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List of United States presidential elections by Electoral College margin

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Summary

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In United States presidential elections, citizens who are registered to vote cast ballots for members of the Electoral College who then cast electoral votes for president and vice president. In order to be elected to office, a candidate must win an absolute majority of electoral votes. Since the Twenty-third Amendment in 1961 gave citizens residing in the District of Columbia the right to vote, this meant winning at least 270 of the 538 electoral votes. Since the Twelfth Amendment in 1804, electors cast separate votes for the president and vice president. Previously, each elector cast two votes for president, and the winner and runner-up became president and vice president, respectively.

Definition of the margin

Informal definition

The margin of victory in a presidential election is the difference between the number of Electoral College votes garnered by the candidate with an absolute majority of electoral votes (since 1964, it has been 270 out of 538) and the number received by the second place candidate (currently in the range of 2 to 538, a margin of one vote is only possible with an odd total number of electors or a faithless elector). The exception occurs if no candidate receives an absolute majority of votes in the Electoral College. In such a situation, the House of Representatives holds a contingent presidential election. As prescribed by the Constitution, the House chooses from among the three candidates who received the most electoral votes. Thus, the winner could be a candidate who initially finished in third-place with one electoral vote. Each state delegation votes en bloc, with each state having a single vote. A candidate is required to receive an absolute majority of state delegation votes (currently 26 votes) in order for that candidate to become the president-elect.

Because the Electoral College has grown in size, the results are normalized to compensate. For example, take two elections: 1848 and 1968. In the election of 1968, Richard Nixon won with a majority of 32 votes. At first glance, the election of 1848 appears closer, because Zachary Taylor won with a majority of only 18 votes, however, Nixon could have received as many as 269 votes above a majority (if he had won unanimously), while Taylor could only have received 145 votes above the majority. Thus, the two elections must be normalized to each other to compare them: Nixon's margin of victory is calculated by dividing 32 by 269 to get 0.119. The same is done with Taylor by dividing 18 by 145, to get 0.124. Nixon's election was actually closer, because a smaller fraction of the electors separated Nixon from facing a contingent election in the House.

While the above explanation applies to modern elections, initially the process was different. Prior to the ratification of the Twelfth Amendment in 1804, the winner of the presidential election was whoever received both a majority of electors to vote for them, and who received the most votes, because each elector cast two presidential votes. Thus, if two candidates had above 50% of the electors, the margin of victory is the victorious candidate's margin over the other candidate who had above 50% of the electors. Of the four elections prior to the 12th Amendment, 1792 and 1800 both involved two candidates receiving above 50% of the electoral votes.

Mathematical definition

The margin of victory in the election is calculated as follows: let c be the total number of electors voting in the election. Let w be the number of electoral votes cast for the candidate with the most electoral votes, and let r be the number of votes for the runner-up. The United States Constitution provides that if the candidate with the most votes does not receive a simple majority of the electors voting, the United States House of Representatives chooses the president. So, the margin of victory is the number of electoral votes over both the runner-up and half the electoral votes cast. For elections after the passage of the 12th Amendment, the runner-up will always have less than half of the electoral votes cast, so the absolute margin of victory will be the difference of the winner's electoral votes and half the electoral votes cast. To express this in mathematical formulae:

: \mbox{absolute margin of victory} = \begin{cases}0; & w \le \frac{c}{2} \ w - \max{r, \frac{c}{2}}; & w \frac{c}{2} \end{cases}

The minimum possible value for the margin of victory is clearly zero. The maximum possible value of the margin of victory occurs in the case in which each elector casts a vote for the winning candidate and the runner-up gets no more than half of the vote. In this case, the maximum margin of victory is c/2. In order to meaningfully compare election to election, we need that maximum margin to be constant from election to election. Thus, we divide the absolute margin of victory by c/2 to get a normalized margin of victory that ranges from 0 to 1:

: \mbox{normalized margin of victory} = \begin{cases}0; & w \le \frac{c}{2} \ \frac{w - \max{r, \frac{c}{2}}}{\frac{c}{2}}; & w \frac{c}{2} \end{cases}

Table of election results

Under the procedure provided in Article II, Section 1, Clause 3 of the Constitution, by which the Electoral College functioned during the first four presidential elections (prior to ratification of the Twelfth Amendment), each elector cast two votes, one for president and one for vice president, but did not distinguish between them. The table's "runner-up" column shows the number of electoral votes for the candidate receiving the second highest number of combined electoral votes, and thus was elected vice president, for each of these elections except for the 1800 United States presidential election, which ended in a tie between two candidates – the presidential and vice presidential candidates of the same party. The value in the runner-up column for 1800 is the number of electoral votes received by the presidential candidate of the other major political party (even though the two winning candidates each received more electoral votes than he did). The number in parentheses in the "Rank" column is the rank that would have been assigned to this election under the rules of the 12th Amendment.

The 1824 United States presidential election is ranked closer than the election of 1800 because the 1800 election resulted in a tie between the same party's candidates for president and vice president (as presidential and vice presidential electoral votes were not distinguished), while the election of 1824 resulted in the contingent election in the House of Representatives selecting the candidate who had won the second highest number of electoral votes (out of the top three) since no candidate got a majority, 41 presidents have won a large total number of electoral votes, Franklin D. Roosevelt received the most total of electoral votes received by a candidate who was elected to the office of president due to him being the only one to serve more than two terms (1,876) and Zachary Taylor received the smallest (163).

RankYearWinnerNumber of electors votingNormalized victory marginPercentagetotalwinnerrunner-up(c)(w)(r)
60.1824John Quincy Adams26199840.00037.93%
59.1876Rutherford B. Hayes3691851840.00350.14%
58.2000George W. Bush5382712660.00950.47%
57.1796John Adams13871680.02951.45%
56.1916Woodrow Wilson5312772540.04352.17%
55.1800Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr (tie)13873650.00052.90%
54.2004George W. Bush5382862510.06353.16%
53.1884Grover Cleveland4012191820.09254.61%
52.1976Jimmy Carter5382972400.10455.20%
51.1968Richard Nixon5383011910.11955.95%
50.1848Zachary Taylor2901631270.12456.21%
49.1960John F. Kennedy5373032190.12856.42%
48.2016Donald Trump5383042270.13056.51%
47.2020Joe Biden5383062320.13856.88%
46.1948Harry S. Truman5313031890.14157.06%
45.1836Martin Van Buren294170730.15657.82%
44.2024Donald Trump5383122260.16057.99%
43.1880James A. Garfield3692141550.16057.99%
42.1888Benjamin Harrison4012331680.16258.10%
41.1856James Buchanan2961741140.17658.78%
40.1812James Madison217128890.18058.99%
39.1860Abraham Lincoln303180720.18859.41%
38.1896William McKinley4472711760.21360.63%
37.2012Barack Obama5383322060.23461.71%
36.1844James K. Polk2751701050.23661.82%
35.1892Grover Cleveland4442771450.24862.39%
34.1900William McKinley4472921550.30665.32%
33.1908William Howard Taft4833211620.32966.46%
32.2008Barack Obama5383651730.35767.84%
31.1828Andrew Jackson261178830.36468.20%
30.1992Bill Clinton5383701680.37568.77%
29.1808James Madison175122470.39469.71%
28.1996Bill Clinton5383791590.40970.45%
27.1904Theodore Roosevelt4763361400.41270.59%
26.1924Calvin Coolidge5313821360.43971.94%
25.1868Ulysses S. Grant294214800.45672.79%
24.1920Warren G. Harding5314041270.52276.08%
23.1832Andrew Jackson286219490.53176.57%
22.1988George H. W. Bush5384261110.58479.18%
21.1840William Henry Harrison294234600.59279.59%
20.1944Franklin D. Roosevelt531432990.62781.36%
19.1912Woodrow Wilson531435880.63881.92%
18.1872Ulysses S. Grant352286420.63981.95%
17.1952Dwight D. Eisenhower531442890.66583.24%
16.1928Herbert Hoover531444870.67283.62%
15.1816James Monroe217183340.68784.33%
14.1940Franklin D. Roosevelt531449820.69184.56%
13.1852Franklin Pierce296254420.71685.81%
12.1956Dwight D. Eisenhower531457730.72186.06%
11.1932Franklin D. Roosevelt531472590.77888.89%
10.1964Lyndon B. Johnson538486520.80790.33%
9.1980Ronald Reagan538489490.81890.89%
8.1864Abraham Lincoln233212210.82090.99%
7.1804Thomas Jefferson176162140.84192.05%
6.1972Richard Nixon538520170.93396.65%
5.1984Ronald Reagan538525130.95297.58%
4.1936Franklin D. Roosevelt53152380.97098.49%
3.1820James Monroe23223110.99199.57%
1.1792George Washington132132771.000100%
2.1788–1789George Washington6969341.000100%

Notes

References

References

  1. (27 October 2020). "US election 2020: What is the electoral college?".
  2. (4 November 2020). "How the electoral college works, explained".
  3. "Interpretation: The Twenty-Third Amendment {{!}} The National Constitution Center".
  4. "The Electoral College - Origin and History".
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