The oddities of the first American election - Kenneth C. Davis

240,779 views ・ 2012-11-05

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Transcriber: tom carter Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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Lawn signs sprouting everywhere.
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Round-the-clock ads on radio and television.
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The phone rings. It's a robo-call from the president, or his opponent,
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asking for your money, and your vote.
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And while you're at it, watch their YouTube videos and like them on Facebook.
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Election time. We all know the look and feel of modern campaigns.
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But what was it like in the early days of the Republic, when, say,
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George Washington ran for office?
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Well, in fact, he didn't run.
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When Washington became the first president in 1789,
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there were no political parties, no conventions or primaries,
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no campaign, no election season.
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Not really any candidates.
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Even the year was odd.
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Literally. 1789 was the only presidential election ever held in an odd year.
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After the framers invented the constitution and the presidency 225 years ago,
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the country set about the business of choosing its first executive.
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Agreeing with Ben Franklin, many people thought "The first man at the helm will be a good one,"
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and by that, Franklin meant George Washington.
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Greatest hero of the Revolution, Washington presided over the convention that created the constitution,
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rarely speaking. He never discussed the job of president,
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or of wanting it. And when the first presidential election took place,
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it was a crazy-quilt affair, with many hands stitching the pattern.
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Under the new constitution, each state was given a number of electors.
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who would cast a vote for two names.
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The man with the most votes would be president,
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the second-place finisher was vice president.
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Ah, but who picked the electors? That was left up to the states.
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Six of them let the people decide, or at least white men over 21 who owned property.
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In New Jersey, some women voted, a right later taken away.
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But in other states, the legislature picked the electors.
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At that time, many people thought democracy was one step away from mob rule
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and a decision this important should be left to wiser men.
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These electors then voted for president.
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All the states had to do was get their votes in on time.
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But there were glitches.
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Only 10 of the 13 states voted.
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Rhode Island and North Carolina hadn't ratified the constitution and couldn't vote.
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New York missed the deadline for naming its electors, and also was not counted.
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When the votes were tallied, it was unanimous.
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George Washington won easily. John Adams trailed far behind, finishing second, and became the vice president.
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Told of his victory, George Washington was not surprised.
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At Mount Vernon, his bags were already packed.
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He moved to New York City, the nation's temporary capital,
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and he would have to figure out just what a president was supposed to do.
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Since that first election, American democracy and elections have come a long way.
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The constitution has been changed to open up voting to more people:
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black men, women, Native Americans, and eighteen-year-olds included.
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Getting that basic right extended to all those people has been a long, hard struggle.
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So when you think you can't stand any more of those lawn signs,
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and TV ads, just remember:
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the right to vote wasn't always for everyone,
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and that's a piece of history worth knowing.
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