Nixon
Ross Perot
In 1959, no one ran for President as it was an off-year for presidential elections in the United States. The next presidential election was held in 1960, when Richard Nixon ran as the Republican candidate and John F. Kennedy ran as the Democratic candidate.
the 1796 presidential election:
The person who ran for a major-party presidential nomination more than anyone else was Harold Stassen, who sought the Republican Party nomination twelve times from 1944 to 2000.Lyndon LaRouche was a candidate in eight U.S. presidential elections from 1976 to 2004.Five people have received at least one electoral vote in four different U.S. presidential elections: John Adams, George Clinton, Thomas Jefferson, Charles C. Pinckney and Franklin D. Roosevelt.Franklin D. Roosevelt won four U.S. presidential elections.
William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska was the Democratic Party U. S. Presidential candidate in the elections of 1896, 1900 and 1908.
George Wallace
Eugene V. Debs was the candidate in the presidential election of 1912 who ran mostly to widen the audience for Socialist ideas.
There was no presidential election in 1999
Abraham Lincoln ran for president with Andrew Johnson as the Vice Presidential candidate. This would be Lincoln's second term as president, having chosen a new vice-presidential candidate.
No, he ran for U.S. President in 1860 as the Democratic Party's southern candidate.
Teddy Roosevelt's election to the Presidency
George washington