Gerald Ford (1974-1977) wasn't elected by either. He was the House Minority Leader when Spiro T. Agnew resigned and was appointed as the VP by the Senate under the twenty-Fifth Amendment. A short time later, he then assumed the presidency after Nixon resigned during the Watergate scandal.
Gerald Ford was the only President who not elected to either president or vice-president. He was appointed vice-president after the elected Vice-President Agnew resigned and became president after Nixon resigned as President. Presidents John Tyler, Millard Fillmore,Andrew Johnson and Chester Alan Arthur was all elected vice-president but never were elected President.
John Quincy Adams was the only President who did not receive a majority of the electoral votes. There was a dispute over the credentials of some of the electors in 1876, but after the dispute was settled, Rutherford Hayes won a majority of the electoral vote.
You may be referring to the oath of office. But the electoral college is what officially elects the president. A presidential candidate may win the popular vote, but without enough electoral votes, he (or one day, she) will not be officially elected.
Enough people voted for him to where he was able to secure the electoral college and win the election.
He received a total of 206 electoral votes, but it was not enough to win the election, since President Obama received 322 and won a second term.
No candidate received votes for President from more than half of the appointed electors.
If you are asking about Washington he was elected by Congress. In 1789 there were no elections held for president. Congress did not feel that voters weren't educated enough to pick a president.
They use a rather curious indirect method in which the voters elect people called electors who then elect the president.
The electoral college system in the United States takes power away from the popular vote and gives it to the states. It was designed to balance the interests of smaller states against larger states and ensure that the president is elected by a diverse range of states. This means that a candidate can win the popular vote but still lose the election if they do not secure enough electoral votes.
I'm not sure if this will answer your question: A political candidate who has been elected president is called the president elect or incoming president. He can officially take office after being sworn in. This is called the inauguration which is Janurary 20th. Until then it is still occupied by the current outgoing president.
It does not take a certain amount of votes to become president. The steps are a little bit different than most sommon votes. Each state has an election for the president on the same day. The candidate who wins the majority of the popular vote for that state gets all of that state's electoral college points. Each state has a different number of points in the electoral college sytem based on their population. It takes 270 electoral college points to win an election. For more information, check out http://www.270towin.com/
One aspect of the presidential election that Andrew Jackson tried but ultimately failed to achieve was the elimination of the Electoral College system. He believed that the Electoral College undermined the principle of "one person, one vote" and favored the interests of the wealthy elite. Despite his efforts, Jackson was unable to gather enough support to abolish the Electoral College during his presidency.
In a US Presidential election, the voters in each state cast votes for electors, who are political party representatives for their state. These electors meet after the election and cast ballots that determine the winner of the election. To win election, a candidate must win more than half of the total of all electoral votes (as of 2014, 270 out of 538). If no candidate wins enough electoral votes, the US House of Representatives elects the President (this has only occurred once, in 1824) and the Senate elects the Vice President. In most cases, all of the electoral votes for a particular state go to the candidate who received the most votes in that state, even if only by a small margin. (Maine and Nebraska have modified this.)