George W Bush in 2000
George Washington received 100% of the electoral votes and was unanimously elected President in 1789 and 1792.
Barack Obama received more votes for president. Obama received 69,456,897 votes, giving him 365 electoral votes, while John McCain received 59,934,814 votes for president, and 173 of 538 electoral votes.
Yes, he received all six of Nevada's electoral votes in the 2012 election. President Obama had 52.36 percent, and his challenger, Mitt Romney received 45.68 percent. (Mr. Obama's received 68,000 more votes than Mitt Romney did: the president had 531,373 while his challenger had 463,567.)
John Quincy Adams in 1824 received only 30.8% of popular vote. In 1860 Lincoln won with 39.7 % .
The president received no electoral votes from Southern states in the election.
George Washington did not have a slogan. He is the only president to receive 100 percent of the electoral votes. In fact, he received 100 percent twice.
In the 1984 election Ronal Regan received 525 (97.58%) of the 538 electoral votes. In the 1936 election Franklin D. Roosevelt received 523 (98.49%) of the 531 electoral votes. In the 1972 election Richard Nixon received 520 (96.65%) of the 538 electoral votes. In the 1820 election James Monroe was unopposed and received 231 (99.57%) of the 232 electoral votes. George Washington received 100% of the electoral votes and was unanimously elected President in 1789 and 1792.
George Washington was the only president who ever received all the electoral votes and he did it twice. james Monroe won all the votes but one in 1820.
According to the popular vote from the United States elections, Lyndon Johnson was the most popular president. He received 61.05 percent of his votes.
When Abraham Lincoln was elected as the 16th US President, on November 6, 1860, He received 180 of 303 possible electoral votes and 40 percent of the popular vote.
In November 2012, President Obama received 332 electoral votes; his challenger, Mitt Romney, received 206.
George Washington received 100% of the electoral votes and was unanimously elected President in 1789 and 1792.