United States presidential elections in New Hampshire
Number of elections | 58 |
---|---|
Voted Democrat | 19 |
Voted Republican | 28 |
Voted Democratic-Republican | 5 |
Voted Federalist | 4 |
Voted other | 2[1] |
Voted for winning candidate | 42 |
Voted for losing candidate | 16 |
Following is a table of United States presidential elections in New Hampshire, ordered by year. Since its admission to statehood in 1788, New Hampshire has participated in every U.S. presidential election.
Winners of the state are in bold.
Elections from 1864 to present
Year | Winner (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Other national candidates[2] |
Votes | Percent | Electoral Votes |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Donald Trump | 345,810 | 47.25 | Hillary Clinton | 348,497 | 47.62 | - | - | 4 | ||
2012 | Barack Obama | 369,561 | 51.98 | Mitt Romney | 329,918 | 46.4 | - | 4 | |||
2008 | Barack Obama | 384,826 | 54.13 | John McCain | 316,534 | 44.52 | - | 4 | |||
2004 | George W. Bush | 331,237 | 48.87 | John Kerry | 340,511 | 50.24 | - | 4 | |||
2000 | George W. Bush | 273,559 | 48.07 | Al Gore | 266,348 | 46.8 | - | 4 | |||
1996 | Bill Clinton | 246,214 | 49.32 | Bob Dole | 196,532 | 39.37 | Ross Perot | 48,390 | 9.69 | 4 | |
1992 | Bill Clinton | 209,040 | 38.91 | George H. W. Bush | 202,484 | 37.69 | Ross Perot | 121,337 | 22.59 | 4 | |
1988 | George H. W. Bush | 281,537 | 62.49 | Michael Dukakis | 163,696 | 36.33 | - | 4 | |||
1984 | Ronald Reagan | 267,051 | 68.66 | Walter Mondale | 120,395 | 30.95 | - | 4 | |||
1980 | Ronald Reagan | 221,705 | 57.74 | Jimmy Carter | 108,864 | 28.35 | John B. Anderson | 49,693 | 12.94 | 4 | |
1976 | Jimmy Carter | 147,635 | 43.47 | Gerald Ford | 185,935 | 54.75 | - | 4 | |||
1972 | Richard Nixon | 213,724 | 63.98 | George McGovern | 116,435 | 34.86 | - | 4 | |||
1968 | Richard Nixon | 154,903 | 52.1 | Hubert Humphrey | 130,589 | 43.93 | George Wallace | 11,173 | 3.76 | 4 | |
1964 | Lyndon B. Johnson | 184,064 | 63.89 | Barry Goldwater | 104,029 | 36.11 | - | 4 | |||
1960 | John F. Kennedy | 137,772 | 46.58 | Richard Nixon | 157,989 | 53.42 | - | 4 | |||
1956 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | 176,519 | 66.11 | Adlai Stevenson II | 90,364 | 33.84 | - | 4 | |||
1952 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | 166,287 | 60.92 | Adlai Stevenson II | 106,663 | 39.08 | - | 4 | |||
1948 | Harry S. Truman | 107,995 | 46.66 | Thomas E. Dewey | 121,299 | 52.41 | Strom Thurmond | 7 | 0 | 4 | |
1944 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | 119,663 | 52.11 | Thomas E. Dewey | 109,916 | 47.87 | - | 4 | |||
1940 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | 125,292 | 53.22 | Wendell Willkie | 110,127 | 46.78 | - | 4 | |||
1936 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | 108,460 | 49.73 | Alf Landon | 104,642 | 47.98 | - | 4 | |||
1932 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | 100,680 | 48.99 | Herbert Hoover | 103,629 | 50.42 | - | 4 | |||
1928 | Herbert Hoover | 115,404 | 58.65 | Al Smith | 80,715 | 41.02 | - | 4 | |||
1924 | Calvin Coolidge | 98,575 | 59.83 | John W. Davis | 57,201 | 34.72 | Robert M. La Follette Sr. | 8,993 | 5.46 | 4 | |
1920 | Warren G. Harding | 95,196 | 59.84 | James M. Cox | 62,662 | 39.39 | - | 4 | |||
1916 | Woodrow Wilson | 43,781 | 49.12 | Charles E. Hughes | 43,725 | 49.06 | - | 4 | |||
1912 | Woodrow Wilson | 34,724 | 39.48 | Theodore Roosevelt | 17,794 | 20.23 | William H. Taft | 32,927 | 37.43 | 4 | |
1908 | William H. Taft | 53,149 | 59.32 | William Jennings Bryan | 33,655 | 37.56 | - | 4 | |||
1904 | Theodore Roosevelt | 54,163 | 60.07 | Alton B. Parker | 34,074 | 37.79 | - | 4 | |||
1900 | William McKinley | 54,799 | 59.33 | William Jennings Bryan | 35,489 | 38.42 | - | 4 | |||
1896 | William McKinley | 57,444 | 68.66 | William Jennings Bryan | 21,650 | 25.88 | - | 4 | |||
1892 | Grover Cleveland | 42,081 | 47.11 | Benjamin Harrison | 45,658 | 51.11 | James B. Weaver | 293 | 0.33 | 4 | |
1888 | Benjamin Harrison | 45,728 | 50.34 | Grover Cleveland | 43,456 | 47.84 | - | 4 | |||
1884 | Grover Cleveland | 39,198 | 46.34 | James G. Blaine | 43,254 | 51.14 | - | 4 | |||
1880 | James A. Garfield | 44,856 | 51.94 | Winfield S. Hancock | 40,797 | 47.24 | - | 5 | |||
1876 | Rutherford B. Hayes | 38,510 | 48.05 | Samuel J. Tilden | 41,540 | 51.83 | - | 5 | |||
1872 | Ulysses S. Grant | 37,168 | 53.94 | Horace Greeley | 31,425 | 45.61 | - | 5 | |||
1868 | Ulysses S. Grant | 37,718 | 55.2 | Horatio Seymour | 30,575 | 44.8 | - | 5 | |||
1864 | Abraham Lincoln | 36,596 | 52.6 | George B. McClellan | 33,034 | 47.4 | - | 5 |
Election of 1860
The election of 1860 was a complex realigning election in which the breakdown of the previous two-party alignment culminated in four parties each competing for influence in different parts of the country. The result of the election, with the victory of an ardent opponent of slavery, spurred the secession of eleven states and brought about the American Civil War.
Year | Winner (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Electoral Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1860 | Abraham Lincoln | 37,519 | 56.9 | Stephen A. Douglas | 25,887 | 39.3 | John C. Breckinridge | 2,125 | 3.2 | John Bell | 412 | 0.6 | 5 |
Elections from 1828 to 1856
Year | Winner (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Other national candidates[2] |
Votes | Percent | Electoral Votes |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1856 | James Buchanan | 31,891 | 45.71 | John C. Frémont | 37,473 | 53.71 | Millard Fillmore | 410 | 0.59 | 5 | |
1852 | Franklin Pierce | 28,503 | 56.4 | Winfield Scott | 15,486 | 30.64 | John P. Hale | 6,546 | 12.95 | 5 | |
1848 | Zachary Taylor | 14,781 | 29.5 | Lewis Cass | 27,763 | 55.41 | Martin Van Buren | 7,560 | 15.09 | 6 | |
1844 | James K. Polk | 27,160 | 55.22 | Henry Clay | 17,866 | 36.32 | - | 6 | |||
1840 | William Henry Harrison | 26,310 | 43.88 | Martin Van Buren | 32,774 | 54.66 | - | 7 | |||
1836 | Martin Van Buren | 18,697 | 75.01 | William Henry Harrison | 6,228 | 24.99 | various[3] | 7 | |||
1832 | Andrew Jackson | 24,855 | 56.67 | Henry Clay | 18,938 | 43.24 | William Wirt | no ballots | 7 | ||
1828 | Andrew Jackson | 20,212 | 45.9 | John Quincy Adams | 23,823 | 54.1 | - | 8 |
Election of 1824
The election of 1824 was a complex realigning election following the collapse of the prevailing Democratic-Republican Party, resulting in four different candidates each claiming to carry the banner of the party, and competing for influence in different parts of the country. The election was the only one in history to be decided by the House of Representatives under the provisions of the Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution after no candidate secured a majority of the electoral vote. It was also the only presidential election in which the candidate who received a plurality of electoral votes (Andrew Jackson) did not become President, a source of great bitterness for Jackson and his supporters, who proclaimed the election of Adams a corrupt bargain.
Year | Winner (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Loser (nationally) | Votes | Percent | Electoral Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1824 | Andrew Jackson | no ballots | John Quincy Adams | 9,389 | 93.59 | Henry Clay | no ballots | William H. Crawford | 643 | 6.41 | 8 |
Elections from 1788-89 to 1820
In the election of 1820, incumbent President James Monroe ran effectively unopposed. The popular vote was primarily directed to filling the office of Vice President. The sole electoral vote against Monroe came from William Plumer, an elector from New Hampshire and former United States senator and New Hampshire governor. Plumer cast his electoral ballot for Secretary of State John Quincy Adams. While some accounts claim incorrectly that this was to ensure that George Washington would remain the only American president unanimously chosen by the Electoral College, that was not Plumer's goal. In fact, Plumer simply thought that Monroe was a mediocre president and that Adams would be a better one.[4] Plumer also refused to vote for Tompkins for Vice President as "grossly intemperate", not having "that weight of character which his office requires," and "because he grossly neglected his duty" in his "only" official role as President of the Senate by being "absent nearly three-fourths of the time";[5] Plumer instead voted for Richard Rush.
Year | Winner (nationally) | Loser (nationally) | Electoral Votes |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1820 | James Monroe | - | 9 | Monroe effectively ran unopposed. One elector voted for John Quincy Adams (see above). |
1816 | James Monroe | Rufus King | 8 | |
1812 | James Madison | DeWitt Clinton | 8 | |
1808 | James Madison | Charles C. Pinckney | 7 | |
1804 | Thomas Jefferson | Charles C. Pinckney | 7 | |
1800 | Thomas Jefferson | John Adams | 6 | |
1796 | John Adams | Thomas Jefferson | 6 | |
1792 | George Washington | - | 6 | Washington effectively ran unopposed. |
1788-89 | George Washington | - | 5 | Washington effectively ran unopposed. |
References
- ↑ George Washington, 1788-89, 1792.
- 1 2 For purposes of these lists, other national candidates are defined as those who won at least one electoral vote, or won at least ten percent of the vote in multiple states.
- ↑ Three other candidates ran and received electoral votes nationally as part of the unsuccessful Whig strategy to defeat Martin Van Buren by running four candidates with local appeal in different regions of the country. The others were Hugh Lawson White, Daniel Webster, and Willie Person Mangum. None of these candidates appeared on the ballot in New Hampshire.
- ↑ Turner (1955) p 253
- ↑ "Daniel D. Tompkins, 6th Vice President (1817-1825)" United States Senate web site.