Adlai Stevenson lost two tims to Eisenhower - in 1952 and again in 1956.
The first Republican Party Presidential Nominee was John C. Frémont of California, who lost to Democrat James Buchanan in 1856.
The Democratic Party candidate for the 1904 presidential election was Alton B. Parker. Parker lost to the incumbent Republican candidate, Teddy Roosevelt.
NO- Fremont ran for President as a Republican in 1856, but lost to Buchanan.
John C. Frémont (R-CA) was the first Republican U.S. presidential candidate, but he lost to James Buchanan (D-PA). The first Republican to win a U.S. presidential election was Abraham Lincoln (R-IL) in 1860.
The Republican candidate for president in 1920 was Warren G. Harding. Harding won that election by defeating Democrat James M. Cox. President Harding served as the 29th President from 1921 until his death on August 2, 1923.
Democratic Party candidate Harry Truman won the 1948 presidential election defeating Republican Party candidate Thomas Dewey.
John McCain won the Republican primaries to become Republican candidate for US president in 2008. However, he lost the presidential election to Barack Obama.
James G. Blaine. Senator from Maine, was the Republican nominee for president in 1884, but lost to Cleveland. Edmund Muskie, vice-presidential candidate in 1968, was the front-runner for the Democratic nomination in 1972 but lost the nomination.
No, the Republican Party's nomination for the 1856 US presidential election was California's John C. Fremont. Fremont, as well as the Know-Nothing Party's Millard Fillmore, lost against the Democratic Party's candidate, James Buchanan.
Yes. He was a republican in his first term and he was a democratic in his second term. ========================================================= Eisenhower was the Republican Party's candidate in both 1952 and 1956. Republican Richard Nixon was his Vice-Presidential candidate. Democrat Adlai Stevenson lost to Eisenhower in both elections.
He was a candidate in 1948 as a conservative Republican from Ohio. He came from a political family that were isolationist and conservative. He ran against the liberal Republican, Thomas Dewey, governor of New York. He lost to Dewey easily. He ran again in 1952 against Dwight Eisenhower and lost again.
William Jennings Bryan