thomas Jefferson beat John Adams & Aaaron Burr Sir to win the election of 1800 by a majority of 73 to 65 electoral votes.…
During the Election of 1824 Andrew Jackson was competing with Henry Clay, John Quincy Adams, and William Crawford. Andrew Jackson won the most popular votes but not the most Electoral College votes. The selection was made from the top three vote getters. Henry Clay came in fourth so he was out of the election. People said that the election between Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams was the fiercest election there ever was. John Quincy Adams had won this election but Andrew Jackson thought that Adam's victory was a “corrupt bargain” between him and Henry Clay so he promised to take his revenge in the 1828 election. Andrew Jackson had won the Election of 1828 and also he had had gotten his revenge.…
Hamilton was offended because he thought Burr had insulted his father in law. Burr was not usually publicly critical of others. He rarely expressed negative opinions.This was not normal of him to express his opinions towards Hamilton. Later, In 1800, Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr ran for president. After the election, the votes were counted, Jefferson and Burr had both received 73 electoral votes. The House of Representatives then got to vote to decide on who would be President and who would become Vice President. The house voted over and over many times. Hamilton decided to vote for Thomas Jefferson, only because he was greatly opposed to Burr. After the house voted many times, Thomas Jefferson won on the 36th vote. Aaron Burr became Vice President. Burr was furious that Hamilton publicly claimed that Burr would hurt the country if he became president. Burr was also furious that he lost because he thought Hamilton had influenced the…
In Adams first election, his main opponent was Andrew Jackson. Although Jackson escalated to more votes, due to certain circumstances, the decision was decided by the House of Representatives. The head of the House, however, disliked Jackson and favored Adams, and thus Adams was elected to office by the court.…
In the election of 1824, Jackson ran against John Quincy Adams. On election day, Jackson won the most popular votes, but no candidate won a majority in the Electoral College. Adams eventually won the presidency and appointed Clay, his former adversary, the secretary of state because Clay got his supporters to back Adams. This was a major act of corruption, and made Andrew Jackson and his supports very mad. In 1828, Jackson ran against Quincy Adams again. This time, Jackson wanted revenge because he felt he was cheated out of the last election. Jackson…
straya m8 ya fuken cuntz nning mates Jefferson and AARON BURR received the same number of electoral votes. The election was decided in the House of Representatives where each state wielded a single vote.…
A rematch between two bitter rivals, Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams, the presidential election of 1828 was highlighted by the split of electoral votes in New York and Maryland. Andrew Jackson had swept through the west, gaining every single state, and even got Pennsylvania. The winner from the election of 1824 by the ‘corrupt’ bargain, John Q. Adams, had gained the support of all the northeast states. However, the real surprise was the split electoral votes in Maryland and New York.…
The election of 1824 was a turning point in our country's election processes to this modern age. In this election the tides of voting changed from more educated, higher class candidates to now include the more common man that people could relate to. This election was also the precursor to the underlying civil war problems and how that effected the election processes. In this election the candidates used unfair practices against their opponents.…
It allowed lots of more Americans to vote over the years with a huge difference in outcome. As the two men fought for the President place there was only one who could win. In 1824 John Quincy Adams beat Andrew Jackson for president. In 1828 there was a rematch and Andrew Jackson won the election. Over these two, it was a very chaotic…
It wasn't until 1789 that he got his break by being named Attorney General by New York Governor George Clinton. In 1791 he won General Philip Schuyler’s seat in the senate and had that seat for six years. He then won a seat in the state legislature after not being re-elected for the senate. In 1799, Burr started to organize the democratic party in New York City and the plan was to have Thomas Jefferson as President and Burr as Vice President. Burr and Jefferson did not get along very well and in the election of 1800, the votes became a tie between the two for president. Alexander Hamilton decided to use his political influence to persuade others to vote for Jefferson which led to Jefferson’s win and Burr’s defeat.…
In the first contested presidential election in American history, Adams won a narrow electoral majority (71–68) over Jefferson, who thereby became vice president. Adams made an initial effort to bring Jefferson into the cabinet and involve him in shaping foreign policy, but Jefferson declined the offer, preferring to retain his independence. This burdened the Adams presidency with a vice president who was the…
With an electoral loss to his old friend and Federalist candidate, John Adams, contemporary laws made Jefferson the Vice President. His leadership of a very vocal opposition did not cease, however, despite threats posed by the Quasi-War of 1796 and subsequent reactionary policies enacted by the Federalists including the Alien & Sedition Acts. In the election of 1800, which Jefferson considered a peaceful revolution, the Democratic-Republican coalition of Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr received the majority of votes over Adams' bid for re-election but the two running mates had split the vote evenly in the electoral college, sending the decision to Congress. It was there that Alexander Hamilton, leader of the influential High Federalist faction, became kingmaker.…
The election of 1800 was one of, if not, the most mysterious and most exciting presidential elections in the history of the United States. The election was a great clash of powers between the Federalists and the Democratic-Republicans who believed the winner could possibly set the path of America’s government, possibly forever. The Democratic-Republicans believed if the federalists won they would destroy the republic, and get rid of liberty that the American people fought for n the American Revolution. Federalists, months before the election, tried to implement the Alien and sedition Acts which were a series of four laws, one of them making sedition and libel of the governed a crime. The acts, along with the direct tax of 1798, and a military the federalists were building up, according to the textbook Liberty, equality, power, were not popular with the people with the people and worked in the favor of the Democratic-Republicans.…
The United States presidential election of 1828 was a rematch with John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, the one who wasn’t liked as much in the election. There were no other major candidates, Jackson and his ally Martin Van Buren consolidated the bases in the South and New York and won against Adams. The Democratic Party collaborated with supporters of Jackson and the supporters of Crawford and Vice-President Calhoun. The election saw how the Jacksonian Democracy was growing in power and so as a result the transition from the First Party System and the Second Party System took place. This election marked the new age to modern politics in America today. Many historians argue this however.…
In that era the candidates did not campaign themselves. The actual campaigning was left to managers and surrogates, and throughout the year various partisans spoke and wrote in favor of the candidates.…