Franklin Delano Roosevelt ran against Hoover in 1932 and won rather handily.
Hoover ran against Al Smith in 1928 and won . He ran against Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 and lost.
Al Smith in '28 (won) and FDR in '32 (lost)
Franklin D. Roosevelt won his first of four Presidential elections in 1932, beating incumbent President Herbert Hoover 472-59.
No, Herbert Hoover ran for President in 1928 and 1932. Ronald Reagan ran in 1980 and 1984.
Alfred E. Smith from New York ran against Hoover in 1928 and lost.
Democrat Al Smith from New York.
No- in 1928, Hoover won the presidency against Al Smith. FDR did not run until 1932.
Albert E. Smith of New York was the first Catholic to run for president. He ran against Hoover in 1928.
Herbert Hoover
Herbert Hoover
Herbert Hoover only served one term as the President of the United States.
Run Girl Run - 1928 was released on: USA: 15 January 1928
Herbert Hoover did not run for president in 1924. It was Calvin Coolidge who ran and won for the Republican party that year against Democrat John Davis and Progressive Robert La Follette.
he ran against Herbert Hoover (first) then Alfred Landon (second) last Wendell Willkie(third) he ran against Herbert Hoover (first) then Alfred Landon (second) last Wendell Willkie(third)
A Cross Country Run - 1928 was released on: USA: 19 August 1928
No- he was still popular enough to be re-elected in 1928, as witnessed by the fact that Hoover won for the Republicans. Coolidge chose not to run again, likely because his poor health sapped his energy.
Herbert Hoover ran against Franklin D. Roosevelt in the presidential election that took place in November of 1932. Hoover was the incumbent President and Roosevelt was the Governor of New York. Roosevelt, the Democratic candidate, won the election.
Herbert Hoover was elected President of the United States as a member of the Republican Party in the 1928 Presidential Election.Before his run for election in 1928, he had previously been offered the democratic ballot in at least one earlier election and refused.Furthermore, his career before the great Depression marked him as a "progressive" and a "reformer" among conservatives. This left his political affiliation "suspect" in the eyes of some in both parties, however, he was elected as a Republican.