1968 Nixon VS. Humphrey VS. Wallace

"Bomb (Nuclear Treaty)"

Transcript

Museum of the Moving Image
The Living Room Candidate
"Bomb (Nuclear Treaty)," Humphrey, 1968

MALE NARRATOR #1: Do you want Castro to have the bomb now?

(sound of bomb exploding)

Do you want any country that doesn't have the bomb to be able to get it?

(drum beat starts)

Of course you don't. Where does Richard Nixon stand on the U.N. treaty to stop the spread of nuclear weapons? He says he's in no hurry to pass it. Hubert Humphrey wants to stop the spread of nuclear weapons now, before it mushrooms. Hubert Humphrey supports the U.N. treaty now, as do the eighty countries who have already signed it. Let's stop the spread of the bomb, now. Humphrey: There is no alternative.

MALE NARRATOR #2: Paid for by Citizens for Humphrey-Muskie.

Credits

"Bomb (Nuclear Treaty)," Citizens for Humphrey-Muskie, 1968

Maker: Tony Schwartz

Video courtesy of the Minnesota Historical Society.

From Museum of the Moving Image, The Living Room Candidate: Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2012.
www.livingroomcandidate.org/commercials/1968/bomb-nuclear-treaty (accessed June 2, 2025).

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1968 Nixon Humphrey Wallace Results

By 1968, one of the most turbulent years in American history, the number of American troops in Vietnam had risen from 16,000 (in 1963) to more than 500,000. Nightly TV coverage of the "living-room war" ignited an antiwar movement. After a weak showing in the New Hampshire primary, President Johnson shocked the country on March 31 by announcing that he would not seek reelection. Just four days later, Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated, sparking riots in more than 100 cities. In June, Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated after winning the California primary. Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who entered the race late and had not won any primaries, became the Democratic nominee at a tumultuous convention in Chicago marred by disorder inside the convention hall and by the televised spectacle of violent confrontations between police and antiwar protesters.

The Republicans nominated Richard M. Nixon, who was attempting a political comeback after losing the 1960 presidential election and the 1962 California gubernatorial race. Nixon claimed to speak for the "silent majority" of law-abiding citizens whose voices were presumably drowned out amidst the social upheaval, and he promised a return to the stability of the Eisenhower years.

Discontent with major-party candidates led to an independent run by Alabama Governor George Wallace, who waged the most successful third-party candidacy since 1924.

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