1788–89 United States elections

1788–89 United States elections
Presidential election year
Next Congress1st
Presidential election
Electoral vote
George Washington69
John Adams34
Presidential election results map. Green denotes states won by Washington. Numbers indicate the number of electoral votes cast by each state.
Senate elections
Overall controlPro-Administration gain
Seats contestedAll 26 seats
Net seat changePro-Administration +13
Senate results
     Pro-Administration      Anti-Administration
     Territories
House elections
Overall controlPro-Administration gain
Seats contestedAll 59 voting members
Net seat changePro-Administration +37
House of Representatives results
     Pro-Administration      Anti-Administration
     Territories

The first federal elections were held in the United States following the ratification of the United States Constitution in 1788. In the elections, George Washington was elected as the first president and the members of the 1st United States Congress were selected.

Formal political parties did not exist, as the leading politicians of the day largely distrusted the idea of "factions." However, in the years after the ratification of the Constitution, Congress would become broadly divided by the economic policies of Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, with the Pro-Administration faction supporting those policies. Opposing them was the Anti-Administration faction, which sought a smaller role for the federal government. In these elections, the Pro-Administration faction won majorities in both houses of Congress.

Meanwhile, General George Washington was elected as the country's first president, while John Adams, who finished with the second largest number of electoral votes, was elected as the first vice president.