History of US Presidential Elections — Statistics & Facts 2026
Politics United States Elections 1788–2024

History of US Presidential Elections — Statistics & Facts 2026

The United States has held 60 presidential elections since George Washington's unanimous victory in 1788. The world's oldest continuing democracy has produced everything from unanimous victories to 537-vote margins, from 82% turnout to 49%, from FDR's four consecutive terms to Liz Truss-style instability. The Electoral College — a system designed in 1787 — has produced five presidents who lost the popular vote, most recently in 2000 and 2016.

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BusinessStats Research Desk
Political Science Intelligence · United States Elections Division
32 min read Updated March 2026 Peer Reviewed
Methodology & Data Sources
Election Results: Dave Leip Atlas of US Presidential Elections, FEC official results, National Archives Electoral College data, Congressional Research Service reports.
Voter Turnout: United States Election Project (VEP turnout), Census Bureau Voting and Registration Supplements, IDEA Voter Turnout Database.
Historical Data: American Presidency Project (UC Santa Barbara), Miller Center Presidential History, Pew Research Center election analyses.
Demographics: PRRI American Values Survey, AP-NORC Election Research, CNN and NBC News exit poll databases 1976–2024.
60Presidential Elections
538Electoral Votes Total
270Needed to Win
5EC Won / PV Lost
11Incumbent Losses
537Closest Margin (2000)
60Elections
538Elec. Votes
270To Win
5EC/PV Split
11Incumbent Losses
537Closest Votes
Sources: Dave Leip Atlas FEC Official Results National Archives US Election Project American Presidency Project Miller Center

US Presidential Elections 1788–2024 — 236 Years of Democratic History

No institution better captures the contradictions of American democracy than the presidential election system. The United States invented modern mass democratic politics — universal white male suffrage in the 1820s, mass party conventions in the 1830s, competitive two-party elections throughout — yet also produced a system where five candidates won the presidency while losing the popular vote, where African Americans were systematically disenfranchised for nearly a century after emancipation, and where the candidate with the most votes has lost three times in the past 25 years. The Electoral College — designed by the Founders to filter popular passions through a deliberative body of electors — has become one of the most controversial features of any democracy in the world.

The 60 elections from 1788 to 2024 encompass: George Washington's unanimous 100% victories, Andrew Jackson's populist revolution, Abraham Lincoln's election that triggered secession, FDR's unprecedented four terms, the Cold War consensus elections of the 1950s–60s, the partisan realignment of the 1968–1988 period, the tight modern elections of 2000–2016, and Donald Trump's historic return to the presidency in 2024 — becoming only the second president in history to win non-consecutive terms (after Grover Cleveland in 1884/1892). Trump won with 312 Electoral Votes and 49.8% of the popular vote — a popular vote majority that had eluded him in both 2016 and 2020. By March 2026, the Trump second term has been among the most consequential first years in modern presidential history: sweeping executive orders on immigration, tariffs, and federal workforce, the largest single-day deportation operation since Eisenhower, and approval ratings ranging from 43–51% depending on the pollster. For economic context see our US financial markets statistics.

US presidential election White House Washington DC American democracy statistics
The White House — home to 46 presidents across 60 elections since 1788. The US presidential election system, including the Electoral College and First Past The Post primaries, is among the most studied — and debated — electoral systems in the world.

US Presidential Election Voter Turnout — 1828 to 2024

The bar chart below tracks US presidential election voter turnout as a percentage of the voting-eligible population (VEP) from 1828 — when mass popular voting began — to 2024. Three distinct eras are visible: the high-turnout 19th century (70–80%+, when elections were community social events and voting was public), the Progressive Era decline (1900–1940), and the modern era (1948–present, averaging 55–65%). The 2020 election recorded 66.8% — the highest since 1900 — driven by pandemic mail-in voting expansion and intense partisan mobilisation. The 2024 election recorded 64.4%.

US Presidential Election Turnout 1828-2024
Voter Turnout as % of Voting-Eligible Population — 1828 to 2024
% of VEP · US Election Project · McDonald (2024)
64.4%
2024 Election
Source: United States Election Project · Michael McDonald · FEC · US Census Bureau

The Electoral College — 538 Votes, 270 to Win, and 5 Popular Vote Losers

The Electoral College was designed at the Constitutional Convention of 1787 as a compromise between direct popular election and Congressional selection of the president. Each state receives electoral votes equal to its total Congressional delegation (House + Senate). The winner-take-all system used by 48 states means a candidate can win the presidency by winning key states by tiny margins while losing others by large margins — making it theoretically possible to win with only about 23% of the popular vote in the most extreme scenario.

ELECTORAL COLLEGE DISTRIBUTION
Electoral Votes by State Size Category — 538 Total
Number of electoral votes · 2024 apportionment · Winner-take-all in 48 states
Key Fact
Five Presidents Won the Electoral College While Losing the Popular Vote

John Quincy Adams (1824, no popular majority), Rutherford Hayes (1876, +3 electoral votes), Benjamin Harrison (1888, -0.8% popular vote), George W. Bush (2000, -0.5% popular vote, decided by 537 votes in Florida), and Donald Trump (2016, -2.1% popular vote). The 2000 and 2016 cases reignited the perennial debate about Electoral College reform. A National Popular Vote Interstate Compact — committing states to award electoral votes to the national popular vote winner — has been signed by states controlling 209 electoral votes as of 2024, but needs 270 to take effect.

Largest Electoral College States — 2024 ApportionmentClick to sort
StateElectoral Votes2024 WinnerSwing State?
California54Biden/Harris (D)Safe Dem
Texas40Trump (R)Safe Rep
Florida30Trump (R)Lean Rep
New York28Harris (D)Safe Dem
Pennsylvania19Trump (R)Swing
Illinois19Harris (D)Safe Dem
Ohio17Trump (R)Lean Rep
Georgia16Trump (R)Swing
Michigan15Trump (R)Swing
Arizona11Trump (R)Swing

US Presidential Elections 1960–2024 — Complete Results Table

The table below covers every US presidential election from 1960 to 2024 — the modern era of television politics. This period encompasses the civil rights realignment (1964–1968), the Watergate aftermath (1976), Reagan Revolution (1980–1984), third-party disruptions (1992, 1996), the contested 2000 election, the post-9/11 elections (2004), Obama's historic victories (2008, 2012), Trump's 2016 upset, Biden's 2020 victory, and Trump's 2024 comeback. For economic context behind each election see our US financial markets and US GDP statistics.

US Presidential Elections 1960–2024 — Full ResultsClick to sort
YearWinnerPartyEV WonPop. Vote %Turnout %Incumbent?
1960John F. KennedyDemocrat30349.7%63.1%Open
1964Lyndon B. JohnsonDemocrat48661.1%61.9%Inc. Won
1968Richard NixonRepublican30143.4%60.8%Open
1972Richard NixonRepublican52060.7%55.2%Inc. Won
1976Jimmy CarterDemocrat29750.1%53.6%Open
1980Ronald ReaganRepublican48950.7%52.8%Inc. Lost
1984Ronald ReaganRepublican52558.8%53.3%Inc. Won
1988George H.W. BushRepublican42653.4%50.3%Open
1992Bill ClintonDemocrat37043.0%55.2%Inc. Lost
1996Bill ClintonDemocrat37949.2%49.0%Inc. Won
2000George W. BushRepublican27147.9%51.2%Open
2004George W. BushRepublican28650.7%60.1%Inc. Won
2008Barack ObamaDemocrat36552.9%61.6%Open
2012Barack ObamaDemocrat33251.1%58.6%Inc. Won
2016Donald TrumpRepublican30646.1%59.2%Open
2020Joe BidenDemocrat30651.3%66.8%Inc. Lost
2024Donald TrumpRepublican31249.8%64.4%Open

US Party History — Democrats vs Republicans, and the Parties That Disappeared

The United States has been dominated by a two-party system since 1860, but the identities and coalitions of those two parties have transformed dramatically. The Republican Party — founded in 1854 specifically to oppose the expansion of slavery — won its first presidential election in 1860 with Lincoln and dominated national politics through the Civil War and Reconstruction. The Democratic Party — the world's oldest political party, tracing roots to Andrew Jackson's 1828 campaign — controlled the South for a century after the Civil War before the parties' regional bases completely swapped during the civil rights era of the 1960s.

ELECTORAL WINS BY PARTY — 1828-2024
Presidential Election Wins by Party — 1828 to 2024
Total elections won per party · Dave Leip Atlas · FEC · American Presidency Project

Presidential Election Records — Biggest Wins, Closest Races, and Historic Firsts

523–8FDR 1936 Electoral Votes
537Closest Margin (FL 2000)
77Biden Age When Elected
43JFK Age When Elected
4FDR Terms Won
2Non-Consec. Term Winners

Biggest Landslide Victories — Winning Electoral Vote Margin

US election voting booth democracy presidential election statistics history
American voters at the polls — a scene repeated 60 times since 1788. US presidential elections are held every 4 years on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November — a tradition dating to 1845 when Congress standardised Election Day to avoid multi-day voting that allowed early results to influence later voters.

The Tightest Presidential Races in US History

CLOSEST PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS
Closest US Presidential Elections — Popular Vote Margin
Winning margin in popular vote percentage · Dave Leip Atlas · FEC
* 2000 election: Bush won Electoral College 271-266 while losing popular vote by 543,895 votes (-0.5%). Source: FEC, Dave Leip Atlas of US Presidential Elections.

Presidential Election Demographic Trends — How America Votes Has Changed

The chart below tracks four key demographic voting trends in US presidential elections from 1972 to 2024: college graduate vote, non-college white vote, Black voter turnout, and Hispanic vote for Democrats. The most dramatic shift is the college/non-college divergence — in 1972, college and non-college whites voted nearly identically; by 2024, college-educated voters lean strongly Democratic while non-college whites are the Republican base. This educational realignment — driven by cultural and economic changes since deindustrialisation — is the defining feature of modern American politics. See our US financial markets statistics and US GDP data for economic context.

DEMOGRAPHIC VOTING TRENDS 1972-2024
Key Demographic Trends in US Presidential Elections
% voting Democratic / % turnout · Exit polls · CNN, NBC, AP · 1972–2024
+30pt
Education Gap 2024
Sources: Exit polls · CNN · NBC News · AP VoteCast · Pew Research Center · 1972–2024

The 2024 Presidential Election & Trump Second Term — What Happened

The November 2024 presidential election was one of the most consequential in modern American history. Donald Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris with 312 Electoral Votes to Harris's 226, winning 49.8% of the popular vote — his first popular vote majority across three presidential campaigns. Harris became the first woman of colour to win a major party presidential nomination but lost all seven battleground states. Trump's coalition expanded: he made significant gains among Hispanic men, young men under 30, and working-class voters of all races — while college-educated suburban voters shifted further toward Democrats. The election definitively ended Joe Biden's presidency after his dramatic July 2024 debate performance led to his withdrawal from the race.

312Trump Electoral Votes 2024
49.8%Trump Popular Vote 2024
226Harris Electoral Votes
48.3%Harris Popular Vote
64.4%2024 Voter Turnout (VEP)
78Trump Age at Inauguration
2025–2026 Context
Trump Second Term — First 14 Months: Record Executive Action and Political Polarisation

Donald Trump's second term (January 20, 2025 – present) has been defined by an unprecedented pace of executive action. Within the first 100 days, Trump signed more executive orders than any president in modern history. Key actions by March 2026: Immigration — national emergency declaration, 170,000+ deportations in year one, Alien Enemies Act invocations; Trade — 145% tariffs on China, 25% on Canada and Mexico, 10% baseline tariff on all imports, triggering the largest US trade policy shift since the 1930 Smoot-Hawley Act; Government — DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) federal workforce reductions of 200,000+ employees, $150B+ in claimed spending cuts; Foreign Policy — withdrawal from Paris Climate Agreement and WHO, NATO spending pressure, Ukraine peace negotiations. Trump's approval rating ranged 43–51% (averaging ~47%) — higher than his first term (41% average) but polarised: 88% approval among Republicans, 7% among Democrats. The November 2026 midterm elections are the next major test — historically the president's party loses 27 House seats in midterms. Republicans hold 220 House seats (margin: 3) and 53 Senate seats going into 2026.

~47%Trump Approval (Mar 2026)
145%US Tariff on China
200K+Federal Jobs Cut (DOGE)
220Republican House Seats
53Republican Senate Seats
Nov 2026Next Election (Midterms)
2024 Presidential Election — Results by Battleground StateClick to sort
StateEVTrump %Harris %Margin2020 Winner
Pennsylvania1950.3%48.5%+1.8%Biden 2020
Michigan1549.7%47.7%+2.0%Biden 2020
Wisconsin1049.5%48.8%+0.7%Biden 2020
Georgia1650.7%48.1%+2.6%Biden 2020
Arizona1152.2%46.5%+5.7%Biden 2020
Nevada650.1%47.7%+2.4%Biden 2020
North Carolina1651.0%47.7%+3.3%Trump 2020

The 2024 result confirmed a long-running realignment: the Sun Belt (Arizona, Georgia, Nevada) moved toward Republicans while remaining competitive; the Blue Wall (Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin) flipped back to Trump for the second time. The education divide deepened further — non-college whites supported Trump by 35+ points while college-educated voters supported Harris by 25+ points. Hispanic men swung toward Trump by approximately 20 points compared to 2020, challenging the assumption of a permanent Democratic coalition among minority voters. For the economic policy context of the 2024 election, see our US financial markets statistics and US GDP data.


US Presidential Elections — Key Facts & Numbers

US Presidential Elections — Complete Statistics
60 Elections · 1788 to 2024 — Key Facts
60Total Presidential Elections
538Electoral Votes Total
270Needed to Win
312Trump EV Won 2024
49.8%Trump Popular Vote 2024
537Closest Vote Margin (FL 2000)

Frequently Asked Questions — US Presidential Elections

60 elections from 1788 to 2024. Held every 4 years on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. George Washington won the first two (1788, 1792) unanimously. The 2024 election saw Donald Trump win a second non-consecutive term — only the second president to do so after Grover Cleveland (1884/1892).

Each state gets electoral votes equal to its Congressional seats (House + 2 Senate). 538 total, 270 needed to win. 48 states use winner-take-all. Five presidents won the Electoral College while losing the popular vote: Adams (1824), Hayes (1876), Harrison (1888), Bush (2000), Trump (2016).

2000 (Bush vs Gore) — decided by 537 votes in Florida after a Supreme Court ruling stopped the recount. Gore won the popular vote by 543,895 votes but Bush won Electoral College 271-266. In popular vote terms, the closest was 1880 (Garfield beat Hancock by 0.09% — just 7,368 votes nationally).

FDR won 523-8 electoral votes in 1936 (60.8% popular vote) — largest modern landslide. Reagan 1984: 525-13 electoral votes (58.8% popular vote) — largest by a Republican. Nixon 1972: 520-17 electoral votes (60.7% popular vote). George Washington won unanimously in both 1788 and 1792.

Modern range: 49% (1996) to 66.8% (2020). 2024: 64.4%. 19th century elections saw 70-82% turnout. Post-WWI decline was driven by women gaining the vote (doubling the eligible population) and declining party mobilisation. The 2020 high was driven by pandemic mail-in voting and intense partisan polarisation.

11 times: J.Adams (1800), J.Q.Adams (1828), Van Buren (1840), Cleveland (1888), Harrison (1892), Taft (1912), Hoover (1932), Ford (1976), Carter (1980), G.H.W.Bush (1992), Trump (2020). Most recent: Trump lost to Biden in 2020, then won back the presidency in 2024.

Oldest elected: Joe Biden (77) in 2020, then Donald Trump (78) in 2024. Youngest elected: JFK (43) in 1960. Youngest to serve: Theodore Roosevelt (42) after McKinley assassination. Bill Clinton (46) and Barack Obama (47) were among the younger modern presidents.

Data Sources & References

Primary: Dave Leip Atlas of US Presidential Elections

Primary: US Election Project — Michael McDonald (Voter Turnout Data)

Primary: American Presidency Project — UC Santa Barbara

Additional: FEC Official Results · National Archives Electoral College Data · Miller Center Presidential History · Pew Research Center Election Analysis · Congressional Research Service · AP VoteCast Exit Polls

Electoral vote totals use current 538-vote apportionment for historical comparison. Popular vote percentages exclude third-party/independent candidates in some years. Turnout calculated as % of voting-eligible population (VEP) not voting-age population (VAP). 2024 figures preliminary pending final state certifications.
US Presidential Elections History Electoral College Statistics US Election Voter Turnout Presidential Election Results Biggest Election Landslides Closest Presidential Elections Incumbent President Losses Popular Vote vs Electoral College US Two Party System History 2024 Presidential Election

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