The Founding Fathers wanted to create a limited government where the rights of the people would be secure. They chose create a republican form of government and feared the danger of democracy.

 

The Constitution gave the states the right to decide how their state electors would be chosen. With the republican model, the electors could be chosen by the legislatures of the states or elected by the voters in the Congressional Districts. The state legislatures were given the authority to allow political parties to choose the Presidential Electors,

In the democratic model the people are allowed to directly vote for the states' electors.

Choosing Electors 1789

Choosing Electors 1792

Choosing Electors 1796

Choosing Electors 1800

Choosing Electors 1804

Choosing Electors 1808

Choosing Electors 1812

Choosing Electors 1816

Choosing Electors 1820

Choosing Electors 1824

Choosing Electors 1828

In 1820 James Monroe ran un-opposed for President as the Federalist Party failed to nominate a candidate. In the 1824 election all four of the candidates, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, William Crawford and Henry Clay were members of the Democratic Republican Party. The party realized that it would be to their advantage to have just one candidate.

When Andrew Jackson lost the election of 1824 the Democratic Party was born on January 8, 1828. They decided to nominate Andrew Jackson for President in 1828 and they became unified behind one candidate.

The 1832 Democratic National Convention was held from May 21 to May 23, 1832, in Baltimore, Maryland. In the first presidential nominating convention ever held by the Democratic Party, incumbent President Andrew Jackson was nominated for a second term, while former Secretary of State Martin Van Buren was nominated for vice president.

The Whig Party was a political party active in the middle of the 19th century in the United States. ... The Whigs emerged in the 1830s in opposition to President Andrew Jackson, pulling together former members of the National Republican Party, the Anti-Masonic Party, and disaffected Democrats.

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  • Only 6 electors from Maryland and 10 electors representing Pennsylvania were elected by the people the remaining 53 electors were appointed by the legislatures of their respective states.

  • In the beginning the electors in two of the states were elected directly by the people while the remaining electors were appointed by the state legislatures. With the emergence of political parties the electors were chosen  at the political party conventions.

  • Electoral college selection[edit]

    The Constitution, in Article II, Section 1, provided that the state legislatures should decide the manner in which their Electors were chosen. Different state legislatures chose different methods:[8]

    Method of choosing electors State(s)
    electors appointed by state legislature Connecticut
    Georgia
    New Jersey
    New York(a)
    South Carolina
    • two electors appointed by state legislature
    • each remaining elector chosen by state legislature from top two candidates in each U. S. House district
    Massachusetts
    each elector chosen by voters statewide; however, if no candidate wins majority, state legislature appoints electors from top ten candidates New Hampshire
    state divided into electoral districts, with one elector chosen per district by the voters of that district Virginia(b)
    Delaware
    electors chosen at large by voters Maryland
    Pennsylvania
    state had not yet ratified the Constitution North Carolina
    Rhode Island

    (a) New York's legislature did not choose electors on time.
    (b) One electoral district failed to choose an elector.

    1788–89 United States presidential election - Wikipedia
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