nobody
Well......
James Monroe was the obvious choice in his second campaign. Every vote except for one was casted on James Monroe. That one vote was casted on John Quincy Adams.
So technically John Quincy Adams did go against James Monroe because he had one vote casted on him.
Monroe's only opponent in the election of 1816 was Rufus King of New York, an unsupported Federalist who carried only three states. In 1820, Madison ran unopposed, the first and only President to do so other than George Washington.
The problem was that Federalists were generally unpopular due to their opposition to the War of 1812. In addition, they could not agree about who to nominate from the well-known candidates such as Henry Clay, William Crawford, and Daniel Tompkins. This factional rivalry handed both elections to Monroe.
For president of the US, James Monroe successfully ran against Rufus King in 1816.
Monroe successfully ran for president a second time in 1820, in which election he was unopposed.
William Crawford, Henry Clay and John Quincy Adams in 1824.
John Quincy Adams in 1828, and
Henry Clay in 1832.
competitor electoral votes popular vote %
Freemon 114 33%
fillmore 8 22%
The Federalist Party nominee in the U.S. Presidential Election of 1816 was Rufus King, a U.S. Senator from New York. His running mate was John E. Howard of Maryland.
lolz
Virginia
virgina
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Hunting & Riding
Democratic-Republic
Monroe document.
what was the color of james monroes eyes
April 28 1758
no there was not
The era of good feelings
mr gonzales jeanfranccois