Contested United States presidential elections
Contested US Presidential elections involve serious allegations by top officials that the election was "stolen." Such allegations appeared in 1824, 1876, 1912, 1960, 2000, and 2020. Typically, the precise allegations change over time.
1800 presidential election
In 1800, the Democratic-Republican candidates won the election and intended for party leader Thomas Jefferson to be president and New York politician Aaron Burr to be vice president. Both men ended up tied in the electoral college, but Burr wanted the job. The decision went to the House where the Federalists were powerful enough to stop Jefferson. Federalist leader Alexander Hamilton was a long-time foe of Jefferson but he deeply distrusted Burr. Hamilton helped arrange for Jefferson to be elected president and Burr vice president. A constitutional amendment was passed to prevent similar confusion.
1824 presidential election
In 1824, political parties were very weak, and the voters had the choice of four candidates: Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, William H. Crawford, and Henry Clay. Jackson had won the popular and electoral vote, but not the majority. According to the Constitution, the House of Representatives had to vote among the top three. Henry Clay was now out of the running, but as Speaker of the House, he played a major role in the decision. He helped Adams win, and Adams rewarded him by appointing him as Secretary of State. To a friend, Clay explained that Jackson's militarism threatened American democracy:
Jackson was livid: "The Judas of the West has closed the contract and will receive the thirty pieces of silver. His end will be the same." Jackson cried foul, believing the election was stolen by a "corrupt bargain" between Adams and Clay. He ran again and defeated Adams in 1828, using partisan rhetoric that Robert V. Remini says was, "almost totally devoid of truth."
1876 presidential election
In 1876, Republican Rutherford B. Hayes was awarded the White House by a partisan special Congressional commission. The result remains among the most disputed to this day. Although it is not disputed that Democrat Samuel J. Tilden outpolled Hayes in the popular vote, there were wide allegations of electoral fraud, election violence, and other disfranchisement of predominantly Republican Black voters. After a first count of votes, Tilden had won 184 electoral votes to Hayes's 165, with 20 votes from four states unresolved. In Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina, both parties reported their candidate to have won the state. In Oregon, one elector was replaced after being declared illegal for having been an "elected or appointed official." The question of who should have been awarded those 20 electoral votes remains in dispute among historians, with most suggesting the Republicans were guilty.
1912 presidential election
In 1908, President Theodore Roosevelt made sure the Republicans Party nominated his close friend William Howard Taft for president. Taft won, however Roosevelt was dissatisfied and challenged Taft for the 1912 nomination. Roosevelt accused Taft of "stealing " the Republican nomination. Roosevelt thereupon ran a third party ticket, allowing Democrat Woodrow Wilson to win. According to Lewis L. Gould,
2000 presidential election
On election night, it was unclear who had won, with the state of Florida still undecided. The final returns showed that Republican George W. Bush had won Florida by 537 votes out of six million cast. Democrat Al Gore was allowed by state law to demand recounts in selected counties. They wanted recounts in Democratic strongholds as it was predicted that votes had been miscounted in these counties. Republicans sued on the grounds the narrow recount unfairly ignored voters in other counties. A month-long series of legal battles led to the highly controversial 5–4 Supreme Court decision Bush v. Gore, which accepted the Republican argument, ended the recount, and left Bush the winner by 500 votes. Following the announcement of the Supreme Court's decision, Gore stated that "Now the U.S. Supreme Court has spoken. Let there be no doubt, while I strongly disagree with the court’s decision, I accept it. I accept the finality of this outcome which will be ratified next Monday in the Electoral College. And tonight, for the sake of our unity of the people and the strength of our democracy, I offer my concession." Despite objections from some Democrats, Gore (acting in his capacity as President of the Senate) presided over the certification of Bush's victory on January 6, 2001.
2020 presidential election
The stolen election conspiracy theory claims that the 2020 United States presidential election was "stolen" from Donald Trump, who lost to Joe Biden. It serves to justify attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election, including the January 6 United States Capitol Protest. A particular variant of it is the "Soros stole the election" conspiracy theory that claims that George Soros stole the election from Trump. Polls conducted since the aftermath of the 2020 election have consistently shown that majority of Republicans believe that the election was stolen from Trump. There was in fact the largest spike in voters between two consecutive presidential elections on record, only for the number of democrat voters to decline again in 2024. This spike came heavily at the end of election night, when a reportedly large amount of mail in ballots was counted in almost every swing state, changing the results of an election that many republicans went to sleep believing they had won. This was just the popular vote, so the suspicion revolving around the 2020 election ignited with many people hoping for further investigation on the electoral votes, including President Trump himself. Donald Trump's legal teams brought a variety of legal challenges to the results in several swing states, however these failed to alter the outcome of the election and were generally considered meritless by the judges who heard the suits. These challenges included an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States, which declined to hear argument regarding three petitions brought by the Trump campaign.
One aspect of President Trump's efforts to cast doubt on the results of the 2020 election was an attempt to impeach the credibility of various companies involved in election administration. With no way to prove that the voting machines' programming was dubious or inconsistent, President Trump was unable to gain any traction in a legal battle against them. Some of the media companies which editorialized in favor of Trump were later sued for defamation by companies implicated in their reporting, including Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic. Smartmatic's lawsuit against Fox News remains active. On April 18, 2023, Dominion Voting Systems and Fox News announced a settlement in that case worth $787,500,000.
See also
- 2008 United States Senate election in Minnesota
- List of conspiracy theories
- American election campaigns in the 19th century
- Election denial movement in the United States
References
Further reading
- Argersinger, Peter H. "New perspectives on election fraud in the Gilded Age." Political Science Quarterly (1985) 100#4 pp. 669–687.
- Baum, Dale, and James L. Hailey. “Lyndon Johnson’s Victory in the 1948 Texas Senate Race: A Reappraisal.” Political Science Quarterly 109#4, (1994) pp. 595–613. online
- Bensel, Richard F. The American ballot box in the mid-nineteenth century (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
- Campbell, Tracy. Deliver the Vote: A History of Election Fraud, An American Political Tradition, 1742–2004 (Basic Books, 2005) online
- Dinkin, Robert J. Campaigning in America: A history of election practices (Praeger, 1989).
- Eggers, Andrew C.; Garro, Haritz; Grimmer, Justin (2021). "No evidence for systematic voter fraud: A guide to statistical claims about the 2020 election". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 118 (45). Bibcode:2021PNAS..11803619E. doi:10.1073/pnas.2103619118. PMC 8609310. PMID 34728563.
- Fitzpatrick, Gerard J., and E. J. Dionne. “Bush v. Gore: Popular Sovereignty, Fundamental Law, and the Post-Election Battle for the Presidency.” Polity 35#1 (2002), pp. 153–68. online
- Foley, Edward B. "The Lake Wobegone Recount: Minnesota's Disputed 2008 US Senate Election." Election Law Journal 10.2 (2011): 129–164.
- Foley, Edward B. "Preparing for a Disputed Presidential Election: An Exercise in Election Risk Assessment and Management." Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 51 (2019): 309+. online
- Gellman, Irwin F. Campaign of the Century: Kennedy, Nixon, and the Election of 1960 (Yale UP, 2022) excerpt.
- Hasen, Richard L. "Identifying and Minimizing the Risk of Election Subversion and Stolen Elections in the Contemporary United States." Harvard Law Review Forum. Vol. 135. (2022). pp 1–32.online
- Jensen, Richard J. (1971). The winning of the Midwest: social and political conflict, 1888–1896. U. of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-39825-9. chapter 2.
- Johnson, Marc C. Tuesday Night Massacre: Four Senate Elections and the Radicalization of the Republican Party (U of Oklahoma Press, 2021) 1980 Senate races saw bitter defeats of Frank Church, Birch Bayh, John Culver, and George McGovern and weakened moderates in GOP.
- Kallina, Edmund F. Courthouse over White House: Chicago and the Presidential Election of 1960 (University of Central Florida Press, 1988).
- Kuo, Didi, and Jan Teorell. "Illicit tactics as substitutes: election fraud, ballot reform, and contested congressional elections in the United States, 1860-1930." Comparative Political Studies 50.5 (2017): 665–696.
- Morris, Roy. Fraud of the Century: Rutherford B. Hayes, Samuel Tilden, and the Stolen Election of 1876 (Simon & Schuster, 2003). 311 pp.
- Ortiz, Paul. Emancipation betrayed: The hidden history of black organizing and white violence in Florida from Reconstruction to the bloody election of 1920 (U of California Press, 2005).
- Rehnquist, William H. Centennial Crisis: The Disputed Election of 1876 (2004), popular history by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. online; also see online review
- Shofner, Jerrell H. “Florida Courts and the Disputed Election of 1876.” Florida Historical Quarterly 48#1, (1969), pp. 26–46. online
- Summers, Mark Wahlgren. The Era of Good Stealings (1993), Scholarly study covers corruption 1868–1877; online
- Woodward, C. Vann, ed. Responses of the Presidents to Charges of Misconduct (1974) scholarly coverage of all major election disputes. online
Historiography and memory
- Berlinski, Nicolas, et al. "The effects of unsubstantiated claims of voter fraud on confidence in elections." Journal of Experimental Political Science (2021): 1–16.
- Minnite, Lorraine C. The Myth of Voter Fraud (Cornell University Press, 2011). online
- Norris, Pippa. "The new research agenda studying electoral integrity." Electoral Studies 32.4 (2013): 563–575.
- Norris, Pippa, Sarah Cameron, and Thomas Wynter, eds. Electoral Integrity in America: Securing Democracy (Oxford University Press, USA, 2018).