
Kennedy Nominated for
Presidency
July 13, 1960

John
Fitzgerald Kennedy
In
Los Angeles, California, Senator John F. Kennedy
of Massachusetts is nominated for the presidency
by the Democratic Party Convention, defeating
Senator Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas. The next day,
Johnson was named Kennedy's running mate by a
unanimous vote of the convention.
Four months later, on November 8, Kennedy won
49.7 percent of the popular vote in one of the
closest presidential elections in U.S. history,
surpassing by a fraction the 49.6 percent
received by Vice President Richard M. Nixon, a
Republican.
On January 20, 1961, on the steps of the Capitol
in Washington, D.C., John Fitzgerald Kennedy was
inaugurated as the 35th president of the United
States. A fourth-generation Irish American,
Kennedy was also the nation's first Catholic
president. During his famous inauguration
address, Kennedy, the youngest candidate ever
elected to the presidency, declared that
"the torch has been passed to a new
generation of Americans" and appealed to
Americans to "ask not what your country can
do for you, ask what you can do for your
country."
Kennedy, his wife Jacqueline, and the large
Kennedy clan seemed fitting representatives of
the youthful spirit of America during the early
1960s, and the Kennedy White House was idealized
by admirers as a modern-day "Camelot."
In foreign policy, Kennedy actively fought
communism in the world, ordering the
controversial Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba and
sending thousands of U.S. military
"advisers" to Vietnam. During the Cuban
Missile Crisis, he displayed firmness and
restraint, exercising an unyielding opposition to
the placement of Soviet missiles in Cuba but also
demonstrating a level-headedness during tense
negotiations for their removal. On the domestic
front, he introduced his "New Frontier"
social legislation, calling for a rigorous
federal desegregation policy and a sweeping new
civil rights bill. On November 22, 1963, after
less than three years in office, Kennedy was
assassinated while riding in an open-car
motorcade with his wife in Dallas, Texas.
|