Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Election of 1824 (Encore)
Episode Date: December 30, 2020Many people think that politics and elections in the United States are the most controversial they have ever been. History, however, begs to differ. Perhaps the oddest and most controversial president...ial election in American history was the election of 1824. It is an election that doesn’t get a lot of attention given who won and the lack of major issues at stake, but it is one that more people should be familiar with. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is an encore presentation of Everything Everywhere Daily.
I'll be back again on January 1st with brand new episodes.
Many people think that politics and elections in the United States are the most controversial
they've ever been. History, however, begs to differ.
Perhaps the oddest and most controversial presidential election in American history
was the election of 1824.
It is an election that doesn't get a lot of attention, given who won and the lack of major
issues at stake, but it is one which more people should be familiar with.
Learn more about the election of 1824 and the end of the era of good feelings on this episode of Everything Everywhere daily.
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Every week on Conspiratuality Podcast, we explore the fever dreams that suck friends, family, and well,
wellness gurus down the right-wing cult spiral in a search for salvation.
This episode is sponsored by audible.com.
My audiobook recommendation for today is the birth of modern politics, Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, and the election of 1828 by Lynn Hudson-Parson.
The election of 1824 set the table for the election of 1828, which ushered in Jacksonian reforms and a complete change in American politics.
If the election of 1824 was the last election of the old order, 1828 was the first election of a new order.
You can get a free one-month trial to Audible and two free audiobooks by going to Audibletrial.com slash everything everywhere, or by clicking on the link in the show notes.
To understand the election of 1824, you first have to understand the election of 1820.
In 1820, President James Monroe ran for president and defeated, no one.
He ran completely unopposed.
He won every state and 98.5% of the Electoral College and didn't get 100% only because one elector from Maine didn't like him.
At this time, the United States was a one-party state.
Not in the way that North Korea is a one-party state, but the opposition federalist party fell apart after the war of 1812, leaving the Democratic Republican Party as the only viable national political party in the country.
The period of time in American history was known as the era of good feeling.
It is mostly glossed over in history books as there were no major wars, controversies, or other major issues.
Basically, it was an era of good feeling because domestic politics were peaceful because there was only one party.
In the lead up to the election of 1824, Monroe decided not to run for president, keeping with the Washingtonian tradition of presidents only having two terms.
Monroe's vice president, Daniel Tompkins, had been dismissed as a serious presidential candidate due to health and financial issues.
Back then, there were no presidential primaries, and in fact, there weren't even really elections.
At this period in history, parties chose their nominees for president and vice president via a congressional nominating caucus.
The Democratic Republican nominating caucus overwhelmingly nominated William H. Crawford of Georgia to be their nominee.
He received 64 of the 69 votes in Congress.
You'd think that if there was only one political party, and that party nominated you for president,
you'd have a pretty good chance at being elected.
Yet, there was never a President Crawford.
However, the states didn't really like or honor the results of the nominating caucus.
They thought the process was very undemocratic.
The states went ahead and nominated their own candidates for president,
and this is where the problem starts.
A sign note, the election of 1824 was the last time there was a congressional nominating caucus.
It was replaced by presidential nominating conventions, which are still in place today.
There were four different people nominated by state nominating conventions.
Each candidate was nominated by at least one state, and they were, the aforementioned William Crawford of Georgia, who is the sitting secretary of the treasury,
Speaker of the House, Henry Clay of Kentucky, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams, and Tennessee Senator and former General, Andrew Jackson.
Jackson wasn't even seeking the nomination.
His plan was to retire to his estate, the hermitage, but he was recruited by the Tennessee State Legislature.
I should note that all four men were members of the same political party.
Unlike other presidential elections, this election wasn't driven so much by differences in policy as geography.
Also, both Adams and Jackson picked the same person for vice president, John C. Calhoun.
So far, I think you'd agree that this election is shaping up to be very different.
As I go through the actual election results, it'll get only weirder.
As I'm sure you know, the United States doesn't select its president via a popular vote.
They do so through the Electoral College.
In the early United States, electors to the Electoral College were chosen by state legislatures.
In 1824, many states still didn't have a popular vote for determining their electoral college votes.
Six states, Delaware, Georgia, Louisiana, New York, South Carolina, and Vermont didn't use a popular vote to select their electors.
Moreover, not every candidate was on the ballot in every state that did have a popular vote.
Adams was left off the ballot in two states, Crawford in four, Jackson in five, and Clay was left
off the ballot in nine states. The election was almost designed to be a confusing mess.
All four candidates won at least three different states. In 1824, there were 261 total
electoral votes, which meant you needed 131 votes to win.
no one reached the 131 number to win in the Electoral College.
Jackson received 99 votes, Adams 84, Crawford 40, and Clay 38.
This was the only election in United States history where no one received a majority in the Electoral College.
While John C. Calhoun clearly won the vice presidency, with 182 votes, even the vice presidential election was weird.
Six different people received votes for vice president under the Crawford ticket.
Andrew Jackson received votes for vice president.
Vice President under the ticket of all three other candidates.
According to the 12th Amendment to the Constitution passed in 1804, if no candidate wins a majority
in the Electoral College, then the election will be sent to the House of Representatives
where each delegation will receive one vote. The top three candidates with the most votes
in the Electoral College will be eligible for election by the House. At the time, there were 24
states, which meant that 13 states were required to win a majority.
This meant that Henry Clay was out as he came in last with 38 electoral votes.
Henry Clay, however, as I noted above, was the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
the very body which was now charged with electing the president.
And Henry Clay hated Andrew Jackson.
He was quoted as saying,
I cannot believe that killing 2,500 Englishmen at New Orleans
qualifies for the various difficult and complicated duties of the chief magistrate.
unquote. The problem was, at least at first glance, no one was set to get 13 states to vote for them.
Clay's policy views were closest to Adams. Adams was a good secretary of state, probably the best in
U.S. history, and Clay viewed him as the least worst option. Crawford's views were further away,
and Crawford also had health issues. Jackson just assumed that because he had the most electoral
votes and the most popular votes, that he would naturally win. The Kentucky state legislature had a
non-binding vote which recommended Jackson for president. Clay, however, cajoled the Kentucky
and Ohio delegations, both states who voted for Clay in the Electoral College, and where Jackson
was the runner-up, to put their support behind Adams. On February 5th, 1825, the House voted, and
John Quincy Adams won the first ballot with exactly 13 states. Jackson won seven and Crawford
four. Andrew Jackson was shocked and livid at the results. He figured that because he had won the
plurality, he should have been elected president. Adams appointed Henry Clay as his
Secretary of State, which at the time was considered selecting an heir apparent. The last four
presidents, Adams, Monroe, Madison, and Jefferson had all served as Secretary of State.
The way this played out didn't sit well with a lot of people. Clay's appointment as Secretary of
State and his role as Speaker of the House in getting Adams elected was called a corrupt
bargain. The 1824 election immediately set the groundwork for the 1828 election. Andrew Jackson,
Martin Van Buren, and even Adams' VP, John C. Calhoun, went on to lay the foundations of a new
Democratic Party, which was the genesis of the political party with the same name today. Jackson
beat Adams for the presidency in the next election, building a party structure from which modern
politics was based. John Quincy Adams, despite his brilliance as a Secretary of State, was a rather
mediocre president, something which he himself later admitted. In most historical rankings of
presidents, he usually ranks on the second quartile, which is good, but not great. I should close
on this note. I previously did an episode about the election of 1960, and how Nixon actually won
the popular vote, and there should be six elections listed, not five, where the popular vote
winner didn't win the election. By the same token, there is an argument for removing the election
of 1824 from that list. Yes, why,
While Andrew Jackson did get more popular votes than any other candidate, a full quarter of the states didn't even have a popular vote, and the largest state in the Union at that time, New York, went for Adams but didn't have a popular vote.
As it stands, however, in a four-way race and a quarter of the states not even having a popular vote, at 30.9 percent, John Quincy Adams remains the president who was elected with the lowest percentage of the popular vote and one of only two presidents elected with under 40 percent of the popular vote.
That other president?
Abraham Lincoln.
Executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is James Mackala.
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