he was a Catholic and the people were afraid he would choose church over the states.
Kennedy was always a Democrat. Both sides of his family sent Democratic elected officials. He was a Democratic United States Congressman, Senator, and President.
Senator Ted Kennedy challenged President Carter for the Democratic nomination in the 1980 primaries. Despite a spirited campaign, Kennedy ultimately lost to Carter, who went on to be the Democratic candidate in the general election, where he lost to Republican candidate Ronald Reagan.
Yes, President Kennedy appointed his younger brother, Robert F. Kennedy, to serve as the Attorney General of the United States in 1961. This decision was controversial, as critics accused Kennedy of nepotism.
In 1959, no one ran for President as it was an off-year for presidential elections in the United States. The next presidential election was held in 1960, when Richard Nixon ran as the Republican candidate and John F. Kennedy ran as the Democratic candidate.
Kennedy tried to become President only once, when he narrowly defeated Richard Nixon in 1960. He was nominated to be the Democratic Vice Presidential candidate in 1956 but came in second. His brother, Robert F. Kennedy, was running for President in 1968, but he was assassinated in June of that year.
The outcome of the 1796 presidential election was controversial because it resulted in the first contested election in American history. The Federalist candidate John Adams narrowly defeated the Democratic-Republican candidate Thomas Jefferson, but Adams's vice president was Jefferson's political rival, Thomas Pinckney. This created tension and a sense of political instability, as the president and vice president were from opposing parties.
John F. Kennedy was elected President on Tuesday, November 8th, 1960 over the Republican candidate Richard M. Nixon.He was sworn in as the 44th American president on Friday, January 20th 1961.John F. Kennedy was President from 1961 to 1963.
Robert Kennedy was never a candidate. He was assassinated during the primaries. Hubert Humphrey wound up with the Democratic nomination that year (1968) and was defeated by Richard Nixon.
I believe that John F. Kennedy was the youngest. At age 44 he became the 35th President of the United States. According to http://www.whitehouse.gov/history/presidents/tr26.html - With the assassination of President McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, not quite 43, became the youngest President in the Nation's history. (26th president), but JFK was the youngest elected (candidate). As far as the American presidency is concerned, the youngest candidate was 36-year-old Democrat William Jennings Bryan (b. March 12, 1860), who ran for president against Republican William McKinley in 1896. - Matt Penn
Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated on June 5th, 1968. He was the U.S. Senator from New York, a presidential candidate, and brother of President John F. Kennedy.
Yes, John F. Kennedy was the only Catholic. At that time, Kennedy was a controversial candidate because he was a Roman Catholic. Religious prejudice, or dislike of a person based solely upon his or her religion, probably cost him over a million votes in Illinois alone. Kennedy responded to the issue of religion in his "Houston speech" on September 11, 1960. He believed in the absolute separation of church and state (the belief that one body-church or government-would have no influence over the other). To him, this meant that no priest could tell a president what to do and no Protestant clergyman could tell his parishioners how to vote. In other words, Kennedy's religion would not affect the decisions he made as president.
Robert Kennedy seemed to have almost a lock on the Democratic nomination in 1968 when he was killed.