Theodore Roosevelt was the Republican Party candidate in 1904 and the Progressive Party candidate in 1912. That was the last time the candidate of a party other than the Republican Party or the Democratic Party came in 2nd in a U. S. Presidential election.
no
Hawaii is a Democratic State with a Republican Governor. It supported the Democratic candidate for President in 10 of the last twelve Presidential elections and in 2008, President Obama won 71.85% of the Hawaiian vote.
jackson was the first candidate for his Democratic Party. Its last candidate was James Buchanan in 1856. It split over slavery. After a civil war, a new opposition party was formed to counter the Republicans and it took the name Democratic Party, but it had few ties with Jackson's Democratic Party.
Former President Theodore Roosevelt created the Progressive Party (nicknamed the "Bull Moose Party") after he failed to receive the Republic nomination in the 1912 presidential election. Theodore Roosevelt received 88 electoral votes and 4,119,207 (27%) of the popular votes.
Thomas Dewey is the last one I can think of. He had a mustache.
1968
As of my last knowledge update in October 2023, I cannot provide information about events or candidates beyond that date, including the Democratic presidential candidate in 2094. For the most accurate and current information, I recommend checking reliable news sources or official announcements.
In the last US Presidential election, the Democratic Party won in Colorado.
The election of 1912 saw incumbent Republican William H. Taft running for reelection against Democrat Woodrow Wilson and 3rd party candidate Theodore Roosevelt. Taft and Roosevelt combined had more popular votes than Wilson, but Wilson had the most popular votes of any individual candidate.1912 was the last U.S. Presidential election to date in which the candidate representing a party other than the Republican Party or the Democratic Party finished in 2nd place.1912 U. S. Presidential / Vice Presidential Election Results435 votes - T. Woodrow Wilson / Thomas R. Marshall (Democratic Party)88 votes - Theodore Roosevelt / Hiram W. Johnson (Progressive Party)8 votes - William Howard Taft / Nicholas M. Butler (Republican Party)
In the 12 U. S. Presidential Elections of the past 50 years, Kentucky voted for the Democratic candidate four times: 1964 - Lyndon Johnson 1976 - Jimmy Carter 1992 - Bill Clinton 1996 - Bill Clinton
Arizona last voted for a Democratic presidential candidate in the 1996 election when Bill Clinton was re-elected. Since then, the state has leaned Republican in subsequent elections until Joe Biden won Arizona in 2020, marking a significant political shift.