richard Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew. They were re-elected president and vice president after decisively defeating George McGovern and Sargent Shriver of the Democratic Party.

37th President of the United States
(1969–1974)
Spiro Agnew
39th Vice President of the United States
(1969–1973)
Official nominee: August 23, 1972
Won election: November 7, 1972
Certification: January 6, 1973
Inaugurated: January 20, 1973
| Campaign | 1972 Republican primaries 1972 U.S. presidential election |
|---|---|
| Candidate | Richard Nixon 37th President of the United States (1969–1974) Spiro Agnew 39th Vice President of the United States (1969–1973) |
| Affiliation | Republican Party |
| Status | Announced: January 7, 1972 Official nominee: August 23, 1972 Won election: November 7, 1972 Certification: January 6, 1973 Inaugurated: January 20, 1973 |
| Slogan(s) | President Nixon. Now more than ever Re-elect the President |
| Theme song | "Nixon Now" by Ken Sutherland |

Nixon authorized the formation of his 1972 campaign committee, Nixon-Agnew '72, on January 7, 1972. On August 23, he secured the nomination of the Republican Party at its convention in Miami Beach, Florida. The convention nominated Vice President Agnew as his running mate.
On November 7, Nixon carried 49 of 50 states, winning the election with 60.7 percent of the popular vote and 520 electoral votes. McGovern only carried Massachusetts and the District of Columbia, receiving 37.5 percent and 17 electoral votes. Nixon's re-election was confirmed by the Electoral College on December 18 and certified by the Joint session of Congress of January 6, 1973. He was inaugurated for his second term on January 20, 1973.
Both Agnew and Nixon resigned within two years of their second term. In December 1973, Gerald Ford replaced Agnew as vice president and in the following year, replaced Nixon as president. This made Nixon the first and, as of 2026, only person to be inaugurated four times as both president and vice president (only Franklin D. Roosevelt had four inaugurations, in his case for four terms).
Chronicle
Primaries
Republican National Convention

In August, Nixon accepted his party's nomination at the Republican National Convention at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida.
Endorsements
Nixon had received endorsements from: Cabinet Members
- United States Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard (1969–1971)[1]
- United States Secretary of State William P. Rogers (1969–1973)[2]
Senators
- Bob Dole (R-KS)[3]
- Jacob Javits (R-NY)[2]
- Charles H. Percy (R-IL)[3]
Former Representatives
- William M. Tuck, (D-VA)[4]
Governors
- William T. Cahill (R-NJ)[2]
- Thomas Meskill (R-CT)[2]
- Richard B. Ogilvie (R-IL)[3]
- Ronald Reagan (R-CA)[1][5]
- Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)[2]
Former Governors
- C. Farris Bryant, (D-FL)[4]
- John Connally, (D-TX)[4]
- Mills Godwin, (D-VA)[4]
- Marvin Griffin, (D-GA)[4]
- Allan Shivers, (D-TX)[4]
- John Bell Williams, (D-MS)[4]
TV and Radio Personalites
- Johnny Grant radio personality[6]
- Merv Griffin TV personality[7]
- Art Linkletter radio personality[3][8]
Actors and Actresses
- June Allyson[8]
- Richard Arlen[8]
- Frankie Avalon[8]
- Joan Blondell[8][6]
- Ray Bolger[8][6]
- Yvonne De Carlo[8]
- Hoagy Carmichael[8]
- Cyd Charisse[8]
- Christopher Connelly (democrat)[6]
- Robert Conrad[8]
- Richard Crenna[5]
- Arlene Dahl[8]
- Sammy Davis Jr. (democrat)[9]
- Dennis Day[8]
- Don DeFore[8]
- William Demarest[8]
- Andy Devine[8]
- Joanne Dru[8]
- James Drury[8]
- Irene Dunne[8]
- Clint Eastwood[8]
- Chad Everett[8]
- Rhonda Fleming[8]
- Glenn Ford (democrat)[5]
- Zsa Zsa Gabor[8][7]
- Virginia Grey[8]
- George Hamilton (democrat)[6]
- June Haver[8]
- Charlton Heston (democrat)[6][7]
- George Jessel[6]
- Lainie Kazan[8]
- Dorothy Lamour[8]
- Fred MacMurray[8]
- Gordon MacRae[8]
- Virginia Mayo[8]
- Ann Miller[8]
- Mary Ann Mobley[8]
- Mary Tyler Moore (democrat)[7]
- Terry Moore, actress[8]
- Lloyd Nolan[8]
- Hugh O'Brian[8]
- John Payne[8]
- Walter Pidgeon[8]
- Gene Raymond[8]
- Debbie Reynolds[7]
- Cesar Romero[8]
- Julie Sommars[8]
- James Stewart[8][7]
- Hal Wallis[8]
- John Wayne[8][7]
Comedians
- Jack Benny[6][7]
- Edgar Bergen[8]
- George Burns[7]
- Jimmy Durante (democrat)[5]
- Bob Hope[2][8]
- Dick Martin[7]
- Ken Murray[8]
- Dan Rowan[7]
- Red Skelton[8][7]
Singers
- James Brown (democrat)[9]
- Pat Boone[8]
- Glen Campbell (democrat)[7]
- Eddie Fisher[5]
- Hildegarde[8]
- Tony Martin[8]
- Frank Sinatra (democrat)[6][7]
- Rudy Vallee[8]
Musicians
- Les Brown saxophonists[8]
- Sammy Kaye saxophonists[8]
Basketball Players
- Wilt Chamberlain center[9]
Football Players
- Jim Brown fullback (democrat)[9]
- Nick Buoniconti linebacker[10]
- Merlin Olsen defensive tackle[10]
- Les Richter linebacker[11]
- Gale Sayers running back[10]
- O. J. Simpson running back[8]
- Howard Twilley wide receiver[10]
Motorsports
- Bobby Allison racing driver[11]
- Gary Bettenhausen racing driver[11]
- Frank DelRoy racing official[11]
- A. J. Foyt racing driver[11]
- Bill France Sr. racing executive (democrat)[11]
- Don Garlits racing driver[11]
- Jerry Grant racing driver[11]
- James Hylton racing driver[11]
- Bobby Isaac racing driver[11]
- John Marcum racing executive[11]
- David Pearson racing driver[11]
- Richard Petty racing driver[11]
- Ronnie Sox racing driver[11]
- Ramo Stott racing driver[11]
- Mickey Thompson racing driver[11]
- Bobby Unser racing driver[11]
- Bruce Walkup racing driver[11]
- Rodger Ward racing driver[11]
- Cale Yarborough racing driver[11]
- LeeRoy Yarbrough racing driver[11]
