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  1. In the election of 1824, only 18 of the 24 states held a popular vote, but by the election of 1828, 22 of the 24 states held a popular vote. Minor candidates are excluded if they received fewer than 100,000 votes, or less than .1% of the vote in their election year.

  2. This is a list of ruling political parties by country, in the form of a table with a link to an overview of political parties in each country and showing which party system is dominant in each country.

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  4. Third-party and independent candidates (1832–present) This list includes the statewide performance of third-party candidates not included in the lists above who accrued 5% or more of a state's popular vote. Many third-party candidates have run under different affiliations in different states.

    • Candidates
    • Results
    • Consequences
    • Electoral College Selection
    • See Also
    • Primary Sources
    • Further Reading
    • External Links

    With the retirement of Washington after two terms, both parties sought the presidency for the first time. Before the ratification of the 12th Amendmentin 1804, each elector was to vote for two persons, but was not able to indicate which vote was for president and which was for vice president. Instead, the recipient of the most electoral votes would...

    Tennessee was admitted into the United States after the 1792 election, increasing the Electoral Collegeto 138 electors. Under the system in place prior to the 1804 ratification of the Twelfth Amendment, electors were to cast votes for two persons for president; the runner-up in the presidential race was elected vice-president. If no candidate won v...

    The following four years would be the only time (as of 2021) that the president and vice-president were from different parties. While John Quincy Adams and John C. Calhoun would later be elected president and vice-president as political opponents, they were both Democratic-Republican party candidates, and while Andrew Johnson, Abraham Lincoln's sec...

    The Constitution, in Article II, Section 1, provided that the state legislatures should decide the manner in which their Electors were chosen. Different state legislatures chose different methods:

    Cunningham, Noble E., Jr. ed. The Making of the American Party System 1789 to 1809(1965), short excerpts from primary sources
    Cunningham, Noble E., Jr., ed. Circular Letters of Congressmen to Their Constituents 1789-1829(1978), 3 vol; political reports sent by Congressmen to local newspapers
    Encyclopedia of the New American Nation, 1754–1829 ed. by Paul Finkelman(2005), 1600 pp.
    The North Carolina Electoral Vote: The People and the Process Behind the Vote. Raleigh, North Carolina: North Carolina Secretary of State. 1988.
    Chambers, William Nisbet, ed. The First Party System(1972)
    United States presidential election of 1796 at the Encyclopædia Britannica
    Election of 1796 in Counting the Votes Archived January 13, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  5. The following is a table of United States presidential election results by state. They are indirect elections in which voters in each state cast ballots for a slate of electors of the U.S. Electoral College who pledge to vote for a specific political party's nominee for president.

  6. On February 9, 1825, the House voted (with each state delegation casting one vote) to elect John Quincy Adams as president, ultimately giving the election to him. [2] [3] The Democratic-Republican Party had won six consecutive presidential elections and by 1824 was the only national political party.

  7. California voters chose electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote, pitting the Republican Party's nominee, incumbent President Donald Trump, and running mate Vice President Mike Pence against Democratic Party nominee, former