On July 14, 1975, McCormack filed with the Federal Election Commission to run in the
1976 presidential primary, and formally announced her candidacy at a news conference in Boston, Massachusetts, on November 16. She was the first woman to receive federal
matching funds (she received $244,125), and appeared on the ballot in twenty states. She ran on an exclusively
anti-abortion platform, and won no primaries, but had her name placed into nomination and seconded by
Erma Clardy Craven and received 22 votes from delegates at the
1976 Democratic National Convention, and engaged in a debate that also included future President
Jimmy Carter. During the
1980 presidential election, she ran as the presidential nominee of the
New York State Right to Life Party, with Carroll Driscoll as her running mate. They received 32,327 votes. She had been a chairwoman of the
New York Right to Life Party, and was their candidate for
Lieutenant Governor of New York in
1978. ==Later life==