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ADAMS, JACKSON, AND VAN BUREN. THE ELECTION OF 1824. ELECTION OF 1824. Only one political party—the Jeffersonian-Republicans. Candidates: William Crawford Andrew Jackson Henry Clay John Quincy Adams.
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ELECTION OF 1824 • Only one political party—the Jeffersonian-Republicans. • Candidates: William Crawford Andrew Jackson Henry Clay John Quincy Adams
Jackson won the popular vote and the most electoral votes, but he did not have a majority (or more than half). The House of Representatives would have to decide.
THE “CORRUPT BARGAIN” • Before the vote in the House, Clay met with Adams. Clay said he would use his influence in the House to get Adams elected, Adams was elected, and Clay became Secretary of State.
This “corrupt bargain” tainted Adams’ presidency and Congress refused to cooperate with him.
THE ELECTION OF 1828 • The Jeffersonian-Republicans split into Democratic-Republicans and National Republicans.
DEMOCRATIC-REPUBLICANS • Andrew Jackson • States’ rights • Party of frontiersmen, immigrants, and laborers.
NATIONAL REPUBLICANS • John Quincy Adams • Strong national government • Party of farmers and merchants
NEW ELECTION TACTICS • Campaigning—election slogans, buttons, rallies, barbecues. • Mudslinging—attempts to ruin your opponent’s reputation with insults.
Jackson won the election by a landslide. His promise to represent the “common man” against the interests of the rich was very popular.
PRESIDENT ANDREW JACKSON “OLD HICKORY”
HOW DID JACKSON’S PRESIDENCY CHANGE POLITICS? • Politics no longer only for the rich • New voters • Spoils system • Electoral changes
POLITICS WAS NO LONGER FOR THE RICH • Jackson had come from a poor background to become a war hero and a wealthy man.
Poor people—THE COMMON MAN—identified with Jackson and wanted to participate in the political process because they liked him.
NEW VOTERS • Jackson promised “equal protection and equal benefits for all.” Voting restrictions were lifted and more voters (white men) could vote.
Women, African-Americans, and Native Americans could still not vote.
SPOILS SYSTEM • Jackson fired many government workers and replaced them with his supporters.
“To the victor belongs the spoils.” The person who wins the election gets the spoils (or benefits of victory), including handing out government jobs to supporters. This practice became known as the SPOILSSYSTEM.
ELECTORAL CHANGES • Nominating conventions allowed more people to participate in the selection of political candidates.
THE TARIFF DEBATE • A tariff is a tax on imported goods. Northern manufacturers like tariffs because they make foreign goods more expensive so that people will buy American goods.
Southerners hated the tariff because it made manufactured goods more expensive for them. They called the Tariff of 1828 the “Tariff of Abominations.”
Vice-President Calhoun suggested that a state had the right to NULLIFY, or cancel, federal laws considered against the state’s interests.
South Carolina suggested that Southern states should SECEDE—or break away from the U.S.—and form their own government.
Jackson did not support nullification, a compromise was reached to end the crisis, and Calhoun resigned as vice-president.
JACKSON AND THE NATIVE AMERICANS • Jackson favored forcible removal and relocation westward. He endorsed the right of state law over Indian claims or federal law.
The Seminole of Florida were the only Native Americans to successfully resisted removal.
Present-day Oklahoma was established as the Indian Territory—basically a large Indian reservation.
WORCESTER v. GEORGIA • The state of Georgia wanted to remove the Cherokee Indians from their land so that settlers could move on to it. The Cherokee sued to keep the land.
The Supreme Court ruled in the favor of the Cherokee. Jackson encouraged people to defy the Court’s ruling, and the U.S. army was sent to remove the Indians from their land.
THE NATIONAL BANK • The Bank performed many useful services and helped in the expansion of the U.S. economy.
Jackson distrusted the bank—he felt the bank had too much power over the common man and wanted it abolished.
Jackson vetoed the recharter of the Bank and transferred federal money to state banks, causing a severe financial panic.
In 1836, Martin Van Buren was elected and inherited the financial crisis from Jackson. There was a severe depression during his presidency.
ELECTION OF 1840—TWO PARTIES EMERGE • WHIGS • DEMOCRAT • William Henry Harrison vs. Martin Van Buren
WHIGS • Represented the wealthy • Strong in New England and upper mid-west • Favored the national bank, internal improvements, tariffs, and moral reform
DEMOCRATS • Favored a reduction in government • Supported by immigrants and labor organizers • Wanted to keep politics separate from moral issues
Harrison (Tippecanoe and Tyler Too) won the election, but died a month after his inauguration. John Tyler became the first vice-president to take office after the death of the elected president.