SKU: 332779004

Nixon's the One 1968 Campaign 3/4 Sleeve Raglan

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Nixon's the One 1968 Campaign 3/4 Sleeve RaglanComing off of the closest election in US history in 1960 and the 1962 gubernatorial loss in California, Richard Nixon stayed out of the 1964 bit for the White House. The nation grieved Kennedy's recent assassination and was likely to support LBJ anyhow. Many savvier powerbrokers in the GOP, including Nixon, figured that the chaos and division in the country and the Republican party meant it was better to essentially punt and prepare for a comeback in

 Coming off of the closest election in US history in 1960 and the 1962 gubernatorial loss in California, Richard Nixon stayed out of the 1964 bit for the White House. The nation grieved Kennedy's recent assassination and was likely to support LBJ anyhow. Many savvier powerbrokers in the GOP, including Nixon, figured that the chaos and division in the country and the Republican party meant it was better to essentially punt and prepare for a comeback in `68.

The eventual 1964 nominee Barry Goldwater was a good man, but he didn't unify the party that was fractured between the Eastern establishment Republicans represented by Rockefeller and Romney supporters and the Western Goldwater Republicans. So Richard Nixon played his part to support Goldwater with appearances and an endorsement, but he sensed it would be for naught in the end.

He was right. The GOP was slaughtered in the 1964 elections across the board.

By 1967 social turmoil and the mishandling of the Vietnam War were making a second full term for LBJ more and more inoperable for Democrats. Baby boomer students and hard New Left radical elements created a fissure so deep with Souther Democrats, working-class democrats, and the party establishment that it made the internecine division in the Republican party seem quaint. Violence had exploded across the nation. The anti-war protests along with New Left Marxian opportunists strategically embedded in the movement were turning off a growing number of Americans. The country seemed to be spinning out of control and the Democrat party was right at the center of the disarray.

The last straw for LBJ was the announcement that Robert Kennedy was running. Within two weeks, a politically savvy President Johnson understood the writing on the wall. After already barely beating Sen. Eugene McCarthy in the New Hampshire primaries, he famously announced he would neither seek nor accept the nomination of the party on March 31st. The field was now open. Sort of.

Sixty-six days later, Robert F. Kennedy was murdered at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles immediately after celebrating his win in the California presidential primary against Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. The Johnson Administration had thus inherited two nominations from Kennedy assassinations in 5 years' time, as Humphrey eventually became Nixon's general election opponent. But the Democrats were impossibly fractured. 

By November 6th the political landscape had changed forever. Nixon's popular message of unification, law and order, and lowering the volume of national debate had won over the voting public. The fatigue of war, violence, protest, and cultural disruption made enough Americans want some semblance of normalcy to return.  George Wallace's independent run had also forever broken the New Deal Democrat collation in the South. Wallace received 46 crucial electoral votes. But even if Humphrey could have obtained all of them, it still wouldn't have been enough to beat Nixon who won the White House with 301 electoral votes. 

Still, more people had voted against Nixon in raw numbers. 40,804,528 Americans had voted for either Humphrey or Wallace to Nixon's 31,710,470. America's political turmoil wasn't finished.

Nixon became as embattled as LBJ in the White House almost as soon as he took office. But against an activist Democrat Congress and swarming press, it wouldn't be long before another American vacated the White House under uncommon circumstances. By the time Nixon announced the Cambodian incursion in 1970, followed by the Kent State protest shooting, Washinton politics were as adversarial as ever.

Nixon was hated by the press more than any President in modern history until Donald Trump. He had risen to popularity as a California congressman in the hot pursuit of New Deal communist Alger Hiss during the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in 1948. The press and Hollywood never forgave Nixon for his part in HUAC. But when Nixon was convinced by Henry Kissinger in 1971 to allow Attorney General John N. Mitchell to file an injunction forcing the New York Times to cease publishing articles about the Pentagon Papers exposing the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations' lies about the Vietnam War, it was an irreparable fissure. 

The Nixon White House created a covert group of intelligence assets dubbed the White House Plumbers to at first discredit the leaker of the Papers, Danielle Ellsberg. Unsuccessful in that, they eventually moved on to other operations such as the Watergate Hotel break-in, which concluded in Richard Nixon's resignation from office. 

A stylish spin on the classic baseball raglan. The combed cotton blend makes it super soft, comfortable, and lightweight.

• All solid colors are 100% ring-spun cotton
• Heather Grey color is 90% cotton, 10% polyester
• Heather Denim color is 50% cotton, 50% polyester
• Fabric weight: 4.5 oz/yd² (152.6 g/m²)
• Fine knit jersey
• 30 singles
• ¾ sleeves
• Contrast raglan sleeve
• Unhemmed bottom
• Reactive-dyed for longer-lasting color
• Prewashed to minimize shrinkage
• Tear away label

 

Size guide

  LENGTH (inches) WIDTH (inches)
S 28 18
M 29 20
L 30 22
XL 31 24
2XL 31 26
  LENGTH (cm) WIDTH (cm)
S 71.1 45.7
M 73.7 50.8
L 76.2 55.9
XL 78.7 61
2XL 78.7 66
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SKU: 332779004

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4.3 ★★★★★
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deloris s.
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Comfortable Shoes
Size: 12, Color: Navy Blazer/Ivor
This is the second time I purchased this style of shoes. They are extremely comfortable. They can be worn on casual and business events.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2026
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Verified Purchase
LindyB
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Great dressy sneaker to wear with business casual or jeans
Size: 11, Color: British Tan/Ivry
I got these for my husband to wear with jeans or business casual dress pants. They look sharp and professional and dress up jeans if you're going out. He says they fit comfortably and he can walk on them all day without his feet hurting. They are beautiful genuine leather so they don't get stinky. I got my husband's normal size and they fit to size.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2026
T
Verified Purchase
timothy scalabrelli
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
Comfortable
Size: 9, Color: Black/Ivory
Most comfortable and roomy shoes I ever wore. Great for insoles. Looks nice too. The base of the shoe is a bit too thick but it’s fine.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2025
B
Verified Purchase
BBZ
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Very nice, but sizing is inconsistent
Size: 10 Wide, Color: Ivory/White/British Tan
All of these Cole Haan shoes are extremely well made and I like the styling. On the other hand, the sizing is very inconsistent and you may end up having to do a lot of returns trying to find the right size. Then if you get a different color of it, you may find the sizing different yet again. If you find your right zie, they are really nice shoes at a very reasonable price for the quality.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2026
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Verified Purchase
Lofidelityrockr
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
I love this brand. These shoes look and fit great!
Size: 13 Wide, Color: Black/White/Black
I love wearing Cole Haan shoes. This is the second pair I’ve owned and the style just gets me. I’ve worn these to work at a great professional job every day, not just casual Friday. I wear these when I head out shopping or to dinner. They are functional, comfortable, built for regular and bigger wider feet and comfortable. I am 6 feet tall and my feet have changed size over the years to me needing a wider shoe to relieve pressure on my toes and front wide porting of my foot. So the 13W feels great and still walks the same as a regular 14 but more comfort for me. They look amazing and qualify in some offices as dress shoes (depending on company rules they will justify a sneaker as a shoe with the tan colored “gum” sole as a sneaker) so check company policy. The black sole on this makes it look more dressy. I am switching out the laces to match my previous Cole Haan because I think the white shoelaces look better. As an adult, aside from my Kenneth Cole boots Reaction boots and Doc Marten’s these are the only shoes I will pay 3 digits for. This looks like skater shoes but with a more mature look.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2025

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