Constitutional Union Party (United States)

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A Constitutional Union campaign poster for the 1860 election. Shown are John Bell, the presidential nominee, and Edward Everett, the vice presidential nominee.
A Constitutional Union campaign poster for the 1860 election. Shown are John Bell, the presidential nominee, and Edward Everett, the vice presidential nominee.

The Constitutional Union Party (also known as the Bell-Everett Party in California) was a political party in the United States created in 1860. It was made up of conservative former Whigs who wanted to avoid disunion over the slavery issue. These former Whigs teamed up with former Know-Nothings to form the Constitutional Union Party. Its name comes from its extremely simple platform, a simple resolution "to recognize no political principle other than the Constitution...the Union...and the Enforcement of the Laws." They hoped that by failing to take a firm stand either for or against slavery or its extension, the issue could be pushed aside.

In short, it was a place to go for Whigs and Know-Nothings unwilling to join Democrats or the Republicans. Senator John J. Crittenden of Kentucky, Henry Clay's successor in border-state Whiggery, set up a meeting among fifty conservative, pro-compromise congressmen in December 1859, which led to a convention in Baltimore the week of May 9, 1860, one week before the Republican Party convention.

The convention nominated John Bell of Tennessee for President and Edward Everett of Massachusetts for Vice President.

In the 1860 election, the Constitutional Unionists received the great majority of their votes from former southern Whigs. Although the party did not get 50% of the popular vote in any state, they won the electoral votes of three states, Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee, largely due to the split in Democratic votes between Stephen A. Douglas and John C. Breckinridge. Everett's home state of Massachusetts and California were the only non-slave states in which the party received more than 5% of the popular vote.

The party and its purpose disappeared after 1860. Bell and many other Constitutional Unionists later supported the Confederacy during the Civil War, but backers of the party from north of the Carolinas tended to remain supporters of the Union. Constitutional Unionists were influential in the Wheeling Convention, which led to the creation of the Union loyalist state of West Virginia, as well as in the declaration of the Kentucky State Legislature for the Union.

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