Campaign Trail Results: Game #908760

This Game:

  • Year: 1860
  • Player Candidate: Abraham Lincoln
  • Running Mate: Hannibal Hamlin
  • Difficulty Level: Easy
  • Winner Take All Mode?: Yes
  • Game Played:
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View overall results, or a specific state:
CandidateElectoral VotesPopular VotesPop. Vote %
---- Abraham Lincoln1391,743,40537.18
---- John C. Breckinridge79919,54719.61
---- Stephen A. Douglas441,425,32230.39
---- John Bell41601,42412.82

Answers:

  • How should your party address the slavery issue during this campaign?
    We must not allow the expansion of slavery into any new states or territories. We also must end outrages like the Fugitive Slave Law.
  • What do you have to say about the merits of your running mate, Hannibal Hamlin?
    I'm proud to share a ballot with Hannibal Hamlin of Maine.
  • To what extent do you plan to personally campaign in this election?
    I made my reputation by debating Stephen A. Douglas. These extraordinary times call for extraordinary action by the candidates for President.
  • How aggressively should your party attack the Northern Democrats and Stephen A. Douglas in this election?
    Douglas and his party are running on the failed, dishonest policy of popular sovereignty. I want the Republicans to point this out at every opportunity.
  • How aggressively should your party attack the Constitutional Unionists and John Bell in this election?
    This party has no discernible platform or political positions on any issue. They are the carcass of the pro-slavery wing of the Whig Party, masquerading as saviors of the Union.
  • How aggressively should your party attack the Southern Democrats and John Breckenridge in this election?
    We will attack Southern Democrats the same as we would Northern Democrats. They represent the same ideas about slavery -- they differ only in their boldness about it.
  • What should your party's position be on the raid of John Brown, late in 1859?
    Whatever our private feelings, we have no choice but to denounce such extralegal actions.
  • Thousands of young men have formed paramilitary “Wide Awake” clubs and marched to support Republicans. Should your party embrace this support, or is it too divisive?
    Every party has political clubs and supporters. I'm proud that we have ours, and they will help drive us to victory in November.
  • Do you have any plans to reach out to your chief rival for the Republican nomination, William Seward, and reconcile?
    Our party rejected Seward because of his unpopularity in states like Illinois and Indiana. Let's wait until after the election before we extend the olive branch to him.
  • How much should your party emphasize its support of higher tariffs in this election?
    Our position on higher tariffs is in the platform for everyone to read and discuss. We don't need to belabor the point.
  • How much should your party emphasize its support of a Transcontinental Railroad in this election?
    Everybody wants a Transcontinental Railroad, and Republicans have supported this since the beginning.
  • How much should your party emphasize its support of a homestead act in this election?
    The core belief of our party is that the federal territories should be settled by honest, free, hard-working men and their families. A homestead act would be right in line with this philosophy.
  • What position should your party take on foreign immigration and nationalization in this election?
    Let's discuss immigrants as little as possible in our campaign and platform. It's a no-win situation for us.
  • What is your position on the Supreme Court's Dred Scott v. Sandford decision?
    This is the most odious, dangerous decision to be handed down in the history of the Court. What is to prevent the Court from forcing slavery next upon the states themselves, under some dubious interpretation?
  • What is your position on the social equality of blacks in American society?
    I don't believe that blacks and whites will ever mix socially in this nation, but that cannot change the fact that blacks are citizens of this nation, and should be given the voting and property rights to match that status.
  • Do you have anything to say about the efforts of some to reopen the Atlantic slave trade?
    The fact that this is even under consideration as a demand shows how far beyond compromise the South has drifted.
  • Do you support the further expansion of the United States into Mexico, Cuba, or the Caribbean?
    I would have to see the specific situation being proposed before I could give my own opinion on the matter.
  • What is your position on the passage of “personal liberty laws” by various states, to flout the Fugitive Slave Act?
    The newer Fugitive Slave Law was the result of reasoned compromise in Congress. I may disagree with aspects of that Compromise, but I must accept it as a whole.
  • Should the proposed constitution for the state of Kansas be accepted by Congress, and Kansas admitted as a free state?
    We support the admission of Kansas as a free state, as soon as possible.
  • Would you support a compromise Amendment which permanently protected slavery in the Southern states, in return for no further expansion of the institution?
    I'm open to some kind of compromise that would provide guarantees on slavery in the South, as long as it would not allow the extension of slavery to new states or territories.
  • If any Southern state was to secede, would you use military force as President to preserve the Union?
    The Union is the most important object, and we will do anything we must to preserve it.
  • What is your position on the creation of land grant universities for secondary education?
    Let's keep our mouth shut on this issue, and stick to our opposition to slavery.
  • Do you stand by your opposition to the Mexican-American War as a Congressman in the 1840s?
    This is a dead letter and an ancient event. We could just as easily bring up Douglas's advocacy of the disastrous Kansas-Nebraska Act if we want to get into old history.
  • Is there a particular state that you believe the party should concentrate its resources into during the final days of the campaign?
    Illinois
  • We just need to let you know, it appears that your opponents have consolidated into a "fusion ticket" in the states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York.
    I see. We shall do our best in any case.