1844 United States elections

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1844 United States elections
Presidential election year
Presidential election
Electoral vote
Template:United States presidential election, 1844 imagemap
1844 presidential election results. Blue denotes states won by Polk, buff denotes states won by Clay. Numbers indicate the electoral votes won by each candidate.
Senate elections
Seats contested 18 of 54 seats[1]
Net change Democratic +3[2]
House elections
Seats contested All 227 voting members
Net change Whig +6[2]

The 1844 United States elections elected the members of the 29th United States Congress, and took place during the Second Party System in the midst of the debate over whether to annex Texas. Texas and Iowa joined the union during the 29th Congress. Democrats retained control of the House and took back control of the Presidency and the Senate, re-establishing the dominant position the party had lost in the 1840 election.

In the Presidential election, Democratic former Speaker of the House James K. Polk defeated Whig former Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky.[3] Though Polk won the popular vote by a little over one percent, he won by a comfortable margin in the electoral college. James G. Birney of the nascent Liberty Party took two percent of the popular vote, and may have swung the election by taking votes from Clay in New York.[4] The little-known Polk defeated several rivals to win his party's nomination, emerging as the first dark horse nominee in U.S. presidential history. Incumbent President John Tyler, who had been expelled from the Whig party early in his presidency, was briefly the candidate of the newly formed Democratic-Republican Party, but dropped out of the race after Polk announced his support for ratification of Tyler's Texas annexation treaty.

In the House, Whigs picked up a small number of seats, but Democrats retained a commanding majority.[5]

In the Senate, Democrats picked up several seats, re-taking the majority.[6]

See also

References

  1. Not counting special elections.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Congressional seat gain figures only reflect the results of the regularly-scheduled elections, and do not take special elections into account.
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