Jackson ran strongest in the frontier states. He also drew support from the rural people in the south. He got a lost of votes everywhere except in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont and Rhode Island.
States rights advocates were opposed to Andrew Jackson over the issue of nullification. A number of people, such as John C. Calhoun, believed that states should have the right to nullify a law that it deemed unconstitutional, but Jackson came out and disagreed, citing the need to preserve the Union above all things.
Andrew Jackson was a Democrat, so naturally the Democratic Party.
The common people
Voting laws in states new to the Union, such as expanding suffrage to non-landowners and reducing property qualifications to vote, helped Andrew Jackson get elected in 1828. These changes, known as "universal white male suffrage," increased the number of eligible voters. As Jackson portrayed himself as a champion of the common man, this expansion of democracy worked in his favor and boosted his electoral support.
Andrew Jackson was sworn in as President on March 29,1829. He was elected in 1828.
Voters directly elect members of the Senate and members of the House of Representatives
In a parliamentary system voters elect the members of parliament but they do not elect the leader/prime minister. The members of parliament elect the leader.
The 17th Amendment gave voters the right to elect senators
Do the voters elect electors not the presidential candidates
In 1928 African American voters in Chicago helped elect Oscar Depriest. He was the first African American representative to congress from a northern state.
They are called Electors
Representatives.
Senate
The name of the form of government in which voters elect officials to run the state is representative democracy.
A democratic republic nation is one in which voters elect their own representatives. Some nations that are democratic republic are Nepal, Congo, and Ethiopia.