Anonymous ID: be2b02 April 13, 2018, 5:35 p.m. No.1030529   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>1030281

The election of 1828. The factionalism within the Republican ranks led to a split and the creation of two partiesโ€”Jackson's Democratic Republicans (soon shortened to โ€œDemocratsโ€) and Adams's National Republicans. Martin Van Buren of New York, who preferred rivalries between parties to disputes within one party, masterminded the emergence of the Democrats.

 

The campaign itself was less about issues than the character of the two candidates. Jacksonians denounced Adams for being โ€œan aristocratโ€ and for allegedly trying to influence Russian policy by providing Tsar Alexander I with an American prostitute during Adams's term as ambassador. Supporters of Adams vilified Jackson as a murderer (he had fought several duels), an adulterer (he and his wife had mistakenly married before her divorce from her first husband was final), and an illiterate backwoodsman. These attacks by the National Republicans did little to detract from Jackson's popularity. Ordinary Americans admired his leadership qualities and decisiveness; they preferred Jackson the Indian fighter and hero of the Battle of New Orleans. Jackson was swept into office with 56 percent of the popular vote from a greatly expanded electorate.