РефератыИностранный языкPrPresidential Elections 2 Essay Research Paper 1812The

Presidential Elections 2 Essay Research Paper 1812The

Presidential Elections 2 Essay, Research Paper


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 s

ignificantly 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.

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