See main article: 1968 United States presidential election.
Election Name: | 1968 United States presidential election in Nevada |
Country: | Nevada |
Flag Year: | 1929 |
Type: | presidential |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1964 United States presidential election in Nevada |
Previous Year: | 1964 |
Next Election: | 1972 United States presidential election in Nevada |
Next Year: | 1972 |
Election Date: | November 5, 1968[1] |
Image1: | Nixon_30-0316a_(cropped).jpg |
Nominee1: | Richard Nixon |
Party1: | Republican Party (United States) |
Home State1: | New York |
Running Mate1: | Spiro Agnew |
Electoral Vote1: | 3 |
Popular Vote1: | 73,188 |
Percentage1: | 47.46% |
Nominee2: | Hubert Humphrey |
Party2: | Democratic Party (United States) |
Home State2: | Minnesota |
Running Mate2: | Edmund Muskie |
Electoral Vote2: | 0 |
Popular Vote2: | 60,598 |
Percentage2: | 39.29% |
Map Size: | 275px |
Image3: | George Wallace (D-AL) (3x4).jpg |
Nominee3: | George Wallace |
Party3: | American Independent Party |
Color3: | ff7f00 |
Home State3: | Alabama |
Running Mate3: | S. Marvin Griffin |
Electoral Vote3: | 0 |
Popular Vote3: | 20,432 |
Percentage3: | 13.25% |
President | |
Before Election: | Lyndon B. Johnson |
Before Party: | Democratic Party (United States) |
After Election: | Richard Nixon |
After Party: | Republican Party (United States) |
The 1968 United States presidential election in Nevada took place on November 5, 1968, as part of the 1968 United States presidential election. State voters chose three[2] representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.
Since William Jennings Bryan's three elections, Nevada had been a bellwether state voting for every winner since 1912. However, relative to the nation, Nevada had trended Republican since the end of World War II when Populist radicalism gave way to small-town and rural conservatism due to demographic and technological change.[3] Although Democrats had a large advantage in registration, the 1966 midterm elections saw Republican Lieutenant Governor Paul Laxalt take most of the Mormon and Catholic vote in traditionally Democratic Clark County,[4] which was becoming the center of the state's rapid demographic growth. This Republican trend was aided by a fall in demand for construction work in Las Vegas and several major strikes across the state.[4]
In the early stages of the campaign, the Democratic Party viewed Nixon – despite losing strongly Catholic Nevada to Kennedy in 1960 – as much more dangerous in Nevada than Ronald Reagan or George Romney.[5] As a part of his national third party segregationist campaign, former Alabama Governor George Wallace became the first third-party candidate to obtain the necessary eight thousand signatures to get on the ballot in Nevada since the "Progressive Party" in 1948.[6]
In the earliest polls Nevada's past Republican trend was confirmed, with it being given clearly to Nixon in the second week of September,[7] and confirmed by further polls[8] until the last few days before the election. During this period Humphrey made a brief visit to Nevada[9] and came back substantially nationwide, whilst a strong poll for Wallace made the state doubtful.[10]
Ultimately former Vice President Richard Nixon, with 47.46% of the popular vote,[11] won Nevada more substantially than predicted by the last polls, though by less than thought likely in September and early October. "Independent American" candidate George Wallace finished with 13.25% of the popular vote, close to his national average but his best performance outside the Confederacy and Border States. Wallace's success was largely due to his endorsement by state congressman Walter S. Baring Jr., a conservative "States' Rights Democrat" who consistently managed huge majorities in Nevada's rural 'Cow Counties' (the 14 counties apart from Clark, Washoe, and Carson City).[12]
County | Richard Nixon Republican | Hubert Humphrey Democratic | George Wallace American Independent | Margin | Total votes cast | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
% | % | % | % | ||||||||||||||||
Churchill | 1,954 | 52.25% | 1,211 | 32.38% | 575 | 15.37% | 743 | 19.87% | 3,740 | ||||||||||
Clark | 31,522 | 41.99% | 33,225 | 44.26% | 10,318 | 13.75% | -1,703 | -2.27% | 75,065 | ||||||||||
Douglas | 1,801 | 64.37% | 670 | 23.95% | 327 | 11.69% | 1,131 | 40.42% | 2,798 | ||||||||||
Elko | 2,687 | 54.48% | 1,686 | 34.18% | 559 | 11.33% | 1,001 | 20.30% | 4,932 | ||||||||||
Esmeralda | 138 | 39.09% | 118 | 33.43% | 97 | 27.48% | 20 | 5.66% | 353 | ||||||||||
Eureka | 277 | 56.53% | 149 | 30.41% | 64 | 13.06% | 128 | 26.12% | 490 | ||||||||||
Humboldt | 1,287 | 50.97% | 885 | 35.05% | 353 | 13.98% | 402 | 15.92% | 2,525 | ||||||||||
Lander | 461 | 50.72% | 301 | 33.11% | 147 | 16.17% | 160 | 17.61% | 909 | ||||||||||
Lincoln | 555 | 49.87% | 414 | 37.20% | 144 | 12.94% | 141 | 12.67% | 1,113 | ||||||||||
Lyon | 1,616 | 53.88% | 939 | 31.31% | 444 | 14.80% | 677 | 22.57% | 2,999 | ||||||||||
Mineral | 927 | 32.31% | 1,242 | 43.29% | 700 | 24.40% | -315 | -10.98% | 2,869 | ||||||||||
Nye | 843 | 40.70% | 728 | 35.15% | 500 | 24.14% | 115 | 5.55% | 2,071 | ||||||||||
Ormsby | 3,169 | 56.58% | 1,770 | 31.60% | 662 | 11.82% | 1,399 | 24.98% | 5,601 | ||||||||||
Pershing | 567 | 46.74% | 466 | 38.42% | 180 | 14.84% | 101 | 8.32% | 1,213 | ||||||||||
Storey | 222 | 50.00% | 172 | 38.74% | 50 | 11.26% | 50 | 11.26% | 444 | ||||||||||
Washoe | 23,492 | 54.65% | 14,560 | 33.87% | 4,936 | 11.48% | 8,932 | 20.78% | 42,988 | ||||||||||
White Pine | 1,670 | 40.65% | 2,062 | 50.19% | 376 | 9.15% | -392 | -9.54% | 4,108 | ||||||||||
Totals | 73,188 | 47.46% | 60,598 | 39.29% | 20,432 | 13.25% | 12,590 | 8.17% | 154,218 |