Wikipedia:Style for yyyy U.S. presidential election
This page is currently inactive and is retained for historical reference. Either the page is no longer relevant or consensus on its purpose has become unclear. To revive discussion, seek broader input via a forum such as the village pump. |
In accordance with general Wikipedia:election coverage standards:
Wikipedia has a page named yyyy United States presidential election for each year yyyy in which a presidential election took place in the United States (or for the next scheduled presidential election). This page defines a consistent format that can be applied to these presidential election pages in the hope for making them easier to read, use, write, and edit. As the Wikipedia Manual of Style notes:
- Clear, informative and unbiased writing is always more important than presentation and formatting. Writers are not required to follow all or any of these rules: the joy of wiki editing is that perfection is not required. Copy-editing wikipedians will refer to this manual, and pages will either gradually be made to conform with this guide or this guide will itself be changed to the same effect.
Each of the presidential election pages should have the following basic structure:
- Introduction
- Background
- Nominations
- General election
- Campaign
- Disputes
- Results
- Contingent election
- Consequences
- Electoral college selection
- Timeline
- See also
- References
- External links
- Navigation
The introduction is the one-to-three paragraph text that appears prior to any section header. Any of these sections (except for the introduction) may be omitted if no information is available.
Introduction
editAs with all wikipedia articles, the article should have an introduction of no more than three paragraphs before the first section title. The first sentence should employ "U.S. presidential election of yyyy" as its subject, if at all possible, and it should be in boldface type. Both "U.S. presidential election" and the year yyyy should be links. According to Wikipedia:Manual of Style (links), "Do not link words in article titles; find other ways to include and then link those words." (boldface in original). Since it is difficult (if not imposssible) to create or link to a page with square brackets in it, "article titles" in this case must refer to the boldfaced "U.S. presidential election of yyyy" in the first sentence. This means that the struck out portion of this paragraph was exactly wrong: there should be no links in that boldface "U.S. presidential election of yyyy".
There should also be a map of the electoral vote results by state, and this map should include a caption which begins, "Presidential election by state." (The caption may consist only of those four words.)
Background
editThis section should describe the state of the United States at the start of the nominating process.
Nominations
editThis section is for the portion of the election campaign in which the various parties nominate candidates. The section should be decomposed by party, so each level 3 section title under nominations should read "X Party nomination" or "Other nominations", where X is the name of the party.
General election
editThis section is for the period in the election campaign between the nomination of the various candidates and the resolution of the general election. (The resolution of the general election generally occurs on Election Day, but disputes can make this last quite a long time.)
General election: Results
editThis should be the location of the HTML table indicating the results of the general election.
Basic table
editA set of templates has been created to make it easy to create this table and to keep the tables on the different pages consistent. Each table should start with "{{start U.S. presidential ticket box| pv_footnote=| ev_footnote=}}" and it should end with "{end U.S. presidential ticket box| pv=| ev=| to_win=}}". The former defines the header of the election results table; the latter defines the footer of the table. For each presidential ticket, there should be a row, which is defined by "{{U.S. presidential ticket box v2 row| name=| party=| state=| pv=| pv_pct= |ev=| vp_name=| vp_state=}}". Here are the meanings of the parameters:
- ev
- For a row, this should be the electoral vote received by the ticket. For the footer, this should have the total electoral vote for the whole nation.
- ev_footnote
- This should have the symbol, such as an asterisk or superscripted number, that links to a footnote for the whole electoral vote column. If you have multiple footnotes, you should have multiple symbols.
- name
- This is the name of the presidential candidate. It should be a link.
- party
- This is the name of the ticket's party.
- pv
- For a row, this should be the popular vote received by the ticket. For the footer, this should have the total popular vote for the whole nation.
- pv_footnote
- This should have the symbol, such as an asterisk or superscripted number, that links to a footnote for the whole popular vote column. If you have multiple footnotes, you should have multiple symbols.
- pv_pct
- This is the percentage of the total popular vote received by the ticket.
- state
- This is the state of the presidential candidate.
- to_win
- This should have the electoral votes required to win in the electoral college. Prior to 1804, this number is the smallest integer exceeding one quarter of the total electoral vote; from 1804 onwards, this number is the smallest integer exceeding one half of the total electoral vote.
- vp_name
- This is the name of the vice presidential candidate. It should be a link.
- vp_state
- This is the state of the vice presidential candidate.
For instance, here is the code for the election results table for the 1844 election (on an 80 column edit box):
{{start U.S. presidential ticket box | pv_footnote = <sup>(a), (b)</sup> | ev_footnote = }} {{U.S. presidential ticket box row | name = [[James K. Polk]] | party = [[United States Democratic Party|Democratic]] | state = [[Tennessee]] | pv = 1,337,243 | pv_pct = 49.6% | ev = 170 | vp_name = [[George Mifflin Dallas]] | vp_state = [[Pennsylvania]]}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box row | name = [[Henry Clay]] | party = [[United States Whig Party|Whig]] | state = [[Kentucky]] | pv = 1,299,062 | pv_pct = 48.1% | ev = 105 | vp_name = [[Theodore Frelinghuysen]] | vp_state = [[New Jersey]]}} {{U.S. presidential ticket box row | name = [[James G. Birney]] | party = [[United States Liberty Party|Liberty]] | state = [[New York]] | pv = 62,300 | pv_pct = 2.3% | ev = 0 | vp_name = [[Thomas Morris]] | vp_state = [[Ohio]]}} {{end U.S. presidential ticket box | pv = 2,698,605 | ev = 275 | to_win = 138}} <sup>(a)</sup> ''The popular vote figures exclude [[South Carolina]] where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote.''<br> <sup>(b)</sup> ''The popular vote total omits votes for candidates besides those listed, which skews the popular percentages up slightly.''
which generates the following table:
Presidential candidate | Party | Home state | Popular vote(a), (b) | Electoral vote |
Running mate | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Count | Percentage | Vice-presidential candidate | Home state | Electoral vote | ||||
James K. Polk | Democratic | Tennessee | 1,337,243 | 49.6% | 170 | George Mifflin Dallas | Pennsylvania | 170 |
Henry Clay | Whig | Kentucky | 1,299,062 | 48.1% | 105 | Theodore Frelinghuysen | New Jersey | 105 |
James G. Birney | Liberty | New York | 62,300 | 2.3% | 0 | Thomas Morris | Ohio | 0 |
Total | 2,698,605 | 100% | 275 | 275 | ||||
Needed to win | 138 | 138 |
(a) The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote.
(b) The popular vote total omits votes for candidates besides those listed, which skews the popular percentages up slightly.
Multiple VPs to a president
edit<< Under construction >>
Complex elections
editOn occasion, the election pairings are too complex to work with the "U.S. presidential ticket box" templates. Specifically, if one ticket consists of a presidential candidate who has multiple vice presidential candidates and a vice presidential candidate who has multiple presidential candidates, then the "U.S. presidential ticket box" templates cannot be used. In this case, the "Election results" section should have the following structure:
- Presidential election results table
- Vice presidential election results table
- Breakdown by ticket
The "Presidential election results table" is simply a table generated by the "U.S. presidential election box" templates: "{{start U.S. presidential election box| pv_footnote=| ev_footnote=}}", "{{U.S. presidential election box row| name=| party=| state=| pv=| pv_pct= | ev=}}", and "{{end U.S. presidential election box| pv=| ev=| to_win=}}". Similarly, the "Vresidential election results table" is simply a table generated by the "U.S. vice presidential election box" templates: "{{start U.S. vice presidential election box| ev_footnote=}}", "{{U.S. vice presidential election box row| name=| party=| state=| ev=}}", and "{{end U.S. presidential election box| ev=| to_win=}}". These should be fairly self-explanatory to anyone who has used the "U.S. presidential ticket box" templates, as they are just stripped down versions of that template.
"Breakdown by ticket" should get a subsection heading, followed by a table generated by the "U.S. electoral vote box" templates: "{{start U.S. electoral vote box| ev_footnote=}}", "{{U.S. electoral vote box row| name=| vp_name=| ev=}}", and "{{end U.S. electoral vote box}}". This table should only list candidate pairings which may have gotten votes. More precisely, if you know that a given ticket received zero electoral votes, it doesn't go in this table.
Contingent election
editThis section is for those rare occasions (at the time of this writing, 1800, 1824, and 1836) in which a President or Vice President isn't decided by the general election and the House or Senate has to determine the winner.
Settlement by judicial review
editThis section is for those rare occasions (at the time of this writing only the election of 2000) in which an election for the selection of electors, the electoral college vote, or a contingent election is contested and ultimately settled by a decision of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Electoral college selection
editThis section should contain a table indicating what methods were used to determine the Electors for each state.
See also
editThis section should contain a link to "History of the United States (xxxx-zzzz)" where xxxx-zzzz is the year interval that yyyy fits into.
References
editIf there is more than one type of reference (e.g., both books and external links), then this section should be subdivided by reference type.
Navigation
editThis section should contain "{{USPresidentialElections}}" which generates the box of links to other presidential election articles.