There has been three presidential debates in the 2008 election.
That has always been false; there was not a U. S. Presidential election in 2002. The most recent U. S. Presidential election before 2012 was in 2008.
Counting the 2016 election, there have been 58 presidential election. The first was in 1788. The 25th was in 1884, the 50th was in 1984 and there have been 8 after 1984 , in 1988,1992,1996,2000,2004,2008,2012 and 2016.
Yes. Incumbent President Barack Obama won reelection in the 2012 presidential election defeating Mitt Romney.
No. The election has been certified by the Federal Elections Commission.
Yes, there have been protests following presidential elections in the United States.
The first presidential election where computers performed some of the vote counting was the 1964 (Johnson vs. Goldwater) election, where 7 counties used punchcard ballots. There still has not been a presidential election (as of 2014) where all votes were counted by computers.
yes
The first presidential election in which the District of Columbia participated was the election of 1964. Since the passage of this amendment, the District's electoral votes have been cast for the Democratic Party's presidential and vice-presidential candidates in every election.
No, John McCain did not win Virginia in the 2008 presidential election. He lost the state to Barack Obama, who received 52.6% of the votes compared to McCain's 47.2%. This election marked a significant shift in Virginia, which had traditionally been a Republican stronghold.
No US Presidential election has ever been delayed or cancelled, but in theory it could happen. It would require an overwhelming emergency which makes it impossible to proceed with an election. Nuclear war would probably do it.
The Presidential election dates have been mandated by Congress since 1845. The date is always the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of even years divisible by four.
yes, in the election of 1800 thomas Jefferson and john Adams