Kansas City, Missouri had not hosted a major party convention since the
1928 Republican National Convention that nominated
Herbert Hoover. Its premier venue,
Kemper Arena, was diminutive by national standards but it was new, and the city aggressively courted the convention planners of both parties. The proposed rules change was defeated by a vote of 1180 to 1069, and Ford gained the momentum he needed to win the presidential nomination. The balloting was still close, however, as Ford won with 1187 votes to 1070 votes for Reagan (and one for
Elliot Richardson of Massachusetts). Conservatives succeeded in inserting several key planks into the party platform, some of which were implicitly critical of the President's own policies. Reagan and Senator Jesse Helms successfully had a "moral foreign policy" plank inserted. In light of the 1973
Roe v. Wade decision, the 1976 Republican platform became the first to advocate a
Human Life Amendment to the
Constitution, despite the fact that
Roe v. Wade had been a 7–2 decision, and 5 of the 7 (Burger, Stewart, Brennan, Blackmun, and Powell) had been appointed to the Supreme Court by Republican presidents. ==Balloting==