Ellen Cullen McCormack (September 15, 1926 – March 27, 2011)[1][2] was an American politician who was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976.
Early life
On September 15, 1926, Eleanor Rose Cullen was born in The Bronx borough of New York City, to Irish immigrants William and Ellen Cullen.[3] In 1949, she married Francis J. McCormack, after meeting him at a dance, and had four children with him.[4]
Career
On July 14, 1975, McCormack filed with the Federal Election Commission to run in the 1976 presidential primary, and formally announced her candidacy at a news conference in Boston, Massachusetts, on November 16.[5] She was the first woman to receive federal matching funds (she received $244,125), and appeared on the ballot in twenty states.[6][7] She ran on an exclusively anti-abortion platform, and won no primaries, but had her name placed into nomination and seconded by Erma Clardy Craven and received 22 votes from delegates at the 1976 Democratic National Convention, and engaged in a debate that also included future President Jimmy Carter.
On March 27, 2011, she died in an assisted-living facility in Avon, Connecticut, after a long period with a heart ailment which originated during one of her pregnancies.[8]
References
^"Uproar over Abortion". Time. February 16, 1976. Archived from the original on March 27, 2009. Retrieved January 20, 2008. Ellen McCormack, 49, a housewife from Merrick, N.Y., is running hard in the Democratic primary...