Stephen Douglas
Abraham Lincoln
Presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln won the state of Michigan during the 1860 presidential election. Lincoln won most of the Midwest and northern states.
No. A presidential candidate has to pay for campaigning, signs, buttons, a way to get around the country, for commercials, campaign trail expenses, and more. Fundraising can probably provide for most of the money, but running for president is not cheap.
Because at the time of the election of 1860 only white males had the right to vote, so it's unnecessary to ask who most whites voted for in 1860. Most southern states voted for the Southern Democratic Party's candidate John Breckenridge, who's VP was Joseph Lane. Two links: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/showelection.php?year=1860 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_1860
Bill Clinton reached out most to younger voters while campaigning for the US presidency.
In the presidential election of 1860 eleven of Southern States supported John Cabell Breckenridge, the former Vice President during Buchanan Administration.
Nixon
The Republican presidential candidate did poorly in the 1856 US presidential elections. John Fremont, the candidate was too radical for most Americans. Also, the party was simply too new to have an impact.
wendell willkie
Robert LaFollette
Ross Perot
Ross Perot