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No -John Quincy Adams was not re-elected He became the 6th US President in 1824 and lost an overwhelming defeat to Jackson in the election of 1828.
Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford and Henry Clay
Andrew Jackson's election marked a new era in US political power. Jackson was the first president who was not tied to the founding fathers. He was the first president from the western frontier. His election was the first in which the more recent immigrants and settlers of the frontier exerted enough political power to elect a president. Jackson's defeat in 1824 and subsequent election in 1828 marked the beginning of national political parties.
he defeated Stephen Douglas and others for president
President Gerald Ford
The goal of the opposing party is make the president look bad and defeat him in the next election. The vice-president presides over the US Senate and can cast the deciding vote in the case of a tie. It would undermine the administration to have a vice-president working against it.
incumbent President Gerald R. Ford
He beat Andrew Jackson. Though some say that the reason was that Henry Clay publicly announced his favor of Adams.
I think he called it a "shellacking."
Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford and Henry Clay (All four were representing the Democratic-Republican Party.)
His main challenger was Republican Mitt Romney. But there were several other third-party candidates on the ballot, like Libertarian Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein. President Obama defeated all of them, to win re-election in November 2012.
President Bill Clinton defeated former Senator Robert Dole in the 1996 presidential election.