Polling aggregation The following graph depicts the standing of each candidate in the poll aggregators from February 1972 to Election Day.
Polling Campaign McGovern ran on a platform of immediately ending the Vietnam War and instituting a
guaranteed minimum income for the nation's poor. His campaign was harmed by his views during the primaries, which alienated many powerful Democrats, the perception that his foreign policy was too extreme, and the Eagleton debacle. As a result of these factors, McGovern's campaign was weakened, with the Republicans portraying McGovern as a radical left-wing extremist, and Nixon
led in the polls by large margins throughout the entire campaign. With an enormous fundraising advantage and a comfortable lead in the polls, Nixon concentrated on large rallies and focused speeches to closed and select audiences, leaving much of the retail campaigning to surrogates like Vice President Agnew. Nixon did not try by design to extend his coattails to Republican congressional or gubernatorial candidates, preferring to pad his own margin of victory.
Results This presidential election was the first since 1808 in which New York did not have the largest number of electors in the Electoral College, having fallen to 41 electors versus California's 45. Nixon's percentage of the popular vote was only marginally less than
Lyndon B. Johnson's record in 1964, and his margin of victory was slightly larger. Nixon won a majority vote in 49 states, including McGovern's home state of
South Dakota. Only
Massachusetts and the
District of Columbia voted for the challenger, resulting in an even more lopsided
Electoral College tally. McGovern garnered only 37.5 percent of the national popular vote, the lowest share received by a Democratic Party nominee since
John W. Davis won only 28.8 percent of the vote in 1924. The only major party candidate since 1972 to receive less than 40 percent of the vote was Republican incumbent President
George H. W. Bush who won 37.4 percent of the vote in 1992, an election that, as in 1924, was affected by a strong third-party vote. Nixon received the highest share of the popular vote for a Republican in history. Although the McGovern campaign believed that its man had a better chance of defeating Nixon because of the new
Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution that lowered the national voting age to 18 from 21, most of the youth vote went to Nixon. This was the first election in American history in which a
Republican candidate carried every single Southern state, continuing the region's transformation from a
Democratic bastion (
Solid South) into a Republican stronghold as President Nixon became the first Republican presidential candidate in a century to carry Arkansas. By this time, all the Southern states, except Arkansas and Texas, had been carried by a Republican in either the previous election or that of 1964, although Republican candidates carried Texas in 1928, 1952, and 1956. As a result of this election, Massachusetts became the only state that Nixon did not carry in any of the three presidential elections in which he was a candidate. Nixon became the first Republican to ever win two terms in the White House without carrying Massachusetts at least once, a feat later duplicated by
George W. Bush and
Donald Trump. Additionally, this remains the last one in which the Republican candidate carried Minnesota. McGovern won a mere 130 counties, plus the District of Columbia and four county-equivalents in Alaska, easily the fewest counties won by any major-party presidential nominee since the advent of popular presidential elections, surpassing the previous lowest figures that had been recorded by Republicans
William Howard Taft in
1912, and
Herbert Hoover in
1932 in failed bids for re-election as president (Taft's total of 232 counties was the lowest recorded overall by a major-party candidate, and Hoover's 374 was the lowest earned by a candidate who finished in second place). In nineteen states, McGovern failed to carry a single county; he carried a mere one county-equivalent in a further nine states. In contrast to
Walter Mondale's narrow 1984 win in Minnesota, McGovern comfortably won Massachusetts but lost every other state by at least five percentage points, as well as 45 states by more than ten percentage points (all but Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Rhode Island,
Wisconsin, and his home state of South Dakota). This also made Nixon the second former vice president in American history, after
Thomas Jefferson (in 1800 and 1804), and the only two-term Vice President to be elected President twice. Since McGovern carried only one state, bumper stickers reading "Nixon49 America1", "Don't Blame Me, I'm From Massachusetts", and "Massachusetts: The One And Only" were popular for a short time in Massachusetts. Nixon managed to win 18% of the African American vote (
Gerald Ford would get 16% in 1976). The
Wallace vote had been crucial to Nixon being able to sweep the states that had narrowly held out against him in 1968 (Maryland, Texas, and West Virginia), as well as the states Wallace won himself (Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, and Mississippi). The pro-Wallace group of voters had given AIP nominee John Schmitz a mere 2.4% of its support, while 19.1% backed McGovern, and the majority 78.5% broke for Nixon. Nixon, who became
term-limited under the provisions of the
Twenty-second Amendment as a result of his victory, became the first presidential candidate to win a significant number of electoral votes in three presidential elections since the ratification of that Amendment; only Trump has done the same. As of 2024, Nixon was the seventh of eight presidential nominees to win a significant number of electoral votes in at least three elections, the others being Jefferson,
Andrew Jackson,
Henry Clay,
Grover Cleveland,
William Jennings Bryan,
Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Trump. The 520 electoral votes received by Nixon, added to the 301 electoral votes he received in 1968 and the 219 electoral votes he received in 1960, gave him 1,040 electoral votes, the second most received by any presidential candidate (after Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1,876 total electoral votes). received one faithless electoral vote from Virginia. Image:1972 United States presidential election results map by county.svg|Results by county, shaded according to winning candidate's percentage of the vote
Results by state For the first time since 1828, Maine allowed its electoral votes to be split between candidates. Two electoral votes were awarded to the winner of the statewide race and one electoral vote to the winner of each congressional district. This was the first time the Congressional District Method had been used since Michigan used it in 1892. Nixon won all four votes.
States that flipped from Democratic to Republican •
Connecticut •
Hawaii •
Maine •
Maryland •
Michigan •
Minnesota •
New York •
Pennsylvania •
Rhode Island •
Texas •
Washington •
West Virginia States that flipped from American Independent to Republican •
Georgia •
Louisiana •
Alabama •
Mississippi •
Arkansas Close states States where margin of victory was more than 5 percentage points, but less than 15 percentage points (115 electoral votes): •
Minnesota, 5.51% (95,923 votes) •
Rhode Island, 6.19% (25,738 votes) •
South Dakota, 8.63% (26,531 votes) •
Massachusetts, 8.97% (220,462 votes) •
Wisconsin, 9.67% (179,256 votes) •
Oregon, 10.12% (93,926 votes) •
California, 13.46% (1,126,249 votes) •
Michigan, 14.39% (502,286 votes) Tipping point states: •
Ohio, 21.56% (882,938 votes) (tipping point for a Nixon victory) •
Maine-1, 22.85% (50,360 votes) (tipping point for a McGovern victory)
Statistics Counties with highest percentage of the vote (Republican) •
Dade County, Georgia 93.45% •
Glascock County, Georgia 93.38% •
George County, Mississippi 92.90% •
Holmes County, Florida 92.51% •
Smith County, Mississippi 92.35% Counties with highest percentage of the vote (Democratic) •
Duval County, Texas 85.68% •
Washington, D. C. 78.10% •
Shannon County, South Dakota 77.34% •
Greene County, Alabama 68.32% •
Charles City County, Virginia 67.84% Counties with highest percentage of the vote (Other) •
Jefferson County, Idaho 27.51% •
Lemhi County, Idaho 19.77% •
Fremont County, Idaho 19.32% •
Bonneville County, Idaho 18.97% •
Madison County, Idaho 17.04% == Voter demographics ==