1972 Republican National Convention

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The 1972 National Convention of the Republican Party of the United States was held on August 21 to August 23, 1972, at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida. It nominated the incumbents, Richard M. Nixon of California, for President and Spiro T. Agnew of Maryland for Vice President.

San Diego, California, had originally been selected as host city for the convention. Columnist Jack Anderson however discovered a memo written by Dita Beard, a lobbyist for International Telephone and Telegraph, suggesting the company pledge $400,000 toward the San Diego bid in return for the U.S. Department of Justice settling its antitrust case against ITT. Fearing scandal, and citing labor and cost concerns, the GOP transferred the event—scarcely three months before it was to begin—to Miami Beach, which was also hosting the 1972 Democratic National Convention. It was the third and last time both the Republican and Democratic national party conventions were held in the same city. The RNC did not return to San Diego until 1996.

The convention set a new standard, as it was scripted as a media event to an unprecedented degree[1].

The keynote address, by Anne Armstrong of Texas, was the first national convention keynote delivered by a woman.

Nixon, having easily turned back primary challenges on the right from Rep. John M. Ashbrook of Ohio and on the left from Rep. Pete McCloskey of California, took 1,347 votes to one for McCloskey and none for Ashbrook.

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[edit] Protest activity

The convention was targeted for widespread protests, particularly against the Vietnam War, and the Nixon administration made efforts to suppress it. Files released under a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit in 2005 showed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation even monitored Beatle John Lennon after was invited to play for Yippie protests, later to conclude he was no dangerous revolutionary, being "constantly under the influence of narcotics."

The U.S. Justice Department indicted Scott Camil, John Kniffen, Alton Foss, Donald Perdue, William Patterson, Stan Michelsen, Peter Mahoney and John Briggs—collectively known as the Gainesville Eight—on charges of conspiracy to disrupt the Convention. All were exonerated.

In his autobiography, Ron Kovic describes how he and fellow Vietnam Veterans Against the War protesters Bobby Muller, Bill Wieman, and Mark Clevinger were spat upon at the convention.[2].

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Preceded by
1968
Miami Beach, Florida
Republican National Conventions Succeeded by
1976
Kansas City, Missouri