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1788–89 United States presidential election

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1788–89 United States presidential election

Presidential elections were held in the United States from December 15, 1788 to January 7, 1789, under the new Constitution ratified in 1788. George Washington was unanimously elected for the first of his two terms as president and John Adams became the first vice president. This was the only U . presidential election that spanned two calendar years without a contingent election and the first national presidential election in American history. Under the Articles of Confederation, which were ratified in 1781, the United States had no head of state. The executive function of government remained with the legislative similar to countries that use a parliamentary system. Federal power, strictly limited, was reserved to the Congress of the Confederation whose "President of the United States in Congress Assembled" was also chair of the Committee of the States which aimed to fulfill a function similar to that of the modern Cabinet. The Constitution created the offices of President and Vice President, fully separating these offices from Congress. The Constitution established an Electoral College, based on each state's congressional representation, in which each elector would cast two votes for two candidates, a procedure modified in 1804 by the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment. States had varying methods for choosing presidential electors. In five states, the state legislature chose electors. The other six chose electors through some form involving a popular vote, though in only two states did the choice depend directly on a statewide vote. The enormously popular Washington was distinguished as the former Commander of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War. After he agreed to come out of retirement, he was elected with ease unanimously; Washington did not select a running mate as that concept was not yet developed. No formal political parties existed, though an informally organized consistent difference of opinion had already manifested between Federalists and Anti-Federalists. Thus, the contest for the vice-presidency was open. Thomas Jefferson predicted that a popular Northern leader such as Governor John Hancock of Massachusetts or John Adams, a former minister to Great Britain who had represented Massachusetts in Congress, would be elected vice president. Anti-Federalists leaders such as Patrick Henry, who did not run, and George Clinton, who had opposed ratification of the Constitution, also represented potential choices. All 69 electors present cast one vote for Washington, making his election unanimous. Adams won 34 electoral votes and the vice presidency. The remaining 35 electoral votes were split among 10 candidates, including John Jay, who finished third with nine electoral votes. Three states were ineligible to participate in the election: New York's legislature did not choose electors on time, and North Carolina and Rhode Island had not yet ratified the constitution. Washington was inaugurated in New York City on April 30, 1789, 57 days after the First Congress convened.

Infobox

Turnout
11 %
Nominee
George Washington
Party
Independent
Home state
Virginia
Electoral vote
69
States carried
10
Popular vote
33,460
Percentage
100 %

Tables

· Results › Popular vote
Count
Count
Col 1
Count
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Percentage
Federalist electors
Federalist electors
Col 1
Federalist electors
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
26,299
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
78 %
Anti-Federalist electors
Anti-Federalist electors
Col 1
Anti-Federalist electors
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
7,161
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
21 %
Total
Total
Col 1
Total
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
33,460
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
100 %
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Count
Percentage
Federalist electors
26,299
78 %
Anti-Federalist electors
7,161
21 %
Total
33,460
100 %
· Results › Electoral vote
Count
Count
Presidential candidate
Count
Party
Percentage
George Washington
George Washington
Presidential candidate
George Washington
Party
Independent
Home state
Virginia
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
33,460
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
100 %
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
69
John Adams
John Adams
Presidential candidate
John Adams
Party
Federalist
Home state
Massachusetts
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
34
John Jay
John Jay
Presidential candidate
John Jay
Party
Federalist
Home state
New York
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
9
Robert H. Harrison
Robert H. Harrison
Presidential candidate
Robert H. Harrison
Party
Federalist
Home state
Maryland
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
6
John Rutledge
John Rutledge
Presidential candidate
John Rutledge
Party
Federalist
Home state
South Carolina
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
6
John Hancock
John Hancock
Presidential candidate
John Hancock
Party
Federalist
Home state
Massachusetts
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
4
George Clinton
George Clinton
Presidential candidate
George Clinton
Party
Anti-Federalist
Home state
New York
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
3
Samuel Huntington
Samuel Huntington
Presidential candidate
Samuel Huntington
Party
Federalist
Home state
Connecticut
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
2
John Milton
John Milton
Presidential candidate
John Milton
Party
Federalist
Home state
Georgia
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
2
James Armstrong(g)
James Armstrong(g)
Presidential candidate
James Armstrong(g)
Party
Federalist
Home state
Georgia(g)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
1
Benjamin Lincoln
Benjamin Lincoln
Presidential candidate
Benjamin Lincoln
Party
Federalist
Home state
Massachusetts
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
1
Edward Telfair
Edward Telfair
Presidential candidate
Edward Telfair
Party
Federalist
Home state
Georgia
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
1
Total
Total
Presidential candidate
Total
Party
33,460
Home state
100 %
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
69
Needed to win
Needed to win
Presidential candidate
Needed to win
Party
35
Presidential candidate
Party
Home state
Popular vote(a), (b), (c)
Electoral vote(d), (e), (f)
Count
Percentage
George Washington
Independent
Virginia
33,460
100 %
69
John Adams
Federalist
Massachusetts
34
John Jay
Federalist
New York
9
Robert H. Harrison
Federalist
Maryland
6
John Rutledge
Federalist
South Carolina
6
John Hancock
Federalist
Massachusetts
4
George Clinton
Anti-Federalist
New York
3
Samuel Huntington
Federalist
Connecticut
2
John Milton
Federalist
Georgia
2
James Armstrong(g)
Federalist
Georgia(g)
1
Benjamin Lincoln
Federalist
Massachusetts
1
Edward Telfair
Federalist
Georgia
1
Total
33,460
100 %
69
Needed to win
35
· Results › Results by state › Popular vote
Votes
Votes
State
Votes
E .
%
George Washington Federalist
E .
George Washington Federalist
Votes
George Washington Federalist
%
George Washington Anti-Federalist
E .
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Votes
George Washington Anti-Federalist
%
Connecticut
Connecticut
State
Connecticut
E .
7
George Washington Federalist
7
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Delaware
Delaware
State
Delaware
E .
3
George Washington Federalist
685
George Washington Federalist
100
George Washington Federalist
3
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
685
Margin
100
Margin
685
Georgia
Georgia
State
Georgia
E .
5
George Washington Federalist
5
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Maryland
Maryland
State
Maryland
E .
8
George Washington Federalist
5,937
George Washington Federalist
70
George Washington Federalist
8
George Washington Anti-Federalist
2,535
George Washington Anti-Federalist
29
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Margin
3,402
Margin
40
Total
8,472
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
State
Massachusetts
E .
10
George Washington Federalist
6,560
George Washington Federalist
78
George Washington Federalist
10
George Washington Anti-Federalist
1,843
George Washington Anti-Federalist
21
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Margin
4,717
Margin
56
Total
8,403
New Hampshire
New Hampshire
State
New Hampshire
E .
5
George Washington Federalist
1,759
George Washington Federalist
92
George Washington Federalist
5
George Washington Anti-Federalist
134
George Washington Anti-Federalist
7
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Margin
1,625
Margin
85
Total
1,893
New Jersey
New Jersey
State
New Jersey
E .
6
George Washington Federalist
6
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
New York
New York
State
New York
E .
8
George Washington Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
State
Pennsylvania
E .
10
George Washington Federalist
6,718
George Washington Federalist
88
George Washington Federalist
10
George Washington Anti-Federalist
912
George Washington Anti-Federalist
11
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Margin
5,806
Margin
76
Total
7,630
South Carolina
South Carolina
State
South Carolina
E .
7
George Washington Federalist
7
George Washington Anti-Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Virginia
Virginia
State
Virginia
E .
12
George Washington Federalist
4,640
George Washington Federalist
72
George Washington Federalist
8
George Washington Anti-Federalist
1,737
George Washington Anti-Federalist
27
George Washington Anti-Federalist
3
Margin
2,903
Margin
45
Total
6,377
TOTAL
TOTAL
State
TOTAL
E .
81
George Washington Federalist
26,299
George Washington Federalist
78
George Washington Federalist
69
George Washington Anti-Federalist
7,161
George Washington Anti-Federalist
21
George Washington Anti-Federalist
3
Margin
19,138
Margin
57
Total
33,460
State
E .
George Washington Federalist
George Washington Anti-Federalist
Margin
Total
Cit.
Votes
%
E .
Votes
%
E .
Votes
%
Connecticut
7
7
Delaware
3
685
100
3
685
100
685
Georgia
5
5
Maryland
8
5,937
70
8
2,535
29
3,402
40
8,472
Massachusetts
10
6,560
78
10
1,843
21
4,717
56
8,403
New Hampshire
5
1,759
92
5
134
7
1,625
85
1,893
New Jersey
6
6
New York
8
Pennsylvania
10
6,718
88
10
912
11
5,806
76
7,630
South Carolina
7
7
Virginia
12
4,640
72
8
1,737
27
3
2,903
45
6,377
TOTAL
81
26,299
78
69
7,161
21
3
19,138
57
33,460
· Results › Results by state › Electoral vote
Connecticut
Connecticut
State
Connecticut
E
7
EV
14
GWTooltip George Washington
7
JAdTooltip John Adams
5
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
2
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
Delaware
Delaware
State
Delaware
E
3
EV
6
GWTooltip George Washington
3
JAdTooltip John Adams
JJTooltip John Jay
3
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
Georgia
Georgia
State
Georgia
E
5
EV
10
GWTooltip George Washington
5
JAdTooltip John Adams
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
2
Maryland
Maryland
State
Maryland
E
8
EV
16
GWTooltip George Washington
6
JAdTooltip John Adams
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
6
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
State
Massachusetts
E
10
EV
20
GWTooltip George Washington
10
JAdTooltip John Adams
10
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
New Hampshire
New Hampshire
State
New Hampshire
E
5
EV
10
GWTooltip George Washington
5
JAdTooltip John Adams
5
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
New Jersey
New Jersey
State
New Jersey
E
6
EV
12
GWTooltip George Washington
6
JAdTooltip John Adams
1
JJTooltip John Jay
5
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
New York
New York
State
New York
E
8
EV
16
GWTooltip George Washington
JAdTooltip John Adams
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
State
Pennsylvania
E
10
EV
20
GWTooltip George Washington
10
JAdTooltip John Adams
8
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
2
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
South Carolina
South Carolina
State
South Carolina
E
7
EV
14
GWTooltip George Washington
7
JAdTooltip John Adams
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
6
JHTooltip John Hancock
1
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
Virginia
Virginia
State
Virginia
E
12
EV
24
GWTooltip George Washington
10
JAdTooltip John Adams
5
JJTooltip John Jay
1
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
1
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
3
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
TOTAL
TOTAL
State
TOTAL
E
81
EV
162
GWTooltip George Washington
69
JAdTooltip John Adams
34
JJTooltip John Jay
9
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
6
JRTooltip John Rutledge
6
JHTooltip John Hancock
4
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
3
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
2
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
2
TO WIN
TO WIN
State
TO WIN
E
37
EV
37
State
E
EV
GWTooltip George Washington
JAdTooltip John Adams
JJTooltip John Jay
RHTooltip Robert H. Harrison
JRTooltip John Rutledge
JHTooltip John Hancock
GCTooltip George Clinton (vice president)
SHTooltip Samuel Huntington (statesman)
JMTooltip John Milton (Georgia politician)
Connecticut
7
14
7
5
2
Delaware
3
6
3
3
Georgia
5
10
5
2
Maryland
8
16
6
6
Massachusetts
10
20
10
10
New Hampshire
5
10
5
5
New Jersey
6
12
6
1
5
New York
8
16
Pennsylvania
10
20
10
8
2
South Carolina
7
14
7
6
1
Virginia
12
24
10
5
1
1
3
TOTAL
81
162
69
34
9
6
6
4
3
2
2
TO WIN
37
37
· Electoral college selection
electors appointed by state legislature
electors appointed by state legislature
Method of choosing electors
electors appointed by state legislature
State(s)
Connecticut Georgia New Jersey New York(a) South Carolina
two electors appointed by state legislature each remaining elector chosen by state legislature from the two most popular candidates in each U . House district
two electors appointed by state legislature each remaining elector chosen by state legislature from the two most popular candidates in each U . House district
Method of choosing electors
two electors appointed by state legislature each remaining elector chosen by state legislature from the two most popular candidates in each U . House district
State(s)
Massachusetts
each elector chosen by voters statewide; however, if no candidate wins a majority, state legislature appoints electors from top ten candidates
each elector chosen by voters statewide; however, if no candidate wins a majority, state legislature appoints electors from top ten candidates
Method of choosing electors
each elector chosen by voters statewide; however, if no candidate wins a majority, state legislature appoints electors from top ten candidates
State(s)
New Hampshire
state divided into electoral districts, with one elector chosen per district by the voters of that district
state divided into electoral districts, with one elector chosen per district by the voters of that district
Method of choosing electors
state divided into electoral districts, with one elector chosen per district by the voters of that district
State(s)
Virginia(b) Delaware
electors chosen at large by voters
electors chosen at large by voters
Method of choosing electors
electors chosen at large by voters
State(s)
Maryland Pennsylvania
state had not yet ratified the Constitution
state had not yet ratified the Constitution
Method of choosing electors
state had not yet ratified the Constitution
State(s)
North Carolina Rhode Island
Method of choosing electors
State(s)
electors appointed by state legislature
Connecticut Georgia New Jersey New York(a) South Carolina
two electors appointed by state legislature each remaining elector chosen by state legislature from the two most popular candidates in each U . House district
Massachusetts
each elector chosen by voters statewide; however, if no candidate wins a majority, state legislature appoints electors from top ten candidates
New Hampshire
state divided into electoral districts, with one elector chosen per district by the voters of that district
Virginia(b) Delaware
electors chosen at large by voters
Maryland Pennsylvania
state had not yet ratified the Constitution
North Carolina Rhode Island

References

  1. 73 total electors were appointed, four of which did not vote (2 in Maryland and 2 in Virginia). According to the unamend
  2. Electors voted for two candidates; percentages are calculated as a share of the total number of electors.
  3. Two electors from Maryland did not vote.
  4. The New York State Legislature failed to appoint electors.
  5. One elector from Virginia did not vote. No elector was chosen from Virginia's 9th electoral district.
  6. One elector from Virginia did not vote. No elector was chosen from Virginia's 9th electoral district.
  7. New York had ratified the Constitution but its legislature failed to appoint presidential electors on time, while North
  8. United States Election Project
    http://www.electproject.org/national-1789-present
  9. See "Alternative methods for choosing electors" under Electoral College.
  10. Alexander Hamilton: Documents Decoded
    https://books.google.com/books?id=pBnHEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA174
  11. Meacham 2012.
  12. Ratification: The People Debate the Constitution, 1787–1788
    https://archive.org/details/ratificationpeop0000maie/page/429/mode/2up
  13. Stephens, Frank Fletcher. The transitional period, 1788-1789, in the government of the United States, University of Miss
    https://archive.org/details/peri00steptransitionalrich/page/66/mode/2up
  14. George Washington's Mount Vernon
    https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/accepting-the-presidency/
  15. history
    https://history.house.gov/Historical-Highlights/1700s/A-Saturday-session-in-the-First-Congress/
  16. Chernow, 272–273.
  17. www
    https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/generic/VP_George_Clinton.htm
  18. New Georgia Encyclopedia
    https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/government-politics/edward-telfair-1735-1807/
  19. "A New Nation Votes"
    https://elections.lib.tufts.edu/?utf8=%E2%9C%93&f%5Belection_type_sim%5D%5B%5D=General&f%5Boffice_id_ssim%5D%5B%5D=ON056&range%5Bdate_sim%5D%5Bbegin%5D=1820&range%5Bdate_sim%5D%5Bend%5D=1820&q=1789&search_field=all_fields&commit=search
  20. A Statistical History of the American Presidential Elections
    https://archive.org/details/statisticalhisto00pete
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