Quick Facts
Date:
November 6, 1888

United States presidential election of 1888, American presidential election held on November 6, 1888, in which Republican Benjamin Harrison defeated Democratic incumbent Grover Cleveland, winning in the electoral college 233–168 despite losing the popular vote. It was the second time in American history (1876 being the first) that a presidential candidate had won a majority of the electoral vote while losing the popular vote—a circumstance that would not happen again until the election of 2000.

At a glance: the election of 1888

Tariff reform tensions

The defining issue of the 1888 presidential campaign was effectively set by Grover Cleveland in his State of the Union address the previous year. Atypically, he devoted the entire speech to one issue: tariff reform. Cleveland advocated strongly for a reduction in the protective tariff, which compelled manufacturers to charge consumers more to make up the cost of importing materials. This position stood in stark contrast to the Republican protectionist position, which called for the tariff to be increased, thereby driving up the cost of imported goods and pushing consumers toward domestically produced ones.

The White House in Washington, D.C., USA. The north portico which faces Pennsylvania Avenue.
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At the Democratic convention in June, Cleveland was nominated for another term with Ohio Sen. Allen G. Thurman filling the vice presidential slot on the ticket. (Thomas A. Hendricks, Cleveland’s first vice president, had died during the first year of his term, and the Constitution at the time did not allow for a replacement.) Later that month, the Republicans held their convention, initially nominating James G. Blaine, who had served as secretary of state under James Garfield and had run against Cleveland in 1884. When Blaine declined, several other contenders emerged, among them New York railroad maven Chauncey Depew and Ohio Sen. John Sherman. However, Depew dropped out at the behest of New York Republican boss Thomas C. Platt, who preferred Benjamin Harrison, a Civil War brigadier general and grandson of William Henry Harrison, ninth president of the United States. The added weight of Blaine’s endorsement sealed Harrison’s nomination. New York banker Levi Morton was nominated as his running mate. Several smaller parties, including the Prohibition Party and the suffragist Equal Rights Party, also put forth candidates.

The election

Keeping with tradition, neither presidential candidate actively campaigned for the presidency. (Harrison, however, did accept delegations at his Indianapolis home.) The task of generating support fell to a range of surrogates, of which the Republicans could afford far more because of aggressive fundraising. Morton, the vice presidential candidate, toured widely, despite his advanced age and declining health. The red kerchief he constantly used to wipe his brow became a symbol of the campaign; supporters waved similar kerchiefs at his rallies. Blaine and Sherman continued to rouse anti-free-trade sentiment, which was further inflamed by a Republican who, posing as a British immigrant, solicited direction on whom to vote for from the British ambassador. The ambassador’s reply, which expressed the British government’s preference for Cleveland, was published and used as evidence of Cleveland’s free-trade sympathies. (The United Kingdom strongly advocated free trade.) The Democrats in turn published a letter from the Republican National Committee that exhorted the use of “floaters,” or paid nonresident voters, in Indiana; the Republicans decried it as a fraud. (Despite their denials, however, the Republicans did in fact deploy hordes of paid “floaters” in Indiana, swinging that state, which had gone to Cleveland in the previous election, in favor of Harrison.)

Come election day, Cleveland garnered more than 100,000 more votes than Harrison but ultimately lost the election in the electoral college. In addition to capturing Indiana, Harrison also prevailed in New York and Ohio, the home states of Cleveland and Thurman, respectively, and fringe parties helped to siphon votes from Cleveland in other states. Thus, when the electoral votes were tallied, Harrison won comfortably, with 233 electoral votes to Cleveland’s 168. Four years later, Cleveland would defeat Harrison to become the first president to serve nonconsecutive terms in office.

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For the results of the previous election, see United States presidential election of 1884. For the results of the subsequent election, see United States presidential election of 1892.

Richard Pallardy

Results of the 1888 election

The results of the 1888 U.S. presidential election are provided in the table.

American presidential election, 1888
presidential candidate political party electoral votes popular votes
Sources: Electoral and popular vote totals based on data from the United States Office of the Federal Register and Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections, 4th ed. (2001).
Benjamin Harrison Republican 233 5,439,853
Grover Cleveland Democratic 168 5,540,309
Clinton B. Fisk Prohibition 249,819
Anson J. Streeter Union Labor 146,602

Grover Cleveland

22nd and 24th president of the United States
Also known as: Stephen Grover Cleveland
Quick Facts
In full:
Stephen Grover Cleveland
Born:
March 18, 1837, Caldwell, New Jersey, U.S.
Died:
June 24, 1908, Princeton, New Jersey (aged 71)
Political Affiliation:
Democratic Party
Awards And Honors:
Hall of Fame (1935)
Notable Family Members:
spouse Frances Cleveland

Grover Cleveland (born March 18, 1837, Caldwell, New Jersey, U.S.—died June 24, 1908, Princeton, New Jersey) was the 22nd and 24th president of the United States (1885–89 and 1893–97) and the first president ever to serve two discontinuous terms. Cleveland distinguished himself as one of the few truly honest and principled politicians of the Gilded Age. His view of the president’s function as primarily to block legislative excesses made him quite popular during his first term, but that view cost him public support during his second term when he steadfastly denied a positive role for government in dealing with the worst economic collapse the nation had yet faced.

Early life and career

Cleveland was the son of Richard Falley Cleveland, an itinerant Presbyterian minister, and Ann Neal. The death of Grover Cleveland’s father in 1853 forced him to abandon school in order to support his mother and sisters. After clerking in a law firm in Buffalo, New York, he was admitted to the bar in 1859 and soon entered politics as a member of the Democratic Party. During the Civil War he was drafted but hired a substitute so that he could care for his mother—an altogether legal procedure but one that would make him vulnerable to political attack in the future. In 1863 he became assistant district attorney of Erie county, New York, and in 1870–73 he served as county sheriff. With this slight political background and only modest success as a lawyer, the apparently unambitious Buffalo attorney launched one of the most meteoric rises in American politics.

In 1881, eight years after stepping down as sheriff, Cleveland was nominated for mayor by Buffalo Democrats who remembered his honest and efficient service in that office. He won the election easily. As Buffalo’s chief executive, he became known as the “veto mayor” for his rejection of spending measures he considered to be wasteful and corrupt. In 1882, without the support of the Tammany Hall Democratic machine in New York City, Cleveland received his party’s nomination for governor, and he went on to crush his Republican opponent by more than 200,000 votes.

As governor of New York, Cleveland again used the veto frequently, even to turn down measures that enjoyed wide public support. His devotion to principle and his unstinting opposition to Tammany Hall soon earned him a national reputation—particularly among Americans disgusted with the frequent scandals of Gilded Age politics.

In the 1884 presidential election, the Democrats sought a candidate who would contrast sharply with Republican nominee James G. Blaine, a longtime Washington insider whose reputation for dishonesty and financial impropriety prompted the Republican Mugwump faction to bolt their party. Cleveland’s image was the opposite of Blaine’s, and he seemed likely to draw Mugwump votes to the Democratic ticket. As a result, Cleveland won the Democratic nomination with ease.

Richard M. Nixon. Richard Nixon during a 1968 campaign stop. President Nixon
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During the campaign, Cleveland’s image as the clean alternative to the supposedly sullied Blaine suffered serious damage when Republicans charged that the Democratic candidate had fathered a child out of wedlock some 10 years earlier. As Republicans joyously chortled, “Ma, ma, where’s my pa?,” Cleveland remained undaunted, and he instructed Democratic leaders to “tell the truth.” The truth, as Cleveland admitted, was that he had had an affair with the child’s mother, Maria Halpin, and had agreed to provide financial support when she named him as the father, though he was uncertain whether the child was really his. Meanwhile, Democrats, trying to contrast Cleveland’s reputation with Blaine’s, chanted “Blaine Blaine, James G. Blaine, the continental liar from the state of Maine!” Late in the campaign, Blaine experienced an embarrassment of his own, when a supporter at a rally in New York City described the Democrats as the party of “rum, Romanism, and rebellion”—a swipe at the city’s Irish Catholics, many of whom Blaine hoped to lure into his camp. Although Blaine was present when the fateful words were spoken, he did nothing to dissociate himself from the remark. The general election was determined by electoral votes from New York state, which Blaine lost to Cleveland by fewer than 1,200 votes.

At a glance: the Cleveland presidencies

Presidency

As president, Cleveland continued to act in the same negative capacity that had marked his tenures as mayor and governor. He nullified fraudulent grants to some 80 million acres (30 million hectares) of Western public lands and vetoed hundreds of pension bills that would have sent federal funds to undeserving Civil War veterans. Once again, Cleveland’s rejection of wasteful and corrupt measures endeared the president to citizens who admired his honesty and courage. He also received credit for two of the more significant measures enacted by the federal government in the 1880s: the Interstate Commerce Act (1887), which established the Interstate Commerce Commission, the first regulatory agency in the United States, and the Dawes General Allotment Act (1887), which redistributed Native American reservation land to individual tribe members.

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In 1886 Cleveland, a lifelong bachelor, married Frances Folsom, the daughter of his former law partner. Frances Cleveland, 27 years younger than her husband, proved to be a very popular first lady. To all appearances the marriage was a happy one, though during the 1888 presidential campaign she was forced to publicly refute Republican-spread rumors that Cleveland had beaten her during drunken rages.

Cleveland ran for reelection in 1888. The major issue of the presidential campaign was the protective tariff. Cleveland opposed the high tariff, calling it unnecessary taxation imposed upon American consumers, while Republican candidate Benjamin Harrison defended protectionism. On election day, Cleveland won about 100,000 more popular votes than Harrison, evidence of the esteem in which the president was held and to the widespread desire for a lower tariff. Yet Harrison won the election by capturing a majority of votes in the electoral college (233 to 168), largely as a result of lavish campaign contributions from pro-tariff business interests in the crucial states of New York and Indiana.

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