December 3, 2007 - 5:00pm
News

Ok, so there wasn't really anything else to write

In the final days of Eugene McCarthy’s campaign for the 1968 Democratic presidential nomination – when Hubert Humphrey appeared to have the votes to win following the assassination of Robert Kennedy and George McGovern’s last-minute replacement candidacy never took hold – McCarthy released a list of possible cabinet appointments.  He had narrowed his choice for U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development down to two choices: Governor Richard Hughes of New Jersey and Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York.

The move didn’t seem to help: Hughes, a political ally of President Lyndon Johnson, was strongly for Humphrey. And Rockefeller, who had lost his own bid for the presidency, was backing the winner of the GOP nomination, Richard Nixon.

WALLY EDGE can be reached via email at politicsnj@aol.com.

Comments

Wally, If You're Taking Applications....


.....let me me know; I'll be happy to spice up the site. 

I assure you; there's lots and lots to write about.  LOL 

 

From Frederick Douglass

If there is no struggle there is no progress......Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.

12/03/07 7:32 pm

HHH & McCarthy


Humphrey made the fatal mistake of not making a deal with McCarthy to place him on the ticket because he was from Wisconsin and Humphrey from Minnesota which lacked geographical balance.

His choice of Ed Muskie was a poor one and his inability to fill the slot with a southerner or McCarthy cost him the race with Wallace and LeMay running as independents.

12/03/07 8:09 pm

My error.


McCarthy, like Humphrey was from Minnesota, not Wisconsin.

Nevertheless, by law you cannot run two candidates on the same ticket from the same state as we winnessed in 2000 when Bush declared his voting status in Texas while Cheney had to declare residency in Wyoming.

 

 

12/03/07 8:13 pm