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Candidate for president in 2008 Candidate for vice president of the United States in 1972 California: April 2, 2019 Exploratory committee: March 19, 2019: August 6, 2019 (endorsed Gabbard and Sanders) Campaign FEC filing [84] [85] [86] Eric Swalwell: November 16, 1980 (age 39) Sac City, Iowa: U.S. representative from CA-15 (2013–present ...
By April 2019, more than 20 major candidates were recognized by national and state polls, causing the field of 2020 major Democratic presidential candidates to exceed the field of major candidates in the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries as the largest presidential candidate field for any single U.S. political party in a single ...
Biden became the first U.S. presidential candidate to win over 80 million total votes, won the highest share of the popular vote of any challenger to an incumbent president since the 1932 presidential election, and won the popular vote by the largest margin since Barack Obama's victory in the 2008 presidential election. [54] The Democratic ...
The 2020 election — like nearly every presidential race before it — will be decided by the Electoral College, which assigns every state with a set number of electoral votes based on its number ...
Major candidates in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries had held significant elective office or received substantial media coverage. Nearly 300 candidates who did not receive significant media coverage also filed with the Federal Election Commission to run for president in the primary.
Presidential candidate Party Home state Popular vote Electoral vote Running mate Count Percentage Vice-presidential candidate Home state Electoral vote Joe Biden: Democratic: Delaware: 81,283,501 51.31% 306 Kamala Harris: California: 306 Donald Trump (incumbent) Republican: Florida: 74,223,975 46.85% 232 Mike Pence (incumbent) Indiana: 232 Jo ...
Unlike many previous elections, the Republican and Democratic candidates have both appeared on past ballots: Donald Trump successfully ran for president in 2016 but lost reelection in 2020, and ...
Senator Kamala Harris was announced as former Vice President Joe Biden's running mate on August 11, 2020. When inaugurated, Harris will be the first woman, first African-American, and first Asian-American vice president of the United States, as well as the second person with non-European ancestry (after Herbert Hoover's vice-president Charles Curtis).