List of United States Republican Party presidential tickets
This is a list of the candidates for the offices of President of the United States and Vice President of the United States of the Republican Party, either duly preselected and nominated, or the presumptive nominees of a future preselection and election. Opponents who received over one percent of the popular vote or ran an official campaign that received Electoral College votes are listed. Offices held prior to Election Day are included, and those held on Election Day have an italicized end date.
19th century
1856
Presidential nominee |
1856 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
John C. Frémont of CA (1813–1890) |
|
|
William L. Dayton of NJ (1807–1864) |
Opponent(s) James Buchanan (Democratic) Millard Fillmore (Know Nothing) |
|
Opponent(s) John Breckinridge (Democratic) Andrew Jackson Donelson (Know Nothing) |
1860, 1864
Presidential nominee |
1860 (won), 1864 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Abraham Lincoln of IL (1809–1865) |
|
|
Hannibal Hamlin of ME (1809–1891) |
|
Andrew Johnson of TN (1808–1875) | ||
Opponent(s) Stephen Douglas (Democratic) John C. Breckinridge (Southern Democrats) John Bell (Constitutional Union) |
|
Opponent(s) Herschel Johnson (Democratic) Joe Lane (Southern Democrats) Edward Everett (Constitutional Union) | |
Opponent(s) George McClellan (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) George Pendleton (Democratic) |
1868, 1872
Presidential nominee |
1868 (won), 1872 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Ulysses Grant of OH (1822–1885) |
|
|
Schuyler Colfax of IN (1823–1885) |
|
Henry Wilson of MA (1812–1875) | ||
Opponent(s) Horatio Seymour (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Francis Blair (Democratic) | |
Opponent(s) Horace Greeley (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Gratz Brown (Democratic) |
1876
Presidential nominee |
1876 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Rutherford Hayes of OH (1822–1893) |
|
|
William Wheeler of NY (1819–1887) |
Opponent(s) Samuel Tilden (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Thomas Hendricks (Democratic) |
1880
Presidential nominee |
1880 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
James Garfield of OH (1831–1881) |
|
|
Chester Arthur of NY (1829–1886) |
Opponent(s) Winfield Hancock (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) William English (Democratic) |
1884
Presidential nominee |
1884 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
James Blaine of ME (1830–1893) |
|
|
John Logan of IL (1826–1886) |
Opponent(s) Grover Cleveland (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Thomas Hendricks (Democratic) |
1888, 1892
Presidential nominee |
1888 (won), 1892 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Benjamin Harrison of IN (1833–1901) |
|
|
Levi Morton of NY (1824–1920) |
|
Whitelaw Reid of NY (1837–1912) | ||
Opponent(s) Grover Cleveland (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Allen Thurman (Democratic) | |
Opponent(s) Grover Cleveland (Democratic) James Weaver (Populist) |
|
Opponent(s) Adlai Stevenson (Democratic) James Field (Populist) |
1896, 1900
Presidential nominee |
1896 (won), 1900 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
William McKinley of OH (1843–1901) |
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|
Garret Hobart of NJ (1844–1899) |
|
Theodore Roosevelt of NY (1858–1919) | ||
Opponent(s) William Jennings Bryan (Democratic, Populist) |
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Opponent(s) Arthur Sewall (Democratic) Tom Watson (Populist) | |
|
Opponent(s) Adlai Stevenson (Democratic) |
20th century
1904
Presidential nominee |
1904 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Theodore Roosevelt of NY (1858–1919) |
|
|
Charles Fairbanks of IN (1852–1918) |
Opponent(s) Alton Parker (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Henry Davis (Democratic) |
1908, 1912
Presidential nominee |
1908 (won), 1912 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
William Taft of OH (1857–1930) |
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|
Jim Sherman of NY[6] (1855–1912) |
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Nicholas Butler of NY[6] (1862–1947) | ||
Opponent(s) William Jennings Bryan (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) John Kern (Democratic) | |
Opponent(s) Woodrow Wilson (Democratic) Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive) Eugene Debs (Socialist) |
|
Opponent(s) Thomas Marshall (Democratic) Hiram Johnson (Progressive) Emil Seidel (Socialist) |
1916
Presidential nominee |
1916 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Charles Hughes of NY (1862–1948) |
|
|
Charles Fairbanks of IN (1852–1918) |
Opponent(s) Woodrow Wilson (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Thomas Marshall (Democratic) |
1920
Presidential nominee |
1920 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Warren G. Harding of OH (1865–1923) |
|
|
Calvin Coolidge of MA (1872–1933) |
Opponent(s) James Cox (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic) |
1924
Presidential nominee |
1924 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Calvin Coolidge of MA (1872–1933) |
|
|
Charles Dawes of IL (1865–1951) |
Opponent(s) John Davis (Democratic) Bob La Follette (Progressive) |
|
Opponent(s) Charles Bryan (Democratic) Burton Wheeler (Progressive) |
1928, 1932
Presidential nominee |
1928 (won), 1932 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Herbert Hoover of CA (1874–1964) |
|
|
Charles Curtis of KS (1860–1936) |
Opponent(s) Al Smith (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Joe Robinson (Democratic) | |
Opponent(s) Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Jack Garner (Democratic) |
1936
Presidential nominee |
1936 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Alf Landon of KS (1887–1987) |
|
|
Frank Knox of IL (1874–1944) |
Opponent(s) Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Jack Garner (Democratic) |
1940
Presidential nominee |
1940 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Wendell Willkie of NY (1892–1944) |
|
|
Charles McNary of OR (1874–1944) |
Opponent(s) Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Henry Wallace (Democratic) |
1944, 1948
Presidential nominee |
1944 (lost), 1948 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Thomas E. Dewey of NY (1902–1971) |
|
|
John W. Bricker of OH (1893–1986) |
|
Earl Warren of CA (1891–1974) | ||
Opponent(s) Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Harry S. Truman (Democratic) | |
Opponent(s) Harry S. Truman (Democratic) Strom Thurmond (Dixiecrat) Henry Wallace (Progressive) |
|
Opponent(s) Alben Barkley (Democratic) Fielding Wright (Dixiecrat) Glen Taylor (Progressive) |
1952, 1956
Presidential nominee |
1952 (won), 1956 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Dwight D. Eisenhower of NY (1952), PA (1956) (1890–1969) |
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|
Richard Nixon of CA (1913–1994) |
Opponent(s) Adlai Stevenson (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) John Sparkman (Democratic) | |
|
Opponent(s) Estes Kefauver (Democratic) |
1960
Presidential nominee |
1960 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Richard Nixon of CA (1913–1994) |
|
|
Henry Cabot Lodge of MA (1902–1985) |
Opponent(s) John F. Kennedy (Democratic) Harry Byrd (Southern Democrats) |
|
Opponent(s) Lyndon Johnson (Democratic) Strom Thurmond (Southern Democrats) |
1964
Presidential nominee |
1964 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Barry Goldwater of AZ (1909–1998) |
|
|
William Miller of NY (1914–1983) |
Opponent(s) Lyndon Johnson (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Hubert Humphrey (Democratic) |
1968, 1972
Presidential nominee |
1968 (won), 1972 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Richard Nixon of NY (1968), CA (1972) (1913–1994) |
|
|
Spiro Agnew of MD (1918–1996) |
Opponent(s) Hubert Humphrey (Democratic) George Wallace (American Independent) |
|
Opponent(s) Ed Muskie (Democratic) Curtis LeMay (American Independent) | |
Opponent(s) George McGovern (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Sargent Shriver (Democratic) |
1976
Presidential nominee |
1976 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Gerald Ford of MI (1913–2006) |
|
|
Bob Dole of KS (born 1923) |
Opponent(s) Jimmy Carter (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Walter Mondale (Democratic) |
1980, 1984
Presidential nominee |
1980 (won), 1984 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Ronald Reagan of CA (1911–2004) |
|
|
George H. W. Bush of TX (1924–2018) |
Opponent(s) Jimmy Carter (Democratic) John Anderson (Independent) Ed Clark (Libertarian) |
|
Opponent(s) Walter Mondale (Democratic) Patrick Lucey (Independent) David Koch (Libertarian) | |
Opponent(s) Walter Mondale (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Geraldine Ferraro (Democratic) |
1988, 1992
Presidential nominee |
1988 (won), 1992 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
George H. W. Bush of TX (1924–2018) |
|
|
Dan Quayle of IN (born 1947) |
Opponent(s) Michael Dukakis (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic) | |
Opponent(s) Bill Clinton (Democratic) Ross Perot (Independent) |
|
Opponent(s) Al Gore (Democratic) James Stockdale (Independent) |
1996
Presidential nominee |
1996 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Bob Dole of KS (born 1923) |
|
|
Jack Kemp of NY (1935–2009) |
Opponent(s) Bill Clinton (Democratic) Ross Perot (Reform) |
|
Opponent(s) Al Gore (Democratic) Pat Choate (Reform) |
21st century
2000, 2004
Presidential nominee |
2000 (won), 2004 (won) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
George W. Bush of TX (born 1946) |
|
|
Dick Cheney of WY (born 1941) |
Opponent(s) Al Gore (Democratic) Ralph Nader (Green) |
|
Opponent(s) Joe Lieberman (Democratic) Winona LaDuke (Green) | |
Opponent(s) John Kerry (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) John Edwards (Democratic) |
2008
Presidential nominee |
2008 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
John McCain of AZ (1936–2018) |
|
|
Sarah Palin of AK (born 1964) |
Opponent(s) Barack Obama (Democratic) |
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Opponent(s) Joe Biden (Democratic) |
2012
Presidential nominee |
2012 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Mitt Romney of MA (born 1947) |
|
|
Paul Ryan of WI (born 1970) |
Opponent(s) Barack Obama (Democratic) |
|
Opponent(s) Joe Biden (Democratic) |
2016, 2020
Presidential nominee |
2016 (won), 2020 (lost) | Vice Presidential nominee | |
---|---|---|---|
Donald Trump of NY (2016), FL (2020) (born 1946) |
|
|
Mike Pence of IN (born 1959) |
Opponent(s) Hillary Clinton (Democratic) Gary Johnson (Libertarian) Jill Stein (Green) |
|
Opponent(s) Tim Kaine (Democratic) Bill Weld (Libertarian) Ajamu Baraka (Green) | |
Opponent(s) Joe Biden (Democratic) Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian) |
|
Opponent(s) Kamala Harris (Democratic) Spike Cohen (Libertarian) |
See also
- List of Republican National Conventions
- History of the United States Republican Party
- List of United States National Republican/Whig Party presidential tickets
- List of United States Democratic Party presidential tickets
- List of United States Green Party presidential tickets
- List of United States Libertarian Party presidential tickets
Notes
- If not for am unpledged elector and 17 invalidated electors from Union-occupied Louisiana and Texas, Lincoln and Johnson would have won 213 (91.0%) or 230 (91.6%) votes.
- If not for the 17 invalidated electors from Union-occupied Louisiana and Texas, McClellan and Pendleton would have won 8.4% of votes.
- If not for the 14 invalidated electors from voting irregularities in Arkansas and Louisiana, Grant and Wilson would have won 300 (82.0%) votes.
- Greeley died after the election but before the Electoral College convened, and was not replaced for the vote. The ticket's intended delegates were scattered.
- If not for the 14 invalidated electors for Grant and Wilson from voting irregularities in Arkansas and Louisiana, Greeley and Brown's 66 votes would have been 18.0%.
- Sherman died before the 1912 election and Butler was declared the running mate after the election to receive his Electoral College votes.
- If not for a faithless elector, Eisenhower and Nixon would have won 458 (86.3%) in 1956.
- If not for a faithless elector, Nixon and Agnew would have won 521 (96.8%) Electoral College votes.
- If not for a faithless elector, Ford would have won 241 (44.8%) votes.
- A faithless elector swapped their votes for President and Vice President in the Electoral College, otherwise the Dukakis/Bentsen ticket would have won 112 (20.8%) votes.
- A faithless elector voted Edwards for President and Vice President in the Electoral College, otherwise Kerry would have won 252 (46.8%) votes.
- If not for faithless electors, Trump and Pence would have won 306 (56.9%) Electoral College votes each, while Clinton and Kaine would have won 232 (43.1%) votes.
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