Campaign Jackson rode into office in 1828 on the strength of a coalition that included southern opponents of the
Tariff of 1828, western advocates of
internal improvements, many former
Democratic-Republicans, and some former
Federalists. Henry Clay predicted this unwieldy marriage of disparate and in many cases hostile interests would soon collapse under the pressures of office. Clay determined to split the Jacksonian party on the issue of the
American System by engineering a
confrontation over the
Second Bank of the United States. He persuaded the president of the bank,
Nicholas Biddle, to request recharter a full four years early in order to coincide with the presidential election. As expected, Jackson vetoed the recharter bill and issued a stinging veto message criticizing the bank's interference in national politics. Clay predicted the president's hostility to the nationalist economic program would prove unpopular with voters, particularly in Pennsylvania where the bank was headquartered, and hand the Anti-Jacksonians victory at the polls. Simultaneously, Jackson faced defections from the southern wing of his party over the
Nullification Crisis. These southerners objected strongly to the tariff and argued for the right of the states to nullify unfriendly federal laws, a position Jackson refused to endorse. Clay hoped to bring the disgruntled ex-Jacksonians into the fold, but his tactic of promoting the American System as the major issue of the campaign was ill-designed for this purpose. While some Southerners did favor the bank, they were unwilling to break publicly with Jackson on this issue, and Vice President Calhoun was overtly hostile to the American System by 1832. In South Carolina, the faction loyal to Calhoun nominated a slate of independent electors who voted for Governor
John Floyd of Virginia. Elsewhere, dissident Southern Jacksonians protested the nomination of
Martin Van Buren by supporting
Philip P. Barbour for vice president but were unwilling to break with Jackson himself. As the Barbour movement suggests, Jackson's personal popularity worked against the growth of opposition politics in the South despite the growing dissatisfaction with the national administration. Meanwhile, Jackson's northern opponents were hurt by the divided state of the opposition. The failure of Anti-Jacksonians to unite behind a single candidate for president alarmed leaders like
William Henry Seward and
Thurlow Weed, who worked feverishly to avoid a disastrous split in the opposition vote. In
New York,
Ohio, and
Pennsylvania, Anti-Masons and National Republicans organized
fusion tickets with electors pledged to support whichever candidate stood the best chance of defeating Jackson in the electoral college. Jackson carried all three states, however, along with their combined 93 electoral votes. His margin in Pennsylvania was much reduced from
1828, but still wider than the Democratic majority in the
gubernatorial election held in October, due largely to the drop in support for the Anti-Masons. The Anti-Jacksonian "Union ticket" foreshadowed the merger of both parties with disaffected Southern Jacksonians in 1834 to form the
Whig Party, which would constitute the major opposition to the Jacksonian Democrats for the remainder of the
Second Party System. While Clay hoped to alienate the different wings of the Democratic Party from each other by promoting the bank as an issue, his strategy backfired, as Jackson's veto message compellingly portrayed him as the defender of the common people against the furious assault of the financial interests. Events of the previous decade had not endeared the bank to working people, and they identified with Jackson's portrait of the "Monster Bank" as corrupt, self-interested, and destructive to democratic egalitarianism. Meanwhile, Clay's high-handed treatment of the Anti-Masons discouraged unity among Anti-Jacksonians, and the unpopularity of the National Republicans frustrated efforts to unite all opponents of the administration under a single roof.
Results 20.6% of the voting age population and 56.7% of eligible voters participated in the election. Jackson won the election in an electoral college landslide. Jackson received 219 electoral votes, defeating Clay (49), Floyd (11), and Wirt (7) by a large margin. Jackson's popularity with the American public and the vitality of the political movement with which he was associated is confirmed by the fact that no president was again able to secure a majority of the popular vote in two consecutive elections until
Ulysses S. Grant in
1872. Only two other presidents from the Democratic party were ever able to replicate this feat:
Franklin D. Roosevelt (for the first time in
1936) and
Barack Obama (in
2012). Furthermore, no president succeeded in securing re-election again until
Abraham Lincoln in
1864, and no Democrat would secure a second consecutive term until
Woodrow Wilson in 1916. As of 2024, Jackson was the second of eight presidential nominees to win a significant number of electoral votes in at least three elections, the others being Thomas Jefferson, Henry Clay, Grover Cleveland, William Jennings Bryan, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Richard Nixon, and Donald Trump. Of these, Jackson, Cleveland, and Roosevelt, also won the popular vote in at least three elections. Jackson was the second of only five presidents to win re-election with a smaller percentage of the popular vote than in prior elections, the other four are
James Madison in
1812,
Grover Cleveland in
1892, Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1940 and 1944 and Barack Obama in 2012. Following the election and Clay's defeat, an Anti-Jackson coalition would be formed out of National Republicans, Anti-Masons, disaffected Jacksonians, and small remnants of the
Federalist Party whose last political activity was with them a decade before. In the short term, it formed the
Whig Party in a coalition against President Jackson and his reforms. (a)
The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote. (b)
66,706 Pennsylvanians voted for the Union slate, which represented both Clay and Wirt. These voters have been assigned to Wirt and not Clay. (c) ''All of John Floyd's electoral votes came from South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislatures rather than by popular vote.'' (d)
Two electors from Maryland for Clay failed to cast votes. Results by state The 1832 presidential election results are displayed in the maps below. 1832 Electoral Map.png|Results by state 1832 United States presidential election results map by county.svg|Results by county, shaded according to winning candidate's percentage of the vote
States that flipped from National Republican to Democratic •
Maine •
New Hampshire •
New Jersey States that flipped from Democratic to National Republican •
Kentucky States that flipped from National Republican to Anti-Masonic •
Vermont States that flipped from Democratic to Nullifier •
South Carolina Close states States where the margin of victory was under 1%: •
New Jersey 0.76% (360 votes) States where the margin of victory was under 5%: •
Delaware 1.98% (166 votes) • '''Maryland's 4th District 2.58% (325 votes)''' •
Ohio 2.98% (4,707 votes) •
New York 4.20% (13,601 votes) States where the margin of victory was under 10%: •
Vermont 6.08% (5,236 votes) • '''Maryland's 2nd District 8.38% (777 votes)''' •
Kentucky 8.98% (36,249 votes) Tipping point states: •
Maine 10.70% (6,647 votes) (tipping point state for a Jackson victory) •
Pennsylvania 15.90% (25,260 votes) (tipping point state for a Clay victory)
Electoral College selection ==See also==