Watch 70 years of Republican and Democratic convention speeches

Here’s a look at the full nominating speeches from Ronald Reagan, George Bush, Barack Obama and others.

The first televised network broadcast of a political convention dates back to 1952.

Political party conventions, before the advent of television, used to be the deciding factors in who Republicans and Democrats would nominate to run for president. Now, the candidates are almost always decided before the week-long events take place.

Americans are used to watching over-the-top displays touting the party’s platform and a ballon-and-confetti-filled spectacle of nominating the party’s preferences for president and vice president, the 2020 conventions look quite different. The conventions were largely canceled for both parties due to the coronavirus pandemic, and they opted to be held virtually instead with live and pre-taped speeches and performances.

The first televised network broadcast of a political convention was in 1952, so here’s a look at the last 70 years of conventions with full nominating speeches from candidates including Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama.

2016 - DONALD TRUMP vs. HILLARY CLINTON

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton became the first woman to be nominated on a major party ticket for president competing alongside political outsider and businessman Donald Trump, who had never seriously run for office before. Clinton, sought to become the first female president and she touted her nearly 40-year experience in politics, while Trump brandished his credentials as a master dealmaker vowing to restore law and order on American streets. Trump used his coined nickname for Clinton: “Crooked Hillary,” as the former first lady was embroiled in a campaign scandal surrounding her private email server while she served as secretary of state. Meanwhile, some DNC delegates supporting her primary opponent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders booed her as she spoke on stage.

2012 - BARACK OBAMA vs. MITT ROMNEY

Mitt Romney, the former Republican Massachusetts governor, and now a senator from Utah, was taking on a one-term incumbent in Obama. He chose Paul Ryan as his running mate and the pair took the stage in Tampa, Fla. amid the looming threat of Hurricane Isaac, leading convention officials to change the schedule briefly. The RNC featured a moment possibly more memorable than Romney’s acceptance speech himself when the actor Clint Eastwood improvised and spoke to an empty chair on stage with him that acted as Obama in absentia. At the DNC, Obama and Vice President Joe Biden appeared together in Charlotte, N.C.

2008 - BARACK OBAMA vs. JOHN MCCAIN   

Obama became the first African-American nominee of a major party when he accepted the nomination alongside his running mate Joe Biden. After a bruising primary battle against then-New York Sen. Hillary Clinton, she called for Obama to be selected by acclamation in a show of party unity on the convention floor. McCain at the RNC in St. Paul Minnesota appeared with his running mate, then Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who gave a rousing speech describing herself as a “hockey mom,” and described the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull was “lipstick," appealing to everyday Americans.

2004 - GEORGE W. BUSH vs. JOHN KERRY  

Amidst the backdrop of the first year of the war in Iraq, Vietnam veteran John Kerry highlighted his military service, criticizing his incumbent opponent’s handling of the "War on Terror." Choosing North Carolina Senator John Edwards as his running mate, the ticket adopted the mantra: “Help is on the way!” But maybe even more attention-grabbing was the young, newly-elected senator from Illinois who gave the keynote address, marking his first-ever convention appearance -- Barack Obama. At the RNC, events took place in New York City weeks before the three-year anniversary of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, where George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney accepted the nomination for their party.

2000 - GEORGE W. BUSH vs. AL GORE

Then Vice President Al Gore with his running mate, Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, took the stage in Los Angeles. Other than the speeches, the most memorable moment was Gore’s long, drawn-out smooch on the lips and subsequent bear hug with his then-wife, Tipper Gore. At the RNC, George W. Bush was seeking the Republican nomination for president, like his father eight years prior. Bush, who was governor of Texas at the time, fought off a strong primary challenger in John McCain to win the nomination. Bush picked his father’s former Secretary of Defense, Dick Cheney as his vice-presidential running mate.

1996- BILL CLINTON vs. BOB DOLE


War hero and Kansas senator, Bob Dole, chose former New York Rep. Jack Kemp as his running mate heading to San Diego to accept the Republican Party’s nomination. After a bitter primary with Pat Buchanan, who refused to endorse Dole in San Diego, Dole tried to unite the party with several moderate Republicans who were given speaking slots. Then-Rep. Susan Molinari spoke at the event, but this year she took the Democrats’ lead and endorsed nominee Joe Biden in a display of relinquishing support of President Donald Trump. At the DNC, incumbent Bill Clinton joined with his Vice President Al Gore in Chicago, the first convention held there since the 1968 riots at the DNC. In a fun, lighthearted moment, the song Macarena played on the loudspeakers to party supporters and First Lady Hillary Clinton danced along to the new pop song sensation at the time.

1992 - GEORGE H.W. BUSH vs. BILL CLINTON 


Incumbent president George H.W. Bush and his running mate Vice President Dan Quayle were trying to head off a Democratic powerhouse in presidential newcomer Bill Clinton and his running mate then-Sen. Al Gore, from Tennessee. Both tickets had to contend with an independent candidate in Ross Perot, much to the later detriment of Bush’s chances of re-election. He lost to Clinton in 1992, according to historians, because Perot siphoned off a large percentage of Bush’s coalition. The economy was in recession at the time and at the Republican convention in Houston, critics say many leading conservatives praised the outgoing Reagan and Bush’s international bona fides, while not giving equal attention to the domestic crises at home.

1988 - GEORGE H.W. BUSH vs MICHAEL DUKAKIS  

At the Democratic convention in Atlanta, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis and his running mate Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen accepted the party’s nomination. The keynote speech was delivered by Texas Gov. Ann Richards, who famously said George H.W. Bush was born “with a silver foot in his mouth.” Dukakis also had to ward off a primary challenge by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who was vying to be the party’s first African American presidential nominee. At the Republican convention, Bush and then-Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle, accepted the nomination in New Orleans. Famously, Bush gave his “thousand points of light” speech in which he told the audience “Read my lips: no new taxes,” a campaign promise Bush would later break, once elected.

1984 - RONALD REAGAN vs. WALTER MONDALE

At the Democratic convention in San Francisco, former Vice President Walter Mondale made a historic first, picking the first female running mate on any major party ticket, then-New York Rep. Geraldine Ferraro. Giving the highly coveted keynote speech was New York Gov. Mario Cuomo. Mondale beat Colorado Sen. Gary Hart in the primary to clinch the nomination. The Republican convention that year was held in Dallas with Reagan and Bush accepting the nomination. The convention had a final address from former Republican nominee Barry Goldwater, who had 20 years earlier, accepted the nomination for president, ushering in a new era for the Republican party. Reagan was the presumptive heir to Goldwater’s legacy, according to historians. The singer Lee Greenwood also sang his patriotic hit, "God Bless the USA," which had been released the previous year.

1980 - RONALD REAGAN vs. JIMMY CARTER

The Republican convention was held in Detroit where Gov. Ronald Reagan, of California, and then Texas Rep. George H.W. Bush accepted the party’s nomination. Bush and Reagan competed for the top prize in the primary race. Reagan picked Bush as his running mate as he took the podium to give his convention acceptance speech, a rarity at the time, but it quelled rumors it could be former President Gerald Ford. At the Democratic convention, incumbent Jimmy Carter and his Vice President Walter Mondale accepted the nomination in New York City. Carter faced a challenge to the nomination however in Sen. Ted Kennedy who was vying for the top spot. Kennedy gave a famous speech from the podium declaring: “For me, a few hours ago, this campaign came to an end. For all those whose cares have been our concern, the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives, and the dream shall never die." Kennedy was unsuccessful in trying to wrest delegates away from Carter.

1976 - JIMMY CARTER vs. GERALD FORD

The RNC was held in Kansas City, Missouri that year. President Ford was nominated but only after a strong challenge from rising Republican star Ronald Reagan, who was the former governor of California. Ford had shepherded the country post-Watergate and picked Sen. Bob Dole to be his running mate. Ford, being a gracious winner, invited Reagan up on the dais with him to deliver remarks of his own after conceding, but historians say Reagan’s concession speech in ‘76 overshadowed Ford’s own acceptance speech, leaving some delegates to second-guess their decision. At the DNC, Carter and his running mate Minnesota Sen. Walter Mondale accepted the nomination in New York City. Other speakers at the convention included astronaut John Glenn and Barbara Jordan, the first southern Black woman to be elected to Congress.

1972 - RICHARD NIXON vs. GEORGE MCGOVERN

At the DNC, South Dakota Sen. George McGovern accepted the nomination in Miami Beach, Florida, but scandal dominated when he nominated his running mate, Missouri Sen. Thomas Eagleton. McGovern dropped Eagleton from the ticket after it was revealed he had undergone electroshock treatment to handle his clinical depression, a taboo at the time, replacing him with Kennedy family member Sargent Shriver. The vice-presidential nominating process was so long and protracted that McGovern did not give his acceptance speech until almost three o’clock in the morning. At the tail-end of the Vietnam War, McGovern boasted of an explicit anti-war message, telling delegates, “Within 90 days of my inauguration, every American soldier and every American prisoner [in Vietnam] will be … back home in America where they belong." The RNC was also held in Miami that year where incumbents President Richard Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew accepted the renomination of their party. It was the fifth time Nixon had been nominated at a convention, previously twice for vice president and twice for president. Nixon/Agnew went on to deliver one of the biggest political defeats to McGovern/Shriver in American history, beating the Democratic ticket in a landslide. Nixon carried 49 states. 

1968 - RICHARD NIXON vs. HUBERT HUMPHREY

In the throes of the Vietnam War, the DNC in Chicago became a tinderbox for social and political unrest at the time, with harrowing images of police beating protesters, tear gas billowing into the air. President Lyndon Johnson had said he wasn’t seeking reelection and the Democrats nominated vice president Hubert Humphrey. He chose as his running mate Maine Sen. Edmund Muskie. The Democratic primary that year was both tragic and tough. Robert Kennedy was assassinated in June and Humphrey had to fend off a challenge from Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy. The RNC was held in Miami, Florida where Richard Nixon and then-Maryland Gov. Spiro Agnew accepted the nomination. Nixon fended off a challenge from New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller for the top spot. Nixon delivered a stirring message about the current state of affairs saying, “When the strongest nation in the world can be tied down for four years in Vietnam with no end in sight, when the richest nation in the world can't manage its own economy, when the nation with the greatest tradition of the rule of law is plagued by unprecedented racial violence, when the President of the United States cannot travel abroad or to any major city at home, then it's time for new leadership for the United States of America.”

1964 - LYNDON JOHNSON vs BARRY GOLDWATER

Johnson and his running mate Vice President Hubert Humphrey accepted the nomination in Atlantic City, New Jersey. It was the first time Johnson had led the ticket, having assumed the role of the presidency after the assassination of President Kennedy. The convention was an ode to Kennedy, where his brother Robert memorialized him in a famous speech, quoting Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, describing the legacy of his brother saying, “When he shall die, take him and cut him out into the stars, and he shall make the face of heaven so fine that all the world will be in love with night and pay no worship to the garish sun." But a new revolution was starting with the Republicans in Goldwater. The Arizona senator turned back a strong primary challenge from New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, ushering in a resurgence of more conservative principles on the party platform. Goldwater accepted the nomination in Daly City, California, near San Francisco, with his chosen running mate New York congressman William Miller, the first Catholic on a Republican ticket.

1960 - JOHN F. KENNEDY vs RICHARD NIXON 

Nixon accepted the nomination in Chicago that year, selecting former Massachusetts Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. as his running mate, known for his foreign policy credentials. Barry Goldwater stole the show, however, withdrawing his name from contention but urging conservatives to “take back the party,” a harbinger of his later nomination in ‘64. But that year the Democrats nominated Kennedy and Johnson in Los Angeles, only after fending off challenges from Johnson himself, Hubert Humphrey and Adlai Stevenson. Kennedy’s Catholic faith was an issue from the outset having been only the second Catholic nominee of any major party since Al Smith in 1928.

1956 - DWIGHT EISENHOWER vs ADLAI STEVENSON 

Incumbent Eisenhower and Vice President Richard Nixon accepted the Republican nomination in San Francisco, but the DNC that year featured rising Democratic star Sen. John F. Kennedy who made an unsuccessful effort to be Illinois Gov. Adlai Stevenson’s running mate. In a surprise move, Stevenson announced that he intended to have the delegates vote on who should be his running mate to make it more exciting. Delegates narrowly voted for Tennessee Sen. Estes Kefauver instead of Kennedy, but it raised his national profile.

1952 - DWIGHT EISENHOWER vs ADLAI STEVENSON

1952 was the year conventions became first televised for millions for audiences to watch delegates consider their party’s leaders. War hero and general “Ike” Eisenhower led the Republican Party ticket with his running mate, then-California Sen. Richard Nixon, on an exclusively anti-communist platform, vowing to end the Korean conflict. In Chicago, the RNC had a memorable moment when General Douglas MacArthur spoke to delegates, becoming a hero to Republicans after Democratic President Harry Truman relieved him of command, but the speech was not well received and quashed his presidential ambitions. At the DNC, Governor Stevenson was initially resistant to being nominated for the top spot, but delegates moved to nominate him after his speech on the floor. Convention delegates then chose segregationist and Alabama Sen. John Sparkman as running mate. President Truman at the time supported Stevenson, throwing his weight behind him over other challengers like Sen. Estes Kefauver who withdrew after the third ballot.

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