Not THAT upcoming election.... the one regarding the upcoming 1828 U.S. Presidential election pitting incumbent John Quincy Adams against Andrew Jackson. Adams won the disputed 1824 election. Jackson would win in 1828 and 1832. Thought you might find this interesting since it quotes a gentlemen who we've all heard of...........
From the November 17, 1827 Trenton Emporium
“The venerable Col. [Henry] Rutgers put the first vote in the ballot box, on the opening of the polls of the Seventh Ward, New-York, for Old Hickory, and made a speech to his fellow citizens. The following are the remarks of Col. Rutgers at the Seventh Ward polls:
“I am a very old man, fellow citizens. You have known me too long to suppose me capable of deceiving you. I desire to say to you, that the man who has passed through the wars of our first and second peril cannot be capable of plotting mischief against the republic: nor can the man who has exposed his person and pledged his property in the hour of danger, be the foe of liberty and his country. There are about a few of us left who witnessed the first efforts for freedom, and we are more than repaid by seeing our country, under the blessings of Providence, free and happy. Let us not suppose any man who drew his sword in the first and second war for liberty, could deserve the character which his enemies give him. I give you the ticket of the old republican party, and I offer it with additional pleasure, because it is the ticket friendly to General [Andrew] Jackson.”
From the November 17, 1827 Trenton Emporium
“The venerable Col. [Henry] Rutgers put the first vote in the ballot box, on the opening of the polls of the Seventh Ward, New-York, for Old Hickory, and made a speech to his fellow citizens. The following are the remarks of Col. Rutgers at the Seventh Ward polls:
“I am a very old man, fellow citizens. You have known me too long to suppose me capable of deceiving you. I desire to say to you, that the man who has passed through the wars of our first and second peril cannot be capable of plotting mischief against the republic: nor can the man who has exposed his person and pledged his property in the hour of danger, be the foe of liberty and his country. There are about a few of us left who witnessed the first efforts for freedom, and we are more than repaid by seeing our country, under the blessings of Providence, free and happy. Let us not suppose any man who drew his sword in the first and second war for liberty, could deserve the character which his enemies give him. I give you the ticket of the old republican party, and I offer it with additional pleasure, because it is the ticket friendly to General [Andrew] Jackson.”