1790 and 1791 United States House of Representatives elections - Biblioteka.sk

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1790 and 1791 United States House of Representatives elections
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1790–91 United States House of Representatives elections

← 1788 & 1789 April 27, 1790 – October 11, 1791[a] 1792 & 1793 →

All 67 seats in the United States House of Representatives[b]
34 seats needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader Jonathan Trumbull Jr. Frederick Muhlenberg[c]
Party Pro-Administration Anti-Administration
Leader's seat Connecticut at-large Pennsylvania 2nd
Last election 37 seats 28 seats
Seats won 40 27
Seat change Increase 3 Decrease 1

Results:
     Pro-Administration hold      Pro-Administration gain
     Anti-Administration hold      Anti-Administration gain
     Undistricted      Chesapeak Party (MD) gain

Speaker before election

Frederick Muhlenberg
Pro-Administration

Elected Speaker

Jonathan Trumbull Jr.
Pro-Administration

The 1790–91 United States House of Representatives elections were held on various dates in various states between April 27, 1790, and October 11, 1791. Each state set its own date for its elections to the House of Representatives before the first session of the 2nd United States Congress convened on October 24, 1791. This was the first midterm election cycle, which took place in the middle of President George Washington's first term. The size of the House increased to 67 seats after the new state of Vermont elected its first representatives.

While formal political parties still did not exist, coalitions of pro-Washington (pro-Administration) representatives and anti-Administration representatives each gained two seats as a result of the addition of new states to the union.

Speaker Frederick Muhlenberg, who had led the Pro-Administrationists in 1789, switched loyalties to the Anti-Administrationists during the tenure of the 1st Congress. He failed to win election to the Speakership as their leader as a result of these elections, and was succeeded by Jonathan Trumbull Jr., who became the 2nd Speaker of the House.

Retirements

Either five or six incumbents did not seek re-election.

Anti-Administration

  1. Maryland 4: William Smith retired.
  2. Virginia 6: Isaac Coles retired.

Aedanus Burke, a U.S. representative from South Carolina's 2nd congressional district, either retired or lost re-election but it is not known

Pro-Administration

  1. Pennsylvania at-large: George Clymer retired.
  2. Pennsylvania at-large: Henry Wynkoop retired.
  3. Pennsylvania at-large: Thomas Scott retired.

Election summaries

In this period, each state fixed its own date for congressional general elections, as early as April 27, 1790 (in New York) and as late as October 11, 1791 (in Pennsylvania). Elections to a Congress took place both in the even-numbered year before and in the odd-numbered year when the Congress convened. In some states, the congressional delegation was not elected until after the legal start of the Congress (on the 4th day of March in the odd-numbered year). The first session of this Congress was convened in Philadelphia on October 24, 1791.

Kentucky and Vermont became states during the 2nd Congress, adding two seats each.[1] The legislation admitted Vermont was passed at the end of the 1st Congress taking effect on March 4, 1791, the first day of the 2nd Congress, so that Vermont was represented from the start of the Congress, while Kentucky was unrepresented until the 2nd session.

State Type Date Total
seats
Pro-
Administration
Anti-
Administration
Seats Change Seats Change
New York Districts April 27–29, 1790 6 5 Increase2 1 Decrease2
New Hampshire At-large August 30, 1790 3 3 Increase1 0 Decrease1
Virginia Districts September 1, 1790 10 2 Decrease1 8 Increase1
Connecticut At-large September 20, 1790 5 5 Steady 0 Steady
Maryland Mixed[d] October 4, 1790 6 3 Increase1 3 Decrease1
Massachusetts Districts October 4, 1790[e] 8 7 Increase1 1 Decrease1
South Carolina Districts October 12, 1790 5 3 Increase1 2 Decrease1
Rhode Island At-large October 19, 1790 1 1 Steady 0 Steady
Delaware At-large November 8, 1790 1 1 Steady 0 Steady
Georgia District January 3, 1791 3 0 Steady 3 Steady Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=1790_and_1791_United_States_House_of_Representatives_elections
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