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The 1800 United States presidential election in Virginia was held between October 31 – December 3, 1800. Virginia voters chose 21 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President. Democratic-Republican Vice President Thomas Jefferson carried the state by taking all 21 electoral votes and over ...
1789 Virginia's 5th congressional district election; 1789 United States House of Representatives elections in New York; 1789 New Hampshire's at-large congressional district special election; 1789 New York gubernatorial election; 1789 Connecticut gubernatorial election; 1788–89 United States Senate elections. 1789 United States Senate ...
1799–1800 Virginia General Assembly December 2, 1799 - January 28, 1800 1799 1800–1801 Virginia General Assembly December 1, 1800 - January 23, 1801 1800 1801–1802 Virginia General Assembly December 7, 1801 - February 2, 1802 1801 1802–1803 Virginia General Assembly December 6, 1802 - January 29, 1803 1802
Elections in Virginia are authorized under Article I of the Virginia State Constitution, sections 5–6, and Article V which establishes elections for the state-level officers, cabinet, and legislature. Article VII section 4 establishes the election of county-level officers. Elections are regulated under state statute 24.2-102.
The last state to vote, South Carolina, chose its electors on December 2, and would become key to determining the election. The state elections in mid-October had produced an assembly that was about evenly divided between committed Federalists and Republicans, with 16 unaffiliated representatives who were all strongly pro-Jefferson.
The 1800–01 United States Senate elections were held on various dates in various states, coinciding with Thomas Jefferson being elected to the White House. As these U.S. Senate elections were prior to the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913, senators were chosen by state legislatures .
Following is a table of United States presidential elections in Kansas, ordered by year. Since its admission to statehood in 1861, Kansas has participated in every U.S. presidential election. As of 2024, Kansas has the longest streak of being decided by more than a 5% margin in presidential elections, with the last race this close being in 1896.
Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 7th United States Congress convened on December 7, 1801. They were held at the same time as the 1800 presidential election, in which Vice President Thomas Jefferson, a Democratic Republican, defeated incumbent President John Adams, a ...