1836 United States elections explained

Year:1836
Type:Presidential election year
Incumbent President:Andrew Jackson (Democratic)
Next Congress:25th
President Control:Democratic hold
President Candidate1:Martin Van Buren (D)
Electoral Vote1:170
President Candidate2:William Henry Harrison (W)
Electoral Vote2:73
President Candidate3:Hugh Lawson White (W)
Electoral Vote3:26
President Candidates Other:Others
Electoral Vote Other:25
President Pv Margin:Democratic +14.2%[1]
President Map Caption:1836 presidential election results. Blue denotes states won by Van Buren, Yellow denotes states won by Harrison, purple denotes states won by White, coral pink denotes states won by Webster, and bluegrass green denotes states won by Mangum. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes allotted to each state.
Senate Control:Democratic hold
Senate Seats Contested:17 of 52 seats[2]
Senate Net Change:Democratic +3[3]
House Control:Democratic hold
House Seats Contested:All 242 voting members
House Net Change:Whig +25

The 1836 United States elections elected the members of the 25th United States Congress. The election saw the emergence of the Whig Party, which succeeded the National Republican Party in the Second Party System as the primary opposition to the Democratic Party. The Whigs chose their name in symbolic defiance to the leader of the Democratic Party, "King" Andrew Jackson, and supported a national bank and the American System. Despite the emergence of the Whigs as a durable political party, Democrats retained the presidency and a majority in both houses of Congress.

In the presidential election, the Whigs ran multiple candidates designed to deny the Democratic candidate a majority of the electoral vote, and carried a scattering of states in the South, West, and Northeast. However, Democratic Vice President Martin Van Buren still took a majority of the popular and electoral vote, defeating Whig candidates William Henry Harrison of Ohio, Hugh Lawson White of Tennessee, Daniel Webster of Massachusetts, and Willie Person Mangum of North Carolina.[4] Virginia's electors refused to vote for Richard Mentor Johnson, Van Buren's running mate, leaving Johnson short of a majority of electoral votes for vice president. The Senate elected Johnson in a contingent election, the only time the Senate has ever chosen the vice president. Van Buren was the last sitting vice president to win election as president until George H. W. Bush's election in 1988; this is also the most recent election in which a Democrat was elected to the U.S. presidency succeeding a Democrat who had served two terms as U.S. president.[5]

In the House, Whigs won moderate gains, but Democrats retained a solid majority in the chamber.[6]

In the Senate, Democrats gained many seats, boosting their majority.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Van Buren won by a popular vote margin of 14.2 percent over Harrison. He won by a popular vote margin of 1.7 percent over the combined popular vote total of all the Whig candidates.
  2. Not counting special elections.
  3. Congressional seat gain figures only reflect the results of the regularly-scheduled elections, and do not take special elections into account.
  4. Web site: 1836 Presidential Election. The American Presidency Project. 25 June 2014.
  5. https://www.thoughtco.com/two-consecutive-democratic-presidents-3368109 Last Time Consecutive Democratic Presidents Were Elected
  6. Web site: Party Divisions of the House of Representatives. United States House of Representatives. 25 June 2014.
  7. Web site: Party Division in the Senate, 1789–Present. United States Senate. 25 June 2014.