1960 United States presidential election: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox election|election_name=1960 United States presidential election|country=United States|flag_year=1960|type=presidential|opinion_polls=|previous_election=1956 United States presidential election|previous_year=1956|election_date=November 8, 1960|next_election=1964 United States presidential election|next_year=1964|votes_for_election=544 members of the [[United States Electoral College|Electoral College]]|needed_votes=Plurality of electoral votes|turnout=65.8% {{increase}} 4.6 pp|image_size=x150px|image1=Senator Goldwater 1960.jpg|nominee1='''[[Barry Goldwater]]'''|party1=[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]|home_state1=Arizona|running_mate1='''[[Wallace F. Bennett]]'''|electoral_vote1='''274'''|states_carried1=|popular_vote1='''35,628,738'''|percentage1='''50.3%'''|image2=Fulbright-1Lyndon B. Johnson -sized Official White House Portrait (cropped, black and white).jpg|nominee2=[[J.Lyndon WilliamB. FulbrightJohnson]]|party2=[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]|home_state2=ArkansasTexas|running_mate2=[[Russell B. Long]]|electoral_vote2=204|states_carried2=|popular_vote2=26,117,348|percentage2=37.4%|image3=Sid McMath, hat in hand, Hot Springs Arkansas, 1948 (cropped).jpg|nominee3=[[Sid McMath]]|party3=[[Progressive Party (United States)|Progressive]]|home_state3=Arkansas|running_mate3=[[WayneHelen G. MorseDouglas]]|electoral_vote3=66|states_carried3=|popular_vote3=12,820,679|percentage3=10.1%|color3=|map_size=350px|map=|map_caption=|title=President|before_election=[[Happy Chandler]]|before_party=Democratic Party (United States)|after_election=[[Barry Goldwater]]|after_party=Republican Party (United States)|ongoing=}}
 
The '''1960 United States presidential election''' was the 44th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 1960.
 
In an unusual dynamic, the Progressive party nominated Helen G. Douglas for Vice President, who was widely known to have been an ex-partner of Democratic nominee [[Lyndon B. Johnson]]. While Johnson and Douglas refused to discuss the topic in interviews, it is widely believed that the two had an acrimonious split prior to the election over the foreign policy of the Chandler administration.