Talk:United States presidential election maps
This redirect does not require a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||
|
Creating a map
[edit]How do you create new SVG for different elections? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Spongesquid (talk • contribs) 21:46, 1 August 2008 (UTC)
Colors
[edit]Theres a problem with colors in these maps. The majority of the time Democratic states are shown in Blue and Republican states are in Red. For most of the maps it is the other way around, except when it gets to the 2000 election, the colors are switched to how they normally are shown. I can understand the colors switching around Lincoln's time because thats when the Democrat and Republican partys switched ideals (i dont quite understand it myself, but i've read about it). But after Lincoln and up until today the Democratc are mostly represented with Blue colors and the Republicans are Red, so I think that should be corrected and changed, because it is quite confusing. Milk 19:21, 13 Aug 2004 (UTC)
- Television networks alternated colors; the "convention" whereby Democrats became blue and Republicans red is directly traceable to the 2000 election. There is no basis for stating that this pattern is "normal" and it most certainly does not date to the 19th century. The parties did not "switch ideals" either in the time of Lincoln; for the most part they remained two non-ideological national parties until the 1960s. The point about abruptly switching color patterns in 2000 is valid, however, so I have added a note.- choster 14:25, 16 May 2005 (UTC)
- And uh, no, there was no switching of...what did you call it..."ideals" in the 1860's.
- Democrats should be red and Republicans blue because ever since the orgins of "Right/Left" in the French Revolution, red has been the traditional international color of the Left (neo-liberal, radicals, "Progressives", Socialist, Social Democrats, Communists, etc.) and blue has been the traditional color of the Right (originally monarchists, now conservative, Christian Democrat, classical liberal, libretarian, tory capitalists, etc)
- As for the parties "switching ideals" during Lincoln's day, whoever wrote this is an idiot. Since the Republicans did not exist before Lincoln's day, it would be hard for them to "switch".
- Shouldn't the colors on the map reflect the way they were used during the election in question?
- In that case, the Democrats should be in red and the Republicans in blue until the 2000 election, I believe it was - or maybe a little earlier, but certainly not before the nineties.
- Also, how did we decide the Federalists would be in red and the Jeffersonians in orange? 213.181.226.21 (talk) 08:34, 19 July 2008 (UTC)
- And uh, no, there was no switching of...what did you call it..."ideals" in the 1860's.
1848 Election Map
[edit]The national boundaries shown for the 1848 election map are incorrect. By the time the election took place, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo had already been signed and what is now New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and California were part of the United States as then unorganized territory. However, the 1848 election map incorrectly shows these areas as still part of Mexico. Keraunos 18:21, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- NA-Class United States articles
- NA-importance United States articles
- NA-Class United States articles of NA-importance
- NA-Class United States presidential elections articles
- NA-importance United States presidential elections articles
- WikiProject United States presidential elections articles
- NA-Class United States Government articles
- NA-importance United States Government articles
- WikiProject United States Government articles
- WikiProject United States articles