U.S. presidential election, 1800



         


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Summary

The election of 1800 is often considered a realigning election.

The flaws incumbent in the electoral college were brought into full focus in this election. Under the United States Constitution, each presidential elector cast two votes, without distinction as to which was for President or for Vice President. The recipient of the greatest number of votes was elected President, while the Vice Presidency went to the recipient of the second greatest number of votes.

Though incumbent president John Adams was opposed once again by 1796 opponent Thomas Jefferson, it was Jefferson's running mate, Aaron Burr, who caused the nation's first constitutional crisis. Electors, intending to cast their votes for a Jefferson-Burr ticket, each cast their two votes for Jefferson and Burr, giving each of them 73 votes - a tie.

And while it was common knowledge that Jefferson was the candidate for President and Burr for Vice President, the dominant Federalists were loathe to vote for Jefferson, their partisan nemesis. Adding to the situation was that the ever-opportunistic Burr now was in fact vying for the Presidency in his own right.

The election went to the United States House of Representatives, which over the course of the next six days cast a total of 35 ballots, with Thomas Jefferson receiving the votes of 8 state delegations each time - one short of the necessary majority of nine. Finally, a group of Delaware Federalists led by James A. Bayard reasoned that a peaceful transfer of power would require the majority to choose Jefferson, and on February 17, 1801 - just 15 days before inauguration - Thomas Jefferson was elected President on the 36th ballot. 10 state delegations voted for Jefferson and 4 voted for Burr, while two state delegations remained deadlocked.

Jefferson's victory ended America's most acrimonious presidential campaign to date and brought to the forefront a serious constitutional crisis. As a result of the problems arising from the election, and to a lessert extent from the election of 1796, the Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution was ratified in 1804, providing that electors make a distinct choice between their selections for President and Vice President.

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Election Results

Presidential CandidatePartyStatePopular Vote:Electoral Vote:
Thomas JeffersonDemocratic-RepublicanVirginiaUnknown73
Aaron BurrDemocratic-RepublicanNew YorkUnknown73
John AdamsFederalistMassachusettsUnknown65
Charles Cotesworth PinckneyFederalistSouth CarolinaUnknown64
John JayNoneNew YorkUnknown1
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U.S. presidential elections

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