TEXT B To broaden their voting
appeal in the Presidential election of 1796, the Federalists selected Thomas
Pinckney, a leading South Carolinian, as running mate for the Newt Englander
John Adams. But Pinckney’s Southern friends chose to ignore their party’s
intentions and regarded Pinckney as Presidential candidate, creating a political
situation that Alexander Hamilton was determined to exploit. Hamilton had long
been wary of Adams’s stubbornly independent brand of politics and preferred to
see his running mate, over whom he could exert more control, in the president’s
chair. The election was held under the system originally
established by the Constitution. At that time there was but a single tally, with
the candidate receiving the largest number of electoral votes declared President
and candidate with the second largest number declared Vice- President. Hamilton
anticipated that all the Federalists in the North would vote for Adams and
Pinckney equally in an attempt to ensure that Jefferson would not be either
first or second in the voting. Pinckney would be solidly supported in the South
while Adams would not. Hamilton concluded if it were possible to divert a few
electoral votes from Adams to Pinckney, Pinckney would receive more than Adams,
yet both Federalists would outpoll Jefferson. Various methods
were used to persuade the electors to vote as Hamilton wished. In the press,
anonymous articles were published attacking Adams for his monarchial tendencies
and Jefferson for being overly democratic, while pushing Pinckney as the only
suitable candidate. In private correspondence with state party leaders the
Hamiltonians encouraged the idea that Adams’ popularity was slipping, that he
could not win the election, and that the Federalists could defeat Jefferson only
by supporting Pinckney. Had sectional pride and loyalty not run
as high in New England as in the deep South, Pinckney might well have become
Washington’s successor. New Englanders, however, realized that equal votes
for Adams and Pinckney in their states would defeat Adams; therefore, eighteen
electors scratched Pinckney’s name from their ballots and deliberately threw
away their second votes to men who were not even running. It was fortunate for
Adams that they did, for the electors from South Carolina completely abandoned
him, giving eight votes to Pinckney and eight to Jefferson. In
the end, Hamilton’s interference in Pinckney’s candidacy lost even the
Vice-Presidency of South Carolina. Without New England’s support, Pinckney
received only 59 electoral votes, finishing third to Adams and Jefferson. He
might have been President in 1797, or as Vice-President a serious contender for
the Presidency in 1800; instead, stigmatized by a plot he had not devised, he
served a brief term in the United States Senate and then dropped from sight as a
national influence. It can be inferred that had South Carolina not cast any electoral votes for Jefferson, the outcome of the 1796 election would have been a______.
A.larger margin of victory for John Adams B.victory for Thomas Jefferson C.Federalist defeat in the Senate D.victory for Thomas Pinckney