ohio
Zachary Taylor had never even registered to vote for past elections. I am not sure that he even voted for himself.
New York
Minnesota
That would have to be Minnesota, because every state except MN went red in 1984. Minnesota has voted Democratic in the last ten presidential elections (1976-2012), and the District of Columbia has voted Democratic in the last thirteen presidential elections (1964-2012), which is its entire presidential voting history.
Vermont has voted Republican in 33 of the 41 U. S. Presidential elections in which the Republican Party has had a nominee. That is more than any other state. With the exception of 1964, Vermont voted Republican in every presidential election from 1856, the first election that had a Republican nominee, to and including 1988.Five other states that were granted statehood after 1856 have voted Republican for president a higher percentage of times than Vermont's 80.5%. At the top of the list is Alaska. With the exception of 1964, Alaska has voted Republican in every presidential election since becoming a state. That's 14 out of 15 elections or 93.3%. The other four are North and South Dakota, Kansas, and Nebraska.Ironically, those states that had voted Republican the most in the first 100 years of the party have voted Republican the least during the past 20 years, and those that voted Republican the least in the Republican Party's first 100 years, the states of the southern region, have become some of the strongest supporters of the party.Here is a list showing how often each state has voted Republican for president, in order:1 - 93.3% (14) of 15 elections: Alaska2 - 84.4% (27) of 32 elections: North Dakota & South Dakota4 - 82.1% (32) of 39 elections: Kansas5 - 81.6% (31) of 38 elections: Nebraska6 - 80.5% (33) of 41 elections: Vermont7 - 78.0% (32) of 41 elections: Indiana8 - 75.6% (31) of 41 elections: Maine9 - 75.0% (24) of 32 elections: Wyoming10 - 74.2% (23) of 31 elections: Utah11 - 73.2% (30) of 41 elections: Iowa12 - 70.7% (29) of 41 elections: New Hampshire & Ohio14 - 70.4% (19) of 27 elections: Arizona15 - 68.3% (28) of 41 elections: Michigan16 - 65.6% (21) of 32 elections: Montana & Idaho18 - 64.3% (18) of 28 elections: Oklahoma19 - 63.4% (26) of 41 elections: Pennsylvania20 - 62.5% (25) of 40 elections: Oregon21 - 61.1% (22) of 36 elections: Colorado22 - 61.0% (25) of 41 elections: California & Wisconsin24 - 58.5% (24) of 41 elections: Illinois25 - 56.1% (23) of 41 elections: Connecticut26 - 51.3% (20) of 39 elections: Nevada27 - 51.2% (21) of 41 elections: Massachusetts & Rhode Island29 - 50.0% (20) of 40 elections: Minnesota30 - 48.8% (20) of 41 elections: New York31 - 48.7% (19) of 39 elections: West Virginia32 - 46.3% (19) of 41 elections: New Jersey & Missouri34 - 44.4% (12) of 27 elections: New Mexico35 - 43.9% (18) of 41 elections: Delaware36 - 43.8% (14) of 32 elections: Washington37 - 39.0% (16) of 41 elections: South Carolina, Tennessee & Florida40 - 36.6% (15) of 41 elections: Virginia & Kentucky42 - 34.1% (14) of 41 elections: Maryland, North Carolina, Alabama & Texas46 - 31.7% (13) of 41 elections: Mississippi47 - 29.3% (12) of 41 elections: Louisiana48 - 26.8% (11) of 41 elections: Georgia49 - 24.4% (10) of 41 elections: Arkansas50 - 13.3% (2) of 15 elections: Hawaii51 - never in 14 elections: the District of Columbia
They get voted by the citizens of the United states of America.
No - they could not vote for President until the 23rd amendment was ratified in 1961.
There was no presidential election in 1849. Presidential elections were held in 1848 and again in 1852. Roughly 2.8 million people voted in the 1848 election.
Paraguay is a democratic country that regularly holds elections for President. Their Senate recently voted to oust the President and within a year there were elections and a new government.
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.
Missouri It hasn't voted for a loser since Adlai Stevenson in 1956.
The score is 7 to 7 .Republicans won California in 1960. Democrats won in 1964. California voted for Republican presidents every year in the six elections from 1968 through 1988.In the six elections since the state has voted Democratic.