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In 1790, James Monroe was running for the House of Representatives but lost to James Madison. Monroe was soon elected by the State Council of Virginia as a US Senator and joined the Democratic Republican Party led by Jefferson and Madison, against the vice president John Adams and the federal policy of Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton. The year after his election, Monroe became the leader of the Senate. Following President Washington's practice, which serves only two terms of office, Madison decided not to participate in the third phase to open James Monroe as a candidate for democratic Republican candidate. Monroe became the fifth president of the United States for the opposition of the currently declining federal party. He assumed office as president and visited the northern provinces. Meanwhile, Boston's newspaper expressed Monroe's hospitality as "a good mood era."
In the presidential election of 1816, both Madison and Jefferson supported another Secretary of State of Virginia State Secretary James Monroe. With the support of Madison and Jefferson, Monroe has defeated William Crawford War Minister at the Party's Congressional Nominated Core Group. New York Governor Daniel Tompkins agreed to become Monroe's running mate. As the Federal Party continued to collapse as a Kuomintang, Monroe easily defeated the Federalist Rufus in the 1816 election. In the parliamentary elections, they lost their reelections due to indignation of dozens of parliamentary wages raised by the House of Representatives from both sides.
Between 1797 and 1799, Madison and Monroe frequently contacted Jefferson about the party problem at Monticello. Monroe 's friends were enthusiastic about dedicating their talents to government senior positions, and in 1799 Monroe won the Virginia Governor. In the summer of 1800, there was an ambiguous report on the distribution of imminent slave rebellion. When specific details arrived at him on 30th August, Monroe immediately summoned state militia and restrained the "Gabriel Rebellion". He did not succeed in trying to reduce the severity of the punishment of captured conspiracy. The autumn presidential election was another source of vigilance against the governor. Monroe prepared a state militia to boycott the Federal party coup, which never was realized, as the House of Representatives Madison struggled to break the relationship between Aaron Bar and Jefferson.