Andrew Johnson was Abraham Lincoln's vice-presidential running mate in the 1864 presidential election. Abraham Lincoln and his running mate Andrew Johnson received 2,218,388 popular votes and 212 electoral votes in the 1864 election. Lincoln was elected president and Johnson was elected vice-president.
electoral collage
Andrew Jackson, with 99 electoral votes.
There are 538 votes in the electoral college. The candidate who wins a simple majority of 270 votes wins the election.
To be declared the winner, a candidate needs at least 270 electoral college votes.
Andrew Jackson lost the election of 1824 even though he received the largest number of popular votes and electoral votes. In the 1824 presidential election an individual needed to receive at least 131 electoral votes out of the 261 total electoral votes. Andrew Jackson received 99 electoral votes, John Quincy Adams received 84 electoral votes, William Crawford received 41 electoral votes, and Henry Clay received 37 electoral votes. The popular vote totals were Andrew Jackson 151,271, John Quincy Adams 113,122, Henry Clay 47,531, and William Crawford 40,856. Since no candidate received the required majority of 131 electoral votes, the president was elected by the U.S. House of Representatives in accordance with the Twelfth Amendment of the United States Constitution. John Quincy Adams won the election in the House of Representatives.
California you dumb but!
2008: 55 electoral votes to Barack Obama, Democrat.1968: 40 electoral votes to Richard Nixon, Republican1964: 40 electoral votes to Lyndon B. Johnson, Democrat.
Hayes won by 19 electoral votes.
Well, the electoral collage votes the president for us....... so its wierd
Andrew Jackson received 99 electoral votes in 1824 and 178 electoral in 1828.
Andrew Jackson was the leader in electoral votes and in popular votes in 1824 but he did not get the required majority of electoral votes and so the House decided the election as the constitution requires.
George Washington received 100% of the electoral votes and was unanimously elected President in 1789 and 1792.