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- Important presidential elections
- Some of the most important presidential elections
-
- 1812
-
- The election of 1812 consisted of a battle between James Madison, and De
- Witt Clinton. Madison had represented both Democratic and Republican
- beliefs, while Clinton was a Federalist.
-
- James Madison was born in Port Conway, Va., on March 16, 1751. A
- Princeton graduate, he joined the struggle for independence on his return
- to Virginia in 1771. He had been an active politician in the 1770's and
- 1780's. He was greatly know for championing the Jefferson reform program,
- and in the Continental Congress. Madison, in collaboration, had
- participated greatly in the, Federalist, a paper who's main purpose was to
- ratify the constitution. Madison first became president in 1809, when he
- bested Charles C. Pickney. He had led the U.S. in a very unpopular war, in
- which the U.S. hadn't been prepared for...the War of 1812.
-
- De Witt Clinton was a Federalist, who's main purpose of the election was
- to get the U.S. out of a war in which he felt was very unnecessary. DeWitt
- held every major elective office in New York between 1797 and
- 1828--assemblyman, senator, mayor of New York City, lieutenant governor,
- and governor. He was a philanthropist and patron of the arts and science
- and, as canal commissioner, championed construction of the Erie and
- Champlain canals
-
- The method in which these candidates received nomination was by the
- Electoral College, or by King Caucus. The idea of political conventions
- had not been present at this time. There were no third-party candidates in
- this election.
-
- The major issue of this election was the War of 1812. The War of 1812, or
- "Mr. Madison's War", had been very unpopular among different sections of
- America. Mainly the ship owners in New England. The war was supposed to
- protect. This war was supposed to help their shipping, but instead, it had
- kept them from trading and making money.
-
- The winner of the election of 1812 was James Madison. Madison collected
- 128 electoral votes, while Clinton received 89, and the number of "No Votes
- Cast" was 1. The Vice-presidential candidate, who won the election was
- Elbridge Gerry, who received 131 electoral votes, while Jared Ingersoll
- received 86. There was no record of the number of popular votes for this
- election.
-
- My opinion of why Madison had won the election is because he had led the
- country into the War of 1812, and therefore, he should be allowed to fight
- it. He was also much more popular than De Witt Clinton. Madison's part in
- ratifying the Constitution, and his other early deeds, were also
- influential on the voters minds. He also did pretty well during his first
- term.
-
- 1844
-
- The candidates for the election of 1844 were James K. Polk, and Henry
- Clay. Two very respectable men, who had great plans for the U.S. Polk
- represented the Democratic party, while Clay represented the Whigs.
-
- James Knox Polk was born in Mecklenburg County, N.C., on November 2, 1795.
- He graduated from the University of North Carolina, from which he then
- moved to Tennessee, where he became prominent in state politics. He was
- elected to the house of representatives in 1825. He was elected Speaker of
- the House in 1835. Four years later, he was elected governor of Tennessee,
- but was beaten in tries for re-election in 1841, and 1843. Martin Van
- Buren, the president prior to the 1844 election, counted on Polk as his
- running mate; but when Van Buren's stand on Texas alienated Southern
- support, the convention swung to Polk on the Ninth ballot.
-
- Henry Clay, a key figure in U.S. politics during the first half of the
- 19th century, was a master of the art of political compromise. Born in
- Hanover County, Va., on April 12, 1777, he studied law in Richmond and
- moved to the frontier state of Kentucky in 1797. Clay became more and more
- important in Kentucky politics, becoming speaker of the state assembly in
- 1807, and winning election to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1811.
- Clay made his first try for the presidency in 1824. Four men ran,
- including Andrew Jackson, were on the ballot. When no candidate won a
- majority, Clay threw his support to John Quincy Adams. Adams won and
- promptly named Clay his secretary of state.
-
- The party members won their candidacy by primary. The major upset of this
- time happened during the Democratic convention. Everyone expected Van
- Buren to be named the Democratic candidate, but because of Van Buren's
- stand on Texas, the nomination went to Polk. This election had no
- third-party candidates.
-
- The major issue of this election was the issue of Texas. Polk and the
- Democrats, wanted Texas in the Union. Clay also wanted Texas, but he was
- afraid that the acquisition of Texas would lead to war with Mexico. Clay
- never made it clear just where the Whig party stood. The Oregon territory
- had also been a big part of this election. Oregon was the name given to
- all the land between Alaska and California, west of the Rocky Mountains.
- Both Great Britain and the U.S. claimed it. Polk said that the Oregon
- territory would be America's, even if it led to war.
-
- The winner of the election was James K. Polk. He pulled in 170 electoral
- votes, while Henry Clay received 105. There is no record of the number of
- popular votes for this election.
-
- My opinion of why Polk won this election is because of his stand on land.
- He believed greatly in "Manifest Destiny", and this was very popular at the
- time. Clay, and the Whig party never made it clear as to where they stood
- on Texas. Perhaps if the voters had known for sure on which side of the
- line they stood, this election might have had a different outcome.
-
- 1912
-
- The election of 1912 was a three-man race between Theodore Roosevelt, who
- was a Progressive, William H. Taft, a Republican, and Woodrow Wilson, a
- Democrat. Each one had their own ideas on how to change America, but only
- one would get a chance to do so.
-
- Born in NYC on October in 1858, Theodore Roosevelt was a Harvard graduate.
- His interests included ranching, politics, and writing. Roosevelt was a
- Republican member of the New York assembly from 1882-1884. He was an
- unsuccessful candidate for mayor of NYC in 1886, but became police
- commissioner of NYC in 1895. Roosevelt assumed the job of president in
- 1901, after the assassination of McKinley. Theodore Roosevelt embarked
- mainly on conserving natural resources. He was very anit-big-buisness.
- After his term was up, he was defeated in presidential primary as a
- Republican, so he chose to start his own party, known as the
- "Progressives". Teddy pulled most of the votes in election of 1912, but
- the split between him and Taft caused Wilson to become president.
-
- Born in Cincinnati on September 15, 1857, William Taft was a Yale
- graduate, who went on to serve for the Ohio supreme court from 1890-92. He
- became the Secretary of war under President Roosevelt. Taft won the
- republican nomination over Roosevelt during their political convention,
- causing Roosevelt to form Progressive party. Lost election, thus causing
- Wilson to become president. Taft had been chosen by Roosevelt essentially
- to carry on Roosevelt's progressive policies. In a certain sense he did:
- he instituted and completed more antitrust cases than his "trust-busting"
- predecessor; he supported the proposed income-tax amendment to the U.S.
- Constitution; he helped enact a system of postal savings and a measure,
- the Mann-Elkins Bill, to regulate the railroads more effectively; and he
- backed several social reforms, including an employer's liability law for
- work done on government jobs and a mandatory 8-hour day in federal
- employment.
-
- Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born in Staunton, Va., on Dec. 28, 1856. He
- was profoundly influenced by a devoutly religious household headed by his
- father, Joseph Ruggles Wilson, a Presbyterian minister, and his mother,
- Janet Woodrow Wilson, the daughter of a minister. Wilson studied at the
- University of Virginia Law School, briefly practiced law in Atlanta, and in
- 1883 entered The Johns Hopkins University for graduate study in political
- science. His book, Congressional Government, was published a year before
- he received his doctoral degree. Success in New Jersey made him a
- contender for the Democratic presidential nomination. Although Wilson
- entered the 1912 Democratic National Convention a poor second to Speaker of
- the House Champ Clark, his strength increased as Clark's faded, and he won
- the nomination after 46 ballots. Offering a program of reform that he
- called the New Freedom, Wilson ran against a divided Republican party. In
- November, with only 42 percent of the popular vote, he won 435 electoral
- votes to 88 for Progressive candidate Theodore Roosevelt and 8 for the
- Republican candidate, President William Howard Taft.
-
- The candidates for this election, excluding Roosevelt, were all elected in
- a convention. Because Roosevelt lost his convention, he formed his own
- party, allowing him a place on the ballot.
-
- The third party candidate for this election was Theodore Roosevelt. His
- party, the Progressives main issue were, they believed that abuses of power
- by government and business could be ended (i.e., bribery and corruption),
- business regulations, importance of technology.
-
- The main issues in this election were Big Business abusing powers by
- monopolizing others. "Trust Busting" was the major idea of this period.
- Many felt that government should get involved to stop power abusing. The
- idea of regulations, such as the on the meat packing industry, were very
- much supported, after being exposed by the muckrakers of the time.
-
- The winner of this election was Woodrow Wilson. Wilson received a total
- popular vote count of 6,286,214, and a total electoral vote count of 435.
- Roosevelt's popular vote total was 4,126,020, with an electoral vote count
- of 88. Finally, Taft's popular vote accumulations were 3,483,922, and 8
- electoral votes.
-
- The main reason Woodrow Wilson won the election in my opinion, was because
- Roosevelt took many votes away from Taft. As is in many third-party
- elections, the number of votes significantly changes, thus causing some
- major upsets. Wilson won because congress voted him in, not because he was
- elected. If Roosevelt hadn't formed his own party, Taft would have had a
- better chance of becoming President of the United States.
-
- 1936
-
- The candidates in the election of 1936 were, Franklin D. Roosevelt, a
- Democrat, Alfred M. Landon, a Republican, and Norman Thomas, a Socialist.
-
- Roosevelt was born on January 30, 1882, at Hyde Park, N.Y., to James
- Roosevelt. He was an average student at Harvard University, edited the
- Harvard Crimson in his senior year, and after graduation attended Columbia
- Law School. He dropped out of law school upon admission to the New York
- bar and worked for a Wall Street law firm. Franklin married a distant
- cousin, Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, on March 17, 1905. Her uncle, President
- Theodore Roosevelt, gave the bride away. Their children were Anna Eleanor,
- James, Elliott, Franklin Delano, Jr., and John; a sixth child died in
- infancy. The Roosevelt's were active in New York social circles but at the
- same time devoted considerable energy to the plight of the less fortunate.
- Franklin's handling of small-claims cases in the municipal court system
- deepened his concern for the common people. Although a Democrat, he admired
- the progressivism of Uncle Teddy and decided early upon a political career.
-
- Alfred Mossman Landon, born in West Middlesex, Pa., on September 9,
- 1887, was a key figure in the U.S. Republican party in the 1930s and ran
- unsuccessfully for president in 1936. "Alf" Landon first entered the
- national political arena in 1912, campaigning for Theodore Roosevelt, who
- was that year the Progressive party candidate for president. Landon
- continued to be associated with progressive politics within the Republican
- party. In 1932, Landon was elected governor of Kansas, and two years later
- he was the only incumbent Republican governor to be reelected in an
- otherwise Democratic landslide. This success made Landon a strong
- candidate to oppose President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936. Although he
- won 17,000,000 votes, Landon carried only two states, Maine and Vermont.
- Following his defeat Landon retired from national politics.
-
- Norman Mattoon Thomas, born in Marion, Ohio, November 20, 1884, was six
- times an unsuccessful Socialist Party candidate for president of the United
- States between 1928 and 1948. A Presbyterian minister in East Harlem's
- slums, he became a pacifist and opposed American entry into World War I.
- In 1917 he helped found what became the American Civil Liberties Union.
- Thomas joined the Socialist party in 1918 and became its leader in 1926.
- Defending a moderate, non-Marxist brand of socialism, he failed (except in
- the 1932 election) to halt the decline of his party.
-
- Each candidate in this election, won his nomination via a presidential
- convention.
-
- The third party candidate, Norman Thomas, was a Socialist. Socialist's
- believed mainly in public ownership of the means by which goods and
- services are produced, distributed, and exchanged.
-
- The main issue of the day for this election was the Great Depression.
- People were living in the hardest economic times America had ever seen, and
- were looking for someone to get them out of it.
-
- The winner of the election was F.D.R. Roosevelt received a popular vote
- total of 27,751,597, and an electoral vote total of 523. Landon received
- 16,679,583 popular votes, and 8 electoral votes, and Thomas received
- 884,781 popular votes, and 0 electoral votes.
-
- Why F.D.R. won the election in my opinion is because he was a great
- president. The American people loved him, and his style of government. He
- gained the trust of the American people, by getting them out of the Great
- Depression. That is why he was elected to the presidency more than any
- other president before his time.
-
- 1964
-
- The election of 1964 was a contest between Lyndon B. Johnson, a Democrat,
- and Barry M. Goldwater, a Republican.
-
- Johnson was born on August 27, 1908, near Johnson City, Texas, the eldest
- son of Sam Early Johnson, Jr., and Rebekah Baines Johnson. Johnson
- attended public schools in Johnson City and received a B.S. degree from
- Southwest Texas State Teachers College in San Marcos. He then taught for a
- year in Houston before going to Washington in 1931 as secretary to a
- Democratic Texas congressman, Richard M. Kleberg. In 1933, Franklin D.
- Roosevelt was elected President. Johnson greatly admired the president,
- who named him, at age 27, to head the National Youth Administration in
- Texas. In 1937, Johnson sought and won a Texas seat in Congress, where he
- mastered public works, reclamation, and public power programs. When war
- came to Europe he backed Roosevelt's efforts to aid the Allies. During
- World War II he served a brief tour of active duty with the U.S. Navy in
- the Pacific, but returned to Capitol Hill when Roosevelt recalled members
- of Congress from active duty. Johnson continued to support Roosevelt's
- military and foreign-policy programs. In 1953 he won the job of Senate
- Democratic leader. The next year he was easily reelected as senator and
- returned to Washington as majority leader, a post he held for the next 6
- years despite a serious heart attack in 1955.
-
- Barry Morris Goldwater, born in Phoenix, Arizona on January 1, 1909, was
- the unsuccessful Republican presidential candidate in 1964. Goldwater was
- elected to the Senate from Arizona in 1952. A firm conservative, he became
- a spokesman for right-wing Republicans in their campaign against big
- government, advocating instead greater state and local powers. He
- vigorously opposed federal welfare appropriations as socialistic and sought
- to curb public ownership of utilities. A strong anti-Communist, Goldwater
- supported American military intervention in Vietnam and criticized efforts
- to achieve detente with the USSR. He was decisively defeated by Lyndon
- Johnson in the 1964 presidential election. Goldwater served in the Senate
- until retirement in 1987.
-
- Each candidate won his nomination by a Presidential Convention, with the
- process of primary elections. There were no third-party candidates in this
- election.
-
- The main issue of this election was civil rights. Many people opposed
- Lyndon B. Johnson's laws, claiming them to be too "pro-black". Many
- liberals and blacks themselves believed that the laws didn't go far enough.
- Race riots broke out in a number of cities because of these conflicts.
-
- The winner of the election was Johnson, by a landslide. He brought in a
- popular vote total of 43,129,484, and an electoral vote total of 486.
- Goldwater, on the other hand, won a popular vote total of 27,178,188, and
- an electoral vote total of 52.
-
- The reason Johnson won the election of 1964, in my opinion is because of
- his prior term. He was able to regain control of the White House, after
- taking over for the assassinated John F. Kennedy. It was a time of
- equality and civil rights, and many people liked and agreed with where he
- stood on these issues.
-
- 1988
-
- The election of 1988 was a contest between George Bush, and Michael
- Dukakis. Bush was a Republican, while Dukakis was a Democrat.
-
- Born on June 12, 1924, in Milton, Massachusetts, to Dorothy Walker Bush,
- daughter of a wealthy investor, and Prescott Sheldon Bush, a banker and
- later Republican U.S. senator from Connecticut, George Bush grew up in the
- New York City suburb of Greenwich, Connecticut and attended Phillips
- Academy in Andover, Mass. During World War II he became the navy's
- youngest bomber pilot. Shot down over the Pacific island of Chichi Jima
- and rescued by a submarine, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross
- and three Air Medals. In 1945 he married Barbara Pierce and then
- matriculated at Yale University, where he majored in economics, was captain
- of the baseball team, and graduated with Phi Beta Kappa honors in 1948.
-
- Michael Stanley Dukakis, born in Brookline, Massachusetts, November 3,
- 1933, a three-term governor of Massachusetts, was the Democratic
- presidential candidate in 1988. The son of immigrants from Greece, Dukakis
- graduated from Swarthmore College and Harvard Law School. He was elected
- to the Massachusetts legislature in 1962, serving four terms. Elected
- governor of Massachusetts in 1974, Dukakis was denied re-nomination in
- 1978. Re-elected in 1982 and 1986, he claimed credit for part of the
- period's economic resurgence--the "Massachusetts miracle." The state's
- economy had soured when he declined to run again in 1990. Stressing
- "competence" over "ideology," Dukakis campaigned for the presidency in 1988
- in a manner that many observers found uninspiring. He and his running
- mate, Sen. Lloyd Bensten of Texas, lost to the Republican team, George Bush
- and Dan Quayle, by 46% to 54% of the popular vote. After leaving office as
- governor of Massachusetts, Dukakis declared that he planned to do some
- lecturing and teaching, as well as encouraging young people to enter public
- service.
-
- Each candidate in this election was elected by the process of primary
- elections, and nominated at their Presidential Convention. There were no
- third-party candidates in this election.
-
- The main issue of this election was taxes. Bush's promise of "no new
- taxes" won over the American public.
-
- Bush won the election with a popular vote total of 48,886,097, and an
- electoral vote of 426. Dukakis received a popular vote total of
- 41,809,074, and an electoral vote total of 111.
-
- The reason Bush won the election in my opinion was because of his promise
- of "no new taxes." The American people just came off of a "Regan High",
- with good economic times. People thought the things would remain like they
- did during the "Reagan Era" if they elected Bush.
-
- The most important election in my opinion of all of these was the
- election of 1812. America was heading into a war which we weren't prepared
- for. This was a crucial time for someone to take the reigns, and lead
- America into a situation in which we would come out on top. Madison was
- the right man for the job, at such a crucial time in American History.
-
-