Popular Vote

Which Presidents Did Not Win the Popular Vote?

Because the U.S. president is voted into power by the electoral college, successful candidates might not always win the popular vote – i.e. the majority of all votes in the country. Likewise, those receiving a majority of the votes might not always become president. Hillary Clinton and Al Gore are two U.S. presidential candidates who suffered this fate recently, but they are not the only ones.

While presidential election races seem to have gotten more competitive recently, the late 1800s were also a time with many close elections. Presidents Rutherford Hayes (1877-1881) and Benjamin Harrison (1889-1893) both came into office with negative popular vote margins, beating Democratic candidate Samuel J. Tilden and Democratic incumbent president Grover Cleveland, respectively. The most recent race was also a tight one at least historically. Joe Biden beat incumbent Donald Trump with a 4.5 percent margin in the popular vote.

The candidate who had the highest popular vote margin and didn’t become president was Andrew Jackson, who got 10 percent more votes than competitor John Quincy Adams in 1824. Adams ran as a National Republican in 1824, while Jackson became the first Democratic presidential candidate in 1828 and won that election.

All of the five people who have won the popular vote and lost the presidency were Democrats, or in Jackson’s case, on the verge of becoming one.

Description

This chart shows the performance of U.S. presidents in the popular vote since 1824.

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U.S. support for popular vote to determine presidential elections 2020-2023
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U.S. adults on the popular vote versus the electoral college by party 2022
Election 2016: results for the popular vote
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U.S. Presidential Election - popular vote cast by state
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Opinions of adults on how to choose the president U.S. 2022
Election 2012: official results of popular vote

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