
July
12, 1984

Geraldine
Ferraro
Ferraro
named vice presidential candidate
Walter Mondale, the
leading Democratic presidential candidate,
announces that he has chosen Representative
Geraldine Ferraro of New York as his running
mate. Ferraro, a daughter of Italian immigrants,
had previously gained notoriety as a vocal
advocate of women's rights in Congress.
Four days after
Ferraro was named vice presidential candidate,
Governor Mario Cuomo of New York opened the
Democratic National Convention in San Francisco
with an impassioned retort to Republican
President Ronald Reagan's contention that the
United States was a "shining city on a
hill." Citing widespread poverty and racial
strife, Cuomo derided President Reagan as
oblivious to the needs and problems of many of
America's citizens. His enthusiastic keynote
address inaugurated a convention that saw Ferraro
become the first woman nominated by a major party
for the vice presidency. However, Mondale, the
former U.S. vice president under Jimmy Carter,
proved a lackluster choice for the Democratic
presidential nominee.
On November 6,
President Reagan and Vice President George Bush
defeated the Mondale-Ferraro ticket in the
greatest Republican landslide in U.S. history.
The Republicans carried every state but
Minnesota--Mondale's home state.
Ferraro left
Congress in 1985. In 1992 and 1998, she made
unsuccessful bids for a U.S. Senate seat. During
President Bill Clinton's administration, she was
a permanent member on the United Nations
Commission on Human Rights.
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