List of United States Progressive Party presidential tickets

During the 20th Century, three national entities making use of the name "Progressive Party" in the United States put forth pairings of candidates for the offices of President of the United States and Vice President of the United States. Despite the shared name, each of the three parties were organizationally distinct from one another.

First iteration (1912, 1916)
The Progressive Party (United States, 1912) was formed by Theodore Roosevelt and his reformist co-thinkers as part of a split of the Republican Party in 1912. The party's ballot symbol was an adult male moose, giving rise to the organization's popular name, the Bull Moose Party.

Second iteration (1924)
The Progressive Party (United States, 1924) was largely a technical ballot name for independent presidential candidate Robert M. La Follette, Sr. in the 1924 United States presidential election. No lasting organization survived the November campaign, outside of Wisconsin, which drew much of its support from the trade union movement, the sponsorship of the Conference for Progressive Political Action and the Socialist Party of America. The party's ballot symbol was the Liberty bell.

Third iteration (1948, 1952)
The Progressive Party (United States, 1948) was an organization created by defectors from the Democratic Party, who backed former Secretary of Agriculture and Vice President Henry A. Wallace over the staunchly anti-Soviet incumbent Harry S. Truman. The organization drew a significant part of its strength from left wing trade unions and the Communist Party, USA as well as pacifists and individuals favoring a relaxation of the Cold War. As of 2015, they are the only ticket to get over a million votes with fourth place status.

1952
Vincent Hallinan and Charlotta Bass received barely a hundred thousand votes.