The Presidents of the US and their Vice-Presidents (boldface are Vice Presidents who succeeded to the office of President, *asterisks indicate the 7 Vice presidents who died in office):
*Following the resignation of Spiro T. Agnew, Gerald Ford was confirmed and then sworn in as Vice President on December 6, 1973. With the resignation of Richard Nixon, Ford became President on August 9, 1974. Nelson Rockefeller was sworn in as Vice President on December 19, 1974.
Winners are listed first under each year.
1789
George Washington (I-VA) / John Adams (F-MA)
1792
George Washington (I-VA) / John Adams (F-MA)
1796
Federalist Party : John Adams (MA) / Thomas Pinckney (SC)
Democratic-Republican Party : Thomas Jefferson (VA) / Aaron Burr (NY)
1800
Democratic-Republican Party : Thomas Jefferson (VA) / Aaron Burr (NY)
Federalist Party : John Adams (MA) / Charles C. Pinckney (SC)
1804
Democratic-Republican Party : Thomas Jefferson (VA) / George Clinton (NY)
Federalist Party : Charles C. Pinckney (SC) / Rufus King (NY)
1808
Democratic-Republican Party : James Madison (VA) / George Clinton (NY)
Federalist Party : Charles C. Pinckney (SC) / Rufus King (NY)
1812
Democratic-Republican Party : James Madison (VA) / Elbridge Gerry (MA)
Federalist Party : DeWitt Clinton (NY) / Jared Ingersoll (PA)
1816
Democratic-Republican Party : James Monroe (VA) / Daniel D. Tompkins (NY)
Federalist Party : Rufus King (NY) / John E. Howard (MD)
1820
Democratic-Republican Party : James Monroe (VA) / Daniel D. Tompkins (NY)
1824
Democratic-Republican Party : John Quincy Adams (MA) / John C. Calhoun (SC)
Democratic-Republican Party : Andrew Jackson (TN) / John C. Calhoun (SC)
Democratic-Republican Party : William H. Crawford (GA) / Nathaniel Macon (NC)
Democratic-Republican Party : Henry Clay (KY) / Nathan Sanford (NY)
1828
Democratic Party : Andrew Jackson (TN) / John C. Calhoun (SC)
National Republican Party : John Quincy Adams (MA) / Richard Rush (PA)
1832
Democratic Party : Andrew Jackson (TN) / Martin Van Buren (NY)
National Republican Party : Henry Clay (KY) / John Sergeant (PA)
Nullifier Party : John Floyd (VA) / Henry Lee (MA)
Anti-Masonic Party : William Wirt (MD) / Amos Ellmaker (PA)
1836
Democratic Party : Martin Van Buren (NY) / Richard M. Johnson (KY)
Whig Party : William Henry Harrison (OH) / Francis Granger (NY)
Whig Party : Hugh L. White (TN) / John Tyler (VA)
Whig Party : Daniel Webster (MA) / Francis Granger (NY)
Whig Party : Willie P. Mangum (NC) / John Tyler (VA)
1840
Whig Party : William Henry Harrison (OH) / John Tyler (VA)
Democratic Party : Martin Van Buren (NY) / no running mate
1844
Democratic Party : James K. Polk (TN) / George M. Dallas (PA)
Whig Party : Henry Clay (KY) / Theodore Frelinghuysen (NJ)
1848
Whig Party : Zachary Taylor (LA) / Millard Fillmore (NY)
Democratic Party : Lewis Cass (MI) / William O. Butler (KY)
Free Soil Party : Martin Van Buren (NY) / Charles F. Adams (MA)
1852
Democratic Party : Franklin Pierce (NH) / William R. King (AL)
Whig Party : Winfield Scott (NJ) / William A. Graham (NC)
1856
Democratic Party : James Buchanan (PA) / John C. Breckenridge (KY)
Republican Party : John C. Frémont (CA) / William L. Dayton (NJ)
Know Nothing Party : Millard Fillmore (NY) / Andrew J. Donelson (TN)
1860
Republican Party : Abraham Lincoln (IL) / Hannibal Hamlin (ME)
Southern Democratic Party : John C. Breckenridge (KY) / Joseph Lane (OR)
Constitutional Union Party : John Bell (TN) / Edward Everett (MA)
Northern Democratic Party : Stephan A. Douglas (IL) / Herschel V. Johnson (GA)
1864
National Union Party : Abraham Lincoln (IL) / Andrew Johnson (TN)
Democratic Party : George B. McClellan (NJ) / George H. Pendleton (OH)
1868
Republican Party : Ulysses S. Grant (IL) / Schuyler Colfax (IN)
Democratic Party : Horatio Seymour (NY) / Francis P. Blair (MO)
1872
Republican Party : Ulysses S. Grant (IL) / Henry Wilson (MA)
Liberal Republican Party : Horace Greeley (NY) / B. Gratz Brown (MO)
1876
Republican Party : Rutherford B. Hayes (OH) / William A. Wheeler (NY)
Democratic Party : Samuel J. Tilden (NY) / Thomas A. Hendricks (IN)
1880
Republican Party : James A. Garfield (OH) / Chester A. Arthur (NY)
Democratic Party : Winfield Scott Hancock (PA) / William H. English (IN)
1884
Democratic Party : Grover Cleveland (NY) / Thomas A. Hendricks (IN)
Republican Party : James G. Blaine (ME) / John A. Logan (IL)
1888
Republican Party : Benjamin Harrison (IN) / Levi P. Morton (NY)
Democratic Party : Grover Cleveland (NY) / Allen G. Thurman (OH)
1892
Democratic Party : Grover Cleveland (NY) / Adlai E. Stevenson I (IL)
Republican Party : Benjamin Harrison (IN) / Whitelaw Reid (NY)
Populist Party : James B. Weaver (IA) / James G. Field (VA)
1896
Republican Party : William McKinley (OH) / Garret A. Hobart (NJ)
Democratic Party : William Jennings Bryan (NE) / Arthur Sewall (ME)
1900
Republican Party : William McKinley (OH) / Theodore Roosevelt (NY)
Democratic Party : William Jennings Bryan (NE) / Adlai E. Stevenson I (IL)
1904
Republican Party : Theodore Roosevelt (NY) / Charles W. Fairbanks (IN)
Democratic Party : Alton B. Parker (NY) / Henry G. Davis (WV)
1908
Republican Party : William Howard Taft (OH) / James S. Sherman (NY)
Democratic Party : William Jennings Bryan (NE) / John W. Kern (IN)
1912
Democratic Party : Woodrow Wilson (NJ) / Thomas R. Marshall (IN)
Progressive Party : Theodore Roosevelt (NY) / Hiram W. Johnson (CA)
Republican Party : William Howard Taft (OH) / James S. Sherman (NY)
... (Vice Pres. Sherman died about a week before Election Day. His votes were given to Nicholas M. Butler of N.Y.)
1916
Democratic Party : Woodrow Wilson (NJ) / Thomas R. Marshall (IN)
Republican Party : Charles Evans Hughes (NY) / Charles W. Fairbanks (IN)
1920
Republican Party : Warren G. Harding (OH) / Calvin Coolidge (MA)
Democratic Party : James M. Cox (OH) / Franklin D. Roosevelt (NY)
1924
Republican Party : Calvin Coolidge (MA) / Charles G. Dawes (IL)
Democratic Party : John W. Davis (WV) / Charles W. Bryan (NE)
Progressive Party : Robert M. LaFollette (WI) / Burton K. Wheeler (MT)
1928
Republican Party : Herbert Hoover (CA) / Charles Curtis (KS)
Democratic Party : Al Smith (NY) / Joseph T. Robinson (AR)
1932
Democratic Party : Franklin D. Roosevelt (NY) / John Nance Garner (TX)
Republican Party : Herbert Hoover (CA) / Charles Curtis (KS)
1936
Democratic Party : Franklin D. Roosevelt (NY) / John Nance Garner (TX)
Republican Party : Alf Landon (KS) / Frank Knox (IL)
1940
Democratic Party : Franklin D. Roosevelt (NY) / Henry A. Wallace (IA)
Republican Party : Wendell L. Wilkie (NY) / Charles L. McNary (OR)
1944
Democratic Party : Franklin D. Roosevelt (NY) / Harry S. Truman (MO)
Republican Party : Thomas E. Dewey (NY) / John W. Bricker (OH)
1948
Democratic Party : Harry S. Truman (MO) / Alben W. Barkley (KY)
Republican Party : Thomas E. Dewey (NY) / Earl Warren (CA)
Dixiecrat Party : Strom Thurmond (SC) / Fielding L. Wright (MS)
1952
Republican Party : Dwight D. Eisenhower (NY) / Richard M. Nixon (CA)
Democratic Party : Adlai E. Stevenson II (IL) / John Sparkman (AL)
1956
Republican Party : Dwight D. Eisenhower (NY) / Richard M. Nixon (CA)
Democratic Party : Adlai E. Stevenson II (IL) / Estes Kefauver (TN)
1960
Democratic Party : John F. Kennedy (MA) / Lyndon B. Johnson (TX)
Republican Party : Richard M. Nixon (CA) / Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (MA)
1964
Democratic Party : Lyndon B. Johnson (TX) / Hubert H. Humphrey (MN)
Republican Party : Barry M. Goldwater (AZ) / William E. Miller (NY)
1968
Republican Party : Richard M. Nixon (NY) / Spiro T. Agnew (MD)
Democratic Party : Hubert H. Humphrey (MN) / Edmund S. Muskie (ME)
American Independent Party : George Wallace (AL) / Curtis E. LeMay (CA)
1972
Republican Party : Richard M. Nixon (NY) / Spiro T. Agnew (MD)
Democratic Party : George McGovern (SD) / Sargent Shriver (MD)
1976
Democratic Party : Jimmy Carter (GA) / Walter Mondale (MN)
Republican Party : Gerald Ford (MI) / Bob Dole (KS)
1980
Republican Party : Ronald Reagan (CA) / George Bush (TX)
Democratic Party : Jimmy Carter (GA) / Walter Mondale (MN)
1984
Republican Party : Ronald Reagan (CA) / George Bush (TX)
Democratic Party : Walter Mondale (MN) / Geraldine Ferraro (NY)
1988
Republican Party : George Bush (TX) / Dan Quayle (IN)
Democratic Party : Michael Dukakis (MA) / Lloyd Bentsen (TX)
1992
Democratic Party : Bill Clinton (AR) / Al Gore (TN)
Republican Party : George Bush (TX) / Dan Quayle (IN)
1996
Democratic Party : Bill Clinton (AR) / Al Gore (TN)
Republican Party : Bob Dole (KS) / Jack Kemp (NY)
2000
Republican Party : George W. Bush (TX) / Dick Cheney (WY)
Democratic Party : Al Gore (TN) / Joe Lieberman (CT)
2004
Republican Party : George W. Bush (TX) / Dick Cheney (WY)
Democratic Party : John Kerry (MA) / John Edwards (NC)
2008
Democratic Party : Barack Obama (IL) / Joe Biden (DE)
Republican Party : John McCain (AZ) / Sarah Palin (AK)
2012
Democratic Party : Barack Obama (IL) / Joe Biden (DE)
Republican Party : Mitt Romney (MA) / Paul Ryan (WI)
2016
Republican Party : Donald Trump (NY) / Mike Pence (IN)
Democratic Party : Hillary Clinton (NY) / Tim Kaine (VA)
Republican Abraham Lincoln and southern Democrat John C. Breckinridge -Novanet
Republican Abraham Lincoln and southern Democrat John C. Breckinridge -Novanet
Republican Abraham Lincoln and southern Democrat John C. Breckinridge -Novanet
No, each party's nominee for US President selects the party's nominee for Vice President, subject to the approval of the party. The election of 1796 was the only US presidential election in which the presidential candidate of the opposing political party won the vice presidency instead of the winning presidential candidate's party's choice for running mate. The 12th Amendment to the US Constitution, ratified in 1804, ensures that people of opposing political parties can no longer become President and Vice President in that way, but the likelihood of candidates of opposing parties being elected President and Vice President at the same time still exists for cases in which no presidential or vice presidential candidate receives enough electoral votes while the US House and Senate are controlled by opposing parties.
Opposing candidates during an election.
General election.
----general election (novanet)----
It was the first election held during a general war (the War of 1812). The earlier Quasi-War of 1800 had cost John Adams his Presidency, but James Madison was successfully re-elected in 1812. Unfortunately, the White House was burned 2 years later in August 1814. It was also the first time the two opposing Presidential candidates were from the same party, unlike the elections from 1796 to 1800 where multiple candidates represented Presidential and Vice Presidential nominees. Madison was nominated by the Democratic-Republicans, who passed over DeWitt Clinton -- Clinton ran anyway and was supported by some Federalists.
final election
The question describes the election process.
Opposing candidates during an election
japanese came to the united states and started f*cking in the streets of the colonies, george washington buried his magnum into martha so hard she died so he killed himself and the g*ddamn japs bombed our harbor so we kicked there asses in okinawa and everywhere else f*ck yeah 'murica