Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is the venue of the convention's general sessions. The 2024 Republican National Convention was an event in which delegates of the United States Republican Party selected the party's nominees for president and vice president in the 2024 United States presidential election. [2]
1972 – RNC Co-Chair Anne Armstrong of Texas; 1976 – U.S. Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee; 1980 – U.S. Representative Guy Vander Jagt of Michigan; 1984 – U.S. Treasurer Katherine Ortega of New Mexico; 1988 – Governor Thomas Kean of New Jersey; 1992 – U.S. Senator Phil Gramm of Texas; 1996 – U.S. Representative Susan Molinari of ...
Included below are all of the major party (Democratic-Republican, Federalist, Democratic, National Republican, Whig, and Republican) presidential tickets in U.S. history, [1] along with the nonpartisan candidacy of George Washington. Also included are independent and third party tickets that won at least ten percent of the popular or electoral ...
The 2024 Republican National Convention is set to begin Monday — meaning Donald Trump, just days after he survived an attempted assassination, will soon officially become the party’s ...
Roosevelt would run on the Progressive Party ticket, splitting the Republicans and thereby handing the election to Democrat Woodrow Wilson. The 1924 Republican National Convention made history by being the first GOP convention to give women equal representation. This was the first time the Republican Convention was held in Cleveland, Ohio.
That $230.9 million estimate is either 23% higher, or 62% higher, than the RNC's 2016 economic impact − depending on which Cleveland study is used for comparison.
About a third of the bus fleet dubbed the GOP Express will come from Wisconsin, according to organizers.
Presidential nominee 1860 (won), 1864 (won) Vice presidential nominee Abraham Lincoln of IL (1809–1865) Prior public experience. Illinois House of Representatives (1834–1842); U.S. House of Representatives (1847–1849)