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I. The Election of 1824 B. Four candidates from the Republican Party competed for the presidency. William H. Crawford a. former congressman from Georgia – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
I. The Election of 1824
B. Four candidates from the Republican Party
competed for the presidency. ?
  • William H. Crawford
  • a. former congressman from Georgia
  • b. poor health weakened him as a candidate.
  • 2. Andrew Jackson
  • a. hero of War of 1812
  • b. raised in poverty spoke for Americans who
    had been left out of politics
  • 3. Henry Clay
  • a. from Kentucky was Speaker of the House
  • b. fought for internal improvements, high
    tariffs, and strong national bank
  • 4. John Quincy Adams
  • a. Massachusetts (son of John Adams)
  • b. received support from merchants of Northeast

2
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3
C. Striking a Bargain
1. No candidate received a majority, or more than
half, of the electoral votes. ?
2. Jackson won 99 electoral votes which gave him
a plurality, or largest single share. ? 3. When
no candidate receives a majority of electoral
votes, the House of Representatives selects the
president. ? 4. Henry Clay met with Adams and
made a bargain. ? 5. Adams won the presidency
? 6. Jacksons followers accused the two men of
making a corrupt bargain
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Section 1-6
4
D. The Adams Presidency
1. Adamss policies ran against popular opinion.
?
2. Adams wanted a. a stronger navy, scientific
expeditions supported by government funds ? b.
direct federal involvementin economic growth.
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Section 1-7
5
II. The Election of 1828
A. By the election of 1828, the party had divided
into two separate parties. ?
1. Democratic-Republicans (Democrats) ? a.
supported Jackson ? b. favored states rights
and mistrusted strong central government ? c.
many were from the frontier, immigrants, or
laborers ? 2. National Republicans ? a.
supported Adams ? b. wanted strong central
government ? c. were merchants and farmers
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Section 1-9
6
II. The Election of 1828 (cont.)
3. During the campaign both parties resorted to
mudslinging, attempts to ruin their opponents
with insults ? 4. Other new elements of
campaigning included slogans, rallies, buttons,
and events were also used to arouse enthusiasm.
(pages 335336)
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Section 1-10
7
B. Jackson Triumphs
1. In the election of 1828, Jackson received most
of the votes in the frontier states and South ?
2. Jackson won the election in a landslide, an
overwhelming victory. ?
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Section 1-11
8
III. Jackson as President
A. Jackson was everything most Americans admired
patriot, self-made man, and a hero. ?
B. Old Hickory 1. Early life ? a. born in
log cabin ? b. parents died before he was 15
? c. fought with Patriots in American Rev
? 2. People loved Jackson a. represented small
farmers, craft workers, and others who felt left
out of politics ? b. felt he demonstrated an
American success story ? c. popularity changed
politics
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Section 1-13
9
C. New Voters
1. In the early years most states had limited
suffrage, or the right to vote. ?
2. By 1815 many states would begin to loosen the
property requirements for voting. ? 3. In 1840
more than 80 of white males voted ? 4. Women
could not vote and African Americans and Native
Americans had few rights of any kind
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Section 1-14
10
D. The Spoils System
  1. Democrats wanted to open up government jobs to
    people of all walks of life. ?
  2. They were disturbed that the federal government
    had become a bureaucracy, a system in which
    nonelected officials carry out the laws ?
  3. President Jackson fired many federal workers and
    replaced them with his supporters

(pages 336337)
Section 1-15
11
The Spoils System
4. The discharged employees said that Jackson was
acting like a tyrant ?
5. Jackson said the new federal employees would
be good for democracy.
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Section 1-16
12
The Spoils System
6. One Jackson supported explained to the
victory belong the spoils which means ? since
Jackson won the election he had the rights to the
spoils. ? 7. The spoils system practice of
replacing government employees with winning
candidates supporters.
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Section 1-16
13
E. Electoral Changes
1. The caucus system was abandoned ?
2. They were replaced by nominating conventions.
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Section 1-17
14
IV. The Tariff Debate
A. Northeast welcomed the tariffs. ?
1. Made European goods more expensive. ? 2.
Americans would now be even more likely to buy
American-made products.
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Section 1-20
15
IV. The Tariff Debate (cont.)
  • Southerners hated the tariff and called it the
    Tariff of Abominations. ?
  • B. The South Protests
  • 1. Calhoun argued that states had the right to
    nullify, or cancel a federal law they considered
    against state interests.
  • 2. Some Southern states wanted to secede, or
    break away from the U.S. to form their own
    government.

16
C. The Webster-Hayne Debate 1. Daniel Webster (a
senator from Massachusetts) attacked the idea of
nullification and said
Liberty and Union now and forever, one and
inseparable!
17
IV. The Tariff Debate (cont.)
D. Jackson takes a stand ? 1. Jackson backed the
tariff. Our federal union must be preserved!
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Section 1-21
18
IV. The Tariff Debate (cont.)
E. The Nullification Crisis. ?
1. To ease the crisis Jackson proposed a
compromise that would gradually lower the tariff
over several years. ? 2. The south would remember
the lesson of the nullification crisis that the
federal government would not allow a state to go
its own way without a fight.
(pages 338339)
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Section 1-22
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