1888
Maryland in 1888
The 1888 contest saw Maryland line up behind Cleveland, delivering 8 electoral votes to the Democratic ticket. Nationally the result broke the other way — Benjamin Harrison (Republican) won the presidency, leaving Maryland among the states he did not carry.
It marked the 6th consecutive election in which Maryland backed the Democratic party, a streak reaching back to 1868. The region divided — Virginia and Delaware joined Maryland for the Democratic ticket, while West Virginia and Pennsylvania did not. Across the 60 presidential elections Maryland has taken part in, it has most often sided with the Democratic party (34 times). The vote fell within the Gilded Age — Industrialization, narrow margins, and patronage politics.
In the national count, Benjamin Harrison took 233 of the 401 electoral votes, against Grover Cleveland's 168. Though Benjamin Harrison won the Electoral College, Grover Cleveland drew more of the national popular vote — 48.63% to 47.8%.
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