1968 United States Presidential Election (The Kennedy Legacy)

The 1968 United States presidential election was the 46th quadrennial presidential election, held on November 5, 1968. The Democratic nominee, Robert F. Kennedy, defeated the Republican nominee, Richard Nixon, and the American Independent nominee, George Wallace, in a tightly contested election.

The incumbent president Lyndon B. Johnson initially entered the race for the Democratic Party's nomination, but withdrew following a series of losses to New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy, the younger brother of the late John F. Kennedy. At the Democratic National Convention, Robert F. Kennedy was nominated as the Democratic presidential candidate while Eugene McCarthy was nominated as the Democratic vice presidential candidate. Nixon entered the race for the Republican Party's nominee, defeating Nelson Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan. Former Alabama Governor George Wallace ran with Curtis LeMay as the candidates for the American Independent Party, campaigning mainly on the issue of racial segregation.

The election year was marked by turmoil across the country, marked by events such as the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., the intense riots following the event, and the nationwide protests against the Vietnam War. Robert F. Kennedy ran on an anti-war campaign and pledged his support to continue Johnson's social policies. As a result, Democrat George Wallace, opposed to the civil rights movement, ran on a third-party campaign gaining significant support in the South. Nixon, formerly the vice president under Dwight D. Eisenhower, ran on a campaign of law and order attempting to attract more moderate voters whom he referred to as the "silent majority". Throughout the race, polls showed an extremely tight contest mainly between Kennedy and Nixon. However, following Wallace's campaign collapse and Johnson's suspension of bombing in Vietnam, Kennedy gained a slight lead in polls that held steady into election day.

On election day, Kennedy managed to narrowly win the electoral votes, only 275, and won 43.2% of the popular vote by a 0.3% margin (By 219,600 votes) compared to Nixon's 217 electoral votes and 42.9% of the popular vote. George Wallace managed to win five Southern states, resulting in gaining 46 electoral votes and won 13.5% of the popular vote, the best performance by a third-party candidate since the 1912 presidential election. This election marked the first presidential election since the Voting Rights Act of 1965, allowing many minorities to regain their right to vote.