Theoretically all of them.
The nominee for president was from Arizona and and the VP candidate was from Alaska.
Andrew was a Democrat before and after he ran for Vice-president with Lincoln as a Republican in 1864.
Joe Biden is on the Democratic Ticket, and Paul Ryan is on the Republican ticket. Read a newspaper for a change.
Sarah Palin, former governor of Alaska, in 2008 became the first woman to be the Republican nominee for vice-president .
Geraldine Ferraro on the democratic ticket in 1984, and Sarah Palin on the republican ticket in 2008.
james bond
The Republican Party's nominee for president in 1948 was Thomas E. Dewey, who also had been the party's nominee in the previous election in 1944. He lost both elections to incumbent President Harry S. Truman, who was a Democrat.
Depends. Some say it is Thomas Jefferson as part of the Democratic-Republicans. Otherwise it would be Lincoln who ran under the "Republican" ticket to be acknowledged as a Republican president. If you mean the first Republican that has the same political ideology as the current Republicans, then that would be Nixon.
Yes. In fact there have been several people in the senate/house who have been members and in the 1920's a Grand Dragon ran as president on a Republican ticket.
The Republican Party was formed in 1854 and ran its first presidential ticket in 1856. John C. Fremont ran for President and William L. Dayton ran for Vice President.
When he ran for President, Theodore Roosevelt was the nominee of the Republican Party in 1904 and the Progressive Party in 1912. 1912 was the last time to date that the Republican Party Presidential Nominee finished third.
He retired after delivering a speech to Congress. He hoped to run for President on the Republican ticket, but Eisenhower got the nomination.