United States presidential election, 1836

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Image:ElectoralCollege1836-Large.png The U.S. presidential election of 1836 is predominantly remembered for three reasons:

  1. It was the last election until 1988 to result in the elevation of an incumbent Vice President to the nation's highest office.
  2. It was the only race in which a major political party intentionally ran several presidential candidates. The Whigs ran three different candidates in different regions of the country, hoping that each would be popular enough to defeat Democratic standard-bearer Martin Van Buren in their respective areas. The House of Representatives could then decide between the competing Whig candidates. This strategy failed: Van Buren won a majority of the electoral vote and became President.
  3. This election is the first (and to date only) time in which a Vice Presidential election was thrown into the Senate.

Contents

Nominations

Democratic Party nomination

Incumbent president Andrew Jackson decided to retire after two terms and supported his Vice President, Martin Van Buren. Although Southerners disliked the New Yorker Van Buren as well as his intended running mate, Colonel Richard Mentor Johnson of Kentucky, Jackson secured the nomination at a meeting in Baltimore.

Whig nomination

The National Republicans joined together with dissident Democrats, including those angered by Jackson's opposition to states' rights, to form the Whig Party. Unable to agree on a single candidate, they ran different candidates in each section of the country to deny Van Buren a majority. Massachusetts Senator Daniel Webster ran in New England, popular former general William Henry Harrison in the West, and Tennessee Senator Hugh Lawson White, a states' rights supporter, in the South.

General election

Campaign

The Whigs attacked Van Buren on all sides, even disrupting the Senate where he presided. Harrison was the most effective of his opponents, but Van Buren's effective party organization carried the day, earning him a majority.

Results

Virginia's electors refused to vote for Van Buren's running mate, Richard Mentor Johnson, leaving him one vote short of the 148-vote majority required to elect. Under the Twelfth Amendment, the Senate would decide between the top two vote-getters, Johnson and Francis Granger.

Template:Start U.S. presidential election box Template:U.S. presidential election box row Template:U.S. presidential election box row Template:U.S. presidential election box row Template:U.S. presidential election box row Template:U.S. presidential election box row Template:U.S. presidential election box other Template:End U.S. presidential election box Source (Popular Vote): Template:Leip PV source

Source (Electoral Vote): Template:National Archives EV source

(a) The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote.
(b) Mangum received his electoral votes from South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislatures rather than by popular vote.


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Breakdown by ticket

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Contingent election

The Senate was required to choose which of Richard Johnson and Francis Granger would be the next Vice President. Johnson was elected easily in a single ballot.

for Richard M. Johnson for Francis P. Granger

Electoral college selection

Template:Start electoral college selection Template:Electoral college selection row Template:Electoral college selection row Template:End electoral college selection

See also

References

Navigation

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