Yes, and there has been (1800). If there was a tie, the House of Representatives would vote.
no, because it's decided 3 months before the voting starts
Aaron Burr and he finished in a tie,
john Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson
in the election of 1824 between John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson
In the electoral college, there are 538 electors (or electoral votes), with at least 270 needed to win the presidential election. Although highly unlikely, it is possible that the electoral votes could be tied 269-269. If this were to happen, the vote would then go to Congress. It would be the duty of The House of Representatives to break the tie for the presidential election, and the duty of the Senate to break the tie for the vice presidential position.
yes, in the election of 1800 thomas Jefferson and john Adams
12th amendment
George Washington won the first presidential election in 1789. The 2008 presidential election was the 56th presidential election in the United States.
Not knowing which election you are referring to... 2008 Presidential election: 132,618,580 total. 2004 Presidential election: 122,294,978 total. 2000 Presidential election: 105,586,274 total
The only tie was the one between Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr in 1800 that resulted in the 12th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution.
There was no U. S. presidential election in 1850.
1842 was not a U.S. Presidential election year.
the cameroonian presidential election is on the 09 october 2011