Thomas Jefferson's first term and the election of John Quincy Adams were determined by the House.
Well, if by large you mean in population, then they would favor the House of Representatives, where the members are determined by population size.
As of October 2021, three U.S. presidents have been impeached by the House of Representatives: Andrew Johnson in 1868, Bill Clinton in 1998, and Donald Trump twice, in 2019 and 2021. However, none of them were convicted and removed from office by the Senate.
The House of Representatives have impeached, or accused, two presidents of criminal wrongdoing: Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton. In both cases, the Senate voted for acquittal rather than conviction.
No, just the opposite is true. Of the 57 elections including 2012, in all but two (maybe three, depending on how you interpret 1876), the winner was determined by the electoral vote. Regarding the two cases in which the House of Representatives elected the president, the electoral vote counts determined from between/among whom they voted.
None. Two presidents have been impeached but neither was found guilty by the Senate after impeachment by the House of Representatives.
Under the United States Constitution, the House of Representatives must vote to impeach the president. It requires a simple majority vote for the measure to be passed and sent to the Senate for trial.
1. Only the House of Representatives can impeach the President. 2. The president must first break a federal law in order to be impeached. As of right now only two presidents have ever been voted on by the House of Representatives to be impeached and the House voted against it. Unless President Obama breaks a federal law, it is impossible for the House of Representatives to impeach him.
None. Two presidents: Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson were impeached by the House of representatives, which is the equivalent of bringing charges against someone. Both of them were acquitted (found not guilty, essentially) in trials in the Senate.
House of Representatives.
This is a bad question because it implies a change took place. In fact, the way House of Representatives legislatures were chosen has always been the same: "House of Representatives shall be composed of Members chosen every second Year by the People of the several States." Article I, Section II
No US presidents have been impeached and convicted and so removed from office.
The American Constitution, the supreme law of the United States, was first drafted in 1787. Since then America has been governed by the House of Representatives and the Senate. Since then there have been 44 presidents, from George Washington to Barak Obama.