Election to the United States House of Representatives 1800

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In the election to the United States House of Representatives in 1800, the House of Representatives was elected on various election days in the United States from April 29, 1800 . The election was part of the general election for the 7th United States Congress that year, in which a third of the US Senators were elected. At the same time, the presidential election of 1800 took place, which Thomas Jefferson won after an initial stalemate with his fellow party member Aaron Burr after a vote in the Senate.

At the time of the election, the United States consisted of 16 states . The number of MPs to be elected was 106. The distribution of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1790 census . Only white men with a certain tax revenue were eligible to vote and eligible for election. Women and members of other races were excluded from voting. The election resulted in a landslide victory for the new President Thomas Jefferson's Democratic Republican Party, which gained 22 seats. The cause of this result was, among other things, the unpopular policies of federal President John Adams , who was also voted out at the time.

Women and slaves were neither eligible nor eligible to vote. Free African Americans were also excluded from voting in many states . The right to vote for free men was also tied to a certain property or tax revenue.

Election result

Total : 106

Distribution of seats
  
A total of 106 seats
  • Federalist Party : 38
  • Democratic Republican Party : 68

The results of the last regular elections of 1798 are in brackets. Changes during the legislative period that do not affect the elections as such are not included in these figures, but are included in the article on the 7th Congress in the section on the members of the House of Representatives noted the corresponding names of the MPs. The same applies to elections in states that did not join the Union until after the beginning of the legislative period. As a result, the sources sometimes contain different information, as changes during the legislative period were sometimes incorporated into the figures and sometimes not.

See also

Web links