Liberty's election rankings (user search)
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Author Topic: Liberty's election rankings  (Read 14660 times)
jimrtex
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« on: July 02, 2004, 06:34:25 AM »

In 39th Place: 1792
Unique for being one of two unanimous elections (along with 1789). It also featured the first political race for an executive office: Adams versus Clinton for the office of VP (Adams won 77-50). It didn't have the newness of 1789, but it was still exciting any time the country got a chance to elect 'Father of our Country' Washington president.
Only election in which an elector voted for two persons from the same State.  The 4 Kentucky electors voted for George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, both of Virginia.  Even under the terms of the 12th Amendment, the constitutional impediment is for an elector casting both his votes for someone from the elector's State.  Maybe the newly admitted Kentuckians wanted to emphasize that they were no longer part of Virginia.
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jimrtex
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Posts: 11,817
Marshall Islands


« Reply #1 on: July 02, 2004, 06:49:44 AM »

In 36th Place: 1920
The first election women could vote in
All 48 States.  There may have been a grandmother or two who was casting her 8th presidential vote, who was accompanied by a grandaughter who was voting for the first time.
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jimrtex
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Posts: 11,817
Marshall Islands


« Reply #2 on: July 06, 2004, 02:09:41 AM »

Now all we have left are 1800, 1824, 1876, 1916, 1948, 1960, 1968, 1976, and 2000
I say he picks 1824 since it led to the almost universal adoption of popular election of electors.  1800 might get a nod because it resulted in a constitutional amendment, but it is pretty quirky to have a tie between members of the same party to lead to such controversy.  1916, 1948, 1960, and 1976 will be the next out.  1916 is interesting because the EV map looks like that for 2000.
1968 gets 5th, 1876 and 2000 a tie for 3rd.
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jimrtex
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Posts: 11,817
Marshall Islands


« Reply #3 on: July 11, 2004, 08:52:06 PM »

In 39th Place: 1792
Unique for being one of two unanimous elections (along with 1789). It also featured the first political race for an executive office: Adams versus Clinton for the office of VP (Adams won 77-50). It didn't have the newness of 1789, but it was still exciting any time the country got a chance to elect 'Father of our Country' Washington president.
Only election in which an elector voted for two persons from the same State.  The 4 Kentucky electors voted for George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, both of Virginia.  Even under the terms of the 12th Amendment, the constitutional impediment is for an elector casting both his votes for someone from the elector's State.  Maybe the newly admitted Kentuckians wanted to emphasize that they were no longer part of Virginia.
While in 1789, Georgia's electors misinterpreted the Constitution and believed that they were two vote for two people exactly one of which was not to be from Georgia.
Now, if that were the rule, presidential history would look a good bit different...
But only 3 of the 5 2nd (non-Washington) votes were for Georgians.   Massachusetts (10 of 10), Connecticut (2 of 7), Maryland (6 of 6 voting), and South Carolina (6 of 7) also went for a favorite son.
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jimrtex
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Posts: 11,817
Marshall Islands


« Reply #4 on: July 13, 2004, 01:25:58 AM »

But only 3 of the 5 2nd (non-Washington) votes were for Georgians.   Massachusetts (10 of 10), Connecticut (2 of 7), Maryland (6 of 6 voting), and South Carolina (6 of 7) also went for a favorite son.
Hmmm...so maybe that's a legend thought up to explain why Georgia's electoral vote went to unknown guys who received no votes from elsewhere...as opposed to the MA, CT and SC favorite sons you're referring to...
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Maybe it is because Milton and Telfair are particularly obscure.
Samuel Huntingdon (CT) is not particularly well known, though he was the first person to be a member of Congress when an electoral vote was counted for him.   Robert Harrison (MD) was nothing except chief justice of Maryland - unless he was related to the Virginia's Benjamin Harrison (father of William Henry and GGfather of Benjamin).  John Adams (MA) and John Rutledge (SC) were more widely known.
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