Tennessee was admitted into the United States after the 1792 election, increasing the
Electoral College to 138 electors. Under the system in place before the 1804 ratification of the
Twelfth Amendment, electors were to cast votes for two persons for president; the runner-up in the presidential race was elected vice president. If no candidate won votes from a majority of the Electoral College, the
House of Representatives would hold a
contingent election to select the winner. Each party intended to manipulate the results by having some of their electors cast one vote for the intended presidential candidate and one vote for someone besides the intended vice-presidential candidate, leaving their vice-presidential candidate a few votes shy of their presidential candidate. But all electoral votes were cast on the same day, and communications between states were extremely slow at that time, making it very difficult to coordinate which electors were to manipulate their vote for vice president. Additionally, there were rumors that Hamilton had coerced southern electors pledged to Jefferson to give their second vote to Pinckney in hope of electing him president instead of Adams. Campaigning centered in the
swing states of New York and
Pennsylvania. Adams and Jefferson won a combined 139 electoral votes from the 138 members of the Electoral College. The Federalists swept every state north of the
Mason–Dixon line except Pennsylvania, though one Pennsylvania elector voted for Adams. The Democratic-Republicans won the votes of most
Southern electors, but the electors of
Maryland and
Delaware gave a majority of their votes to Federalist candidates, while North Carolina and Virginia each gave Adams one electoral vote. Nationwide, most electors voted for Adams and a second Federalist or for Jefferson and a second Democratic-Republican, but there were several exceptions to this. One elector in Maryland voted for both Adams and Jefferson, and two electors cast votes for Washington, who had not campaigned and was not formally affiliated with either party. Pinckney won the second votes from most of the electors who voted for Adams, but 21 electors from
New England and Maryland cast their second votes for other candidates, including Chief Justice
Oliver Ellsworth. Those who voted for Jefferson were significantly less united in their second choice, though Burr won a plurality of the Jefferson electors. All eight electors in Pinckney's home state of South Carolina, as well as at least one Pennsylvania elector, cast their ballots for Jefferson and Pinckney. In North Carolina, Jefferson won 11 votes, but the remaining 13 were spread among six different candidates from both parties. In Virginia, most electors voted for Jefferson and Governor
Samuel Adams of Massachusetts. Congress counted the electoral results on February 8, 1797, with John Adams opening and reading the votes in his role as
President of the Senate. Although some contemporary newspapers contested the legal validity of Vermont's electoral votes, no objections against them were raised in congress.
Source (Popular Vote): A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825
Source (Electoral Vote): (a)
Votes for Federalist electors have been assigned to John Adams and votes for Democratic-Republican electors have been assigned to Thomas Jefferson.(b)
Only 9 of the 16 states used any form of popular vote.(c)
Those states that did choose electors by popular vote had widely varying restrictions on suffrage via property requirements. Electoral votes by state As per the terms of the unamended constitution, each elector was permitted two votes for president, with a majority of "the whole number of electors appointed" necessary to elect a president. Of the 138 participating electors, 70 voted for Adams and some other candidate and 67 voted for Jefferson and some other candidate; one elector from Maryland voted for both Adams and Jefferson, bringing their respective totals to 71 and 68. With both parties' electors divided on their choice of a vice president, Jefferson finished second in the electoral vote ahead of Adams' intended running mate, Thomas Pinckney of South Carolina, making him vice president-elect.
Source: A New Nation Votes: American Election Returns 1787-1825 Popular vote by state Compiling reliable popular vote statistics for elections of the
First Party System poses a challenge to historians. Election procedures of the late 18th century differed greatly from those of later campaigns: rather than vote for a presidential candidate, voters chose from candidates running to represent their state in the
electoral college. Candidates for elector did not always advertise a party preference or even for whom they intended to vote; in some districts, candidates from the same party were in direct competition, while in others, inconsistent support for all candidates of a party led states to split their electoral votes. These conditions make it difficult or impossible to determine voter intent in some cases. Moreover, some states' returns have not survived to the present day, meaning that national popular vote totals in this article are necessarily incomplete. The table below calculates each state's popular vote by comparing the vote for the most popular Adams elector to that for the most popular Jefferson elector. In Massachusetts, the best performing elector candidates for the First Western and Second Middle Districts,
Simon Larned and
James Winthrop respectively, were not selected by the
Massachusetts General Court to be electors. Larned was a Democratic-Republican and Winthrop was a former Anti-Federalist. The totals for Massachusetts and Virginia appear to be incomplete. In several states candidates of unknown affiliation received votes.
Sources: A New Nation Votes; Dubin, p. 6-8.
Maps File:1796 Presidential County Results.svg|Map of presidential election results by county, shaded according to the vote share of the highest result for an elector of any given party File:1796 United States presidential election by electoral district.svg|Map of presidential election results by electoral district, shaded according to the vote share of the highest result for an elector of any given party. Electoral boundaries and data for Kentucky, Massachusetts, and North Carolina could not be found
Close states States where the margin of victory was under 1% (15 electoral votes): •
Pennsylvania, 0.4% (89 votes) States where the margin of victory was under 5% (11 electoral votes): •
Maryland, 4.0% (539 votes) ==Consequences==