1884
Reading the 1884 result in Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania backed Blaine (Republican) in the 1884 presidential election, casting 30 electoral votes for the ticket. Nationally the result broke the other way — Grover Cleveland (Democratic) won the presidency, leaving Pennsylvania among the states he did not carry.
It marked the 7th consecutive election in which Pennsylvania backed the Republican party, a streak reaching back to 1860. The region divided — Ohio joined Pennsylvania for the Republican ticket, while West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, and New York did not. Across the 60 presidential elections Pennsylvania has taken part in, it has most often sided with the Republican party (26 times). The vote fell within the Gilded Age — Industrialization, narrow margins, and patronage politics.
In the national count, Grover Cleveland took 219 of the 401 electoral votes, against James G. Blaine's 182. Grover Cleveland led the national popular vote with 48.85% of the ballots cast.
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