No.
Richard M. Nixon was the first to do this. He did it in 1960 while he was campaigning and did it again after he was President.
First mentioned in the memoirs of Gerald Ford "A Time To Heal: The Autobiography of Gerald Ford" and again in both "Frost/Nixon" by Peter Morgan and "Kisinger: A Biography" by Walter Issacson, Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger knelt down in prayer on the night before Nixon resigned.
Richard Nixon lost in 1960 but won in 1968 and again in 1972.
John F. Kennedy defeated Richard M. Nixon in the presidential election of 1960. Ran ran again in 1968 and won.
He took oath in January 20, 1969 and again on January 20,1973.
Yes. Richard M. Nixon originally ran for President in 1960 after serving two terms as Dwight D. Eisenhower's Vice-President, but lost to John F. Kennedy. Nixon ran again and won in 1968.
John Kennedy ran against Richard Nixon in 1960. Kennedy won but Nixon ran again in 1968 and won.
Richard Nixon was elected with Spiro Agnew as his running mate in 1968 and again in 1972. On October 10, 1973 he resigned as Vice-President in a scandal about bribery. Gerald Ford was appointed Vice-President - a role he filled until RIchard Nixon also resigned on August 9th, 1974. Ford was then appointed President.
The sitting vice president, Spiro T. Agnew, was once again Nixon's running mate in 1972. They won the election, but Agnew served only until October 1973, when he agreed to resign when facing criminal charges.
Yes, Senator John McCain can run again. Richard Nixon did that, losing to Senator John F. Kennedy in 1960 but winning against Vice President Hubert Humphrey in 1968. He then ran for re-election in 1972
Vice-president Gerald Ford became President because President Nixon resigned his office. Vice-Presidents Thomas Jefferson and Martin Van Buren ran for President and were elected, Vice-president Richard Nixon ran for president and lost, but 8 years later ran again and was elected.
Incumbent Vice Presidents who lost their presidential elections were...John C. Breckinridge (1860)Richard M. Nixon (1960)Hubert H. Humphrey (1968)Al Gore (2000)(Although Nixon lost the 1960 election, he ran again and won eight years later.... His opponent was the incumbent Vice President.)