The Electoral College faithless electors popular vote presidential election

Editorโ€™s Note: The presidential election of 2024 is still fresh on everyoneโ€™s mind. In fact, as of this writing, it is so recent that we still donโ€™t know how Arizona will award its 11 electoral votes. This article will be updated in January 2025, after the electoral votes are certified.

The Electoral Collegeโ€”Americaโ€™s favorite Rube Goldberg machine for picking presidents. Itโ€™s equal parts brilliant compromise and head-scratching anachronism, a system designed to ensure that no one, not even the Founding Fathers, completely understood how it works. But here we are, over two centuries later, still entrusting our highest office to a group of electors whose votes technically matter more than the rest of ours combined. Democracy at its quirkiest, right?

The Electoral College wasnโ€™t just some slapdash idea cooked up in the sweltering halls of the Constitutional Convention. No, it was born from deep suspicionโ€”our Founding Fathers werenโ€™t exactly thrilled with the idea of letting the rabble have too much say in government.

Join us in a wild ride through the Electoral Collegeโ€™s greatest hits and misses. From the candidates who walked away with landslide victories to those who barely limped into office with fewer popular votes than their opponent, weโ€™ll break down the percentage of electoral votes each winner received. And because we know you love the weird stuff, weโ€™ll sprinkle in some choice Electoral College trivia along the wayโ€”faithless electors, dead candidates, and the occasional vice-presidential drama. Buckle up, because the only votes that really matter are about to get very interesting.

The Electoral College: The Only Votes That Really Matter

The USAโ€™s Founding Fathers were suspicious of unchecked democracy. This sentiment was expressed by Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No. 68:

Talents for low intrigue, and the little arts of popularity, may alone suffice to elevate a man to the first honors in a single State; but it will require other talents, and a different kind of merit, to establish him in the esteem and confidence of the whole Union, or of so considerable a portion of it as would be necessary to make him a successful candidate for the distinguished office of President of the United States.

The electoral college faithless electors popular vote

They were also concerned about the โ€œAnother argument states that the Electoral College prevents the โ€œtyranny of the majority,โ€ where a few mega-cities or densely-populated states would ignore or trample on the rights of the rest of the country.

Consequently, the USAโ€™s chief executive is not elected by popular vote. Each state is awarded a number of votes in the Electoral College equal to the number of that stateโ€™s senators and U.S. representatives. In 1961, the 23rd Amendment to the Constitution gave Washington, D.C.,a say in the process, as well. As a result, the District of Columbia has three electoral votes.

Technically, the popular vote doesnโ€™t matter at all. In principal, electors Regardless of the popular vote, those who are designated as electors by a state may vote for any candidate โ€” even if it is someone who wasnโ€™t on the ballot. This is known as a โ€œFaithless Electorโ€ scenario.

A Faithless Elector is a rogue who goes off-script and refuses to vote for the candidate who won his or her stateโ€™s popular vote. As of the 2020 election, there have been 165 instances of faithlessness: 90 for president and 75 for vice president. While these rebel votes might sound like the stuff of political drama, theyโ€™ve never actually swung an election. Nearly all have been symbolic gestures, casting their votes for third-party candidates, fictional characters, or non-candidates instead of throwing their support behind a major opposing party. Itโ€™s political theater at its finest.

Monroe Loses Out on Unanimity โ€” Not for the Reason Youโ€™ve Been Told

Everyone remembers the big wins and dramatic losses, but the quirks? Those are where the real fun lives. Take James Monroeโ€™s near-unanimous reelection in 1820, for example. Out of 231 electoral votes, Monroe snagged 230. That last, lonely vote? It was cast against him by William Plumer, a New Hampshire elector, former senator, and part-time buzzkill. Instead of voting for Monroe, Plumer went rogue and cast his ballot for Secretary of State John Quincy Adams.

Thereโ€™s a persistent myth that Plumer did this out of some noble desire to preserve George Washingtonโ€™s status as the only unanimously elected president. But no, Plumer wasnโ€™t playing the role of historyโ€™s hype man. He simply thought Monroe was, to put it bluntly, meh. In Plumerโ€™s opinion, Monroe was a lackluster president, and Adams seemed like a better choice for the job. No grand gesture hereโ€”just one man throwing shade at Monroeโ€™s rรฉsumรฉ.

And Plumer didnโ€™t stop there. He also refused to vote for Monroeโ€™s running mate, Vice President Daniel Tompkins. According to Plumer, Tompkins was โ€œgrossly intemperate,โ€ lacked the gravitas for the job, and pretty much ghosted his only official duty as President of the Senate, being absent three-quarters of the time. Harsh, but Plumer wasnโ€™t wrong. Instead, he cast his vice-presidential vote for Richard Rush, which, as a fun bit of foreshadowing, accidentally predicted the 1828 National Republican ticket of Adams and Rush. Nostradamus, eat your heart out.

As for Adams, he was less than thrilled about this unexpected show of support. He described Plumerโ€™s vote as a โ€œsurprise and mortification,โ€ taking it as an insult to the Monroe administration rather than the compliment Plumer probably thought it was. Awkward.

The Candidate Who Had the Discourtesy to Die

The election where it happened the most was in 1872, 63 faithless electors refused to vote for Horace Greeley. It wasnโ€™t because they were feeling particularly defiant, but because Greeley had inconveniently died between Election Day and the Electoral College convening. (See โ€œWhat Happens if a Candidate Dies During the Election Process?โ€ ) Fortunately for the stability of democracy, Ulysses S. Grant had already locked up enough votes to win reelection, so no harm, no foul.

Much Ado About an Undesirable VP

Then thereโ€™s the 1836 election, which gave us perhaps the most dramatic example of collective faithlessness. Virginiaโ€™s entire 23-man delegation straight-up abstained from voting for Richard M. Johnson, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee. Why? Letโ€™s just say they werenโ€™t fans of his colorful personal life. This faithless move caused Johnson to fall one vote short of an Electoral College majority, tossing the vice-presidential race to the Senate for a contingent election. In the end, party loyalty prevailed, and the Senate elected Johnson anyway. Meanwhile, the presidential race was unaffected since Virginiaโ€™s electors dutifully supported Martin Van Buren as pledged.

Nixon: The Faithless Elector Magnet

And for a truly unique twist, letโ€™s talk about Richard Nixon, the Electoral Collegeโ€™s version of a faithless-elector magnet. In each of his three presidential campaignsโ€”1960, 1968, and 1972โ€”Nixon managed to attract at least one elector who said, โ€œNah, Iโ€™m voting for someone else.โ€ Oklahoma, North Carolina, and Virginia all gave him their states, but each included a rogue elector who decided to write in another name. Was it a trend? A curse? Or just the Electoral College being its usual weird self? You decide.

So, while faithless electors make for fascinating trivia, theyโ€™re more like political footnotes than game-changers. Still, they add just the right amount of chaos to remind us that the Electoral College is anything but predictable.

Some states have laws that require electors to vote in accordance with the stateโ€™s popular vote. At least 22 states leave it entirely up to the elector to vote his or her conscience.

It Takes a Majority โ€” Except When It Doesnโ€™t

Barring any faithless elector scenarios, it is possible to win the presidency in the Electoral College with about 23% of the popular vote, if you play the map strategically. Read this article from NPR for more details on how to accomplish this.

George washington the Electoral College
George Washington, the only one to win all of the Electoral Collegeโ€™s votes.

It is a case of โ€œmajority rulesโ€ when we get to the Electoral College, however. (See โ€œWhen Does the Winner of the Election Become the President-Elect?โ€). Wellโ€ฆ most of the time. One man became president with fewer than one-third of the electoral votes, and five presidents took office without a single electoral vote.

George Washington is in a league all his own. The nationโ€™s first president was the only one to be unanimously elected by the Electoral College. Not content with that distinction, he doubled down and did it twice.

On the other end of the scale is John Quincy Adams. In 1824, he managed to get just 32% of the electoral votes. Incidentally, thatโ€™s almost exactly the same as his percentage of the popular vote. His opponent, Andrew Jackson, secured 38%. At first glance, it would appear that Jackson won. Remember, however, that to win in the Electoral College, a candidate must receive a majority of the votes, not merely a plurality. Other candidates received enough votes to prevent either of the top two contenders from gaining an outright majority. As a result, the election was thrown to the House of Representatives. Adams was elected, despite getting less than one-third of the electoral and popular vote.

We also have five presidents โ€” John Tyler, Millard Fillmore, Andrew Johnson, Chester A. Arthur, and Gerald Ford โ€” who served as president despite getting no electoral college votes. Those cases had nothing to do with faithless electors, however. These men were vice presidents who assumed the presidency upon the death or resignation of their successors and then chose not to seek an elected term or failed in the attempt.

Electoral College Class Rankings

As has already been mentioned, George Washington is at the top of his class in Electoral College vote percentages. He is not the only one to come out of a presidential election with high marks from the Electoral College. Here is a list of the percentages in electoral vote history:

Rank#PresidentYearPercentage
11George Washington1789100.00%
11George Washington1792100.00%
35James Monroe182099.57%
432Franklin D. Roosevelt193698.49%
540Ronald Reagan198497.58%
637Richard M. Nixon197296.65%
73Thomas Jefferson180492.05%
816Abraham Lincoln186490.99%
940Ronald Reagan198090.89%
1036Lyndon B. Johnson196490.33%
1132Franklin D. Roosevelt193288.89%
1234Dwight D. Eisenhower195686.06%
1314Franklin Pierce185285.81%
1432Franklin D. Roosevelt194084.56%
155James Monroe181684.33%
1631Herbert Hoover192883.62%
1734Dwight D. Eisenhower195283.24%
1818Ulysses S. Grant187281.95%
1928Woodrow Wilson191281.92%
2032Franklin D. Roosevelt194481.36%
219William Henry Harrison184079.59%
2241George H. W. Bush198879.18%
237Andrew Jackson183276.57%
2429Warren G. Harding192076.08%
2518Ulysses S. Grant186872.79%
2630Calvin Coolidge192471.94%
2726Theodore Roosevelt190470.59%
2842Bill Clinton199670.45%
294James Madison180869.71%
3042Bill Clinton199268.77%
317Andrew Jackson182868.20%
3244Barack Obama200867.84%
3327William H. Taft190866.46%
3425William McKinley190065.32%
3524Grover Cleveland189262.39%
3611James K. Polk184461.82%
3744Barack Obama201261.71%
3825William McKinley189660.63%
3916Abraham Lincoln186059.41%
404James Madison181258.99%
4115James Buchanan185658.78%
4223Benjamin Harrison188858.10%
4320James A. Garfield188057.99%
448Martin Van Buren183657.82%
4533Harry S. Truman194857.06%
4646Joe Biden202056.88%
4745Donald J. Trump201656.50%
4835John F. Kennedy196056.42%
4912Zachary Taylor184856.21%
5037Richard M. Nixon196855.95%
5139Jimmy Carter197655.20%
5222Grover Cleveland188454.61%
5343George W. Bush200453.16%
543Thomas Jefferson180052.90%
5528Woodrow Wilson191652.17%
562John Adams179651.45%
5743George W. Bush200050.37%
5819Rutherford B. Hayes187650.14%
596John Quincy Adams182432.18%
10John TylerNo presidential election win.
13Millard FillmoreNo presidential election win.
17Andrew JohnsonNo presidential election win.
21Chester A. ArthurNo presidential election win.
38Gerald R. FordNo presidential election win.

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2 responses to “The Electoral College: How to Graduate With the Only Votes that Matter”

  1. Lyndon B. Johnson was also among those who became president without initially being elected through the Electoral College.

    1. You make a good point. We intended to say that there were some who served as president without ever being sent there by the Electoral College. LBJ did in fact get a promotion in 1963, but in 1964, he was elected in his own right. We made a correction to reflect this. Thanks for pointing out the error!

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