The electoral college is a system of voting that is completely based on the different populations of each state. This system is not based on the size of the of the state but how many people are in each state. The states with larger populations get more electoral votes and the states with smaller population get less electoral votes. The electoral collage should be changed to fit modern day populations.…
The electors are elected by popular vote and declare in advance how they will vote if they are elected, so the people choose electors who will vote the way they would vote if they were electors. The election process uses the “winner-take-all” rule in 48 states, under which all of a state 's electoral votes are awarded to the one candidate with the most votes in that state. States having only three votes and states that are considered either safe or hopelessly lost are largely ignored by presidential candidates in the election campaigns under the current Electoral College…
|Indicate why the framers believed it was important in the creation of the government |…
The electoral college, the body that chooses the president. The electoral college is the group of people chosen to represent what the citizens want. After the people vote it is up to the electoral college to cast their vote. Their votes are also called electoral votes. The electoral college is a fair way to vote but it should be changed in certain places.…
There is twenty seven states have laws where the electors have to vote with majority of the people. An elector that doesn’t vote for his state is called a faithless elector which is a disgrace of loyalty and completely untrustworthy. The overall purpose of the electoral college is to the automatic winning by the highest candidate that gets the most votes. The electoral college is promising and does it’s job, but it has it’s flaws. It is most effective when the popular vote is a split decision because then the people and the candidates rely heavily on the Electoral College votes through each state. Some states give more electoral votes than others. This is so because some states have more representatives than other states.The candidates running for president have to reach 270 electoral votes before the other candidate to win the presidency. Most candidates strive for the states that supply the most electoral votes which mainly includes california who has fifty five and the second state with a…
In the founding of the Constitution, it was assumed the general population would be far too uneducated to properly elect their representatives. From this unfortunately accurate presumption, came the Electoral College. The Electoral College is a gift from the founding fathers that has, in turn, counteracted the impact of low voter turnout.…
There are very few provisions in the Constitution of the United States about the qualifications of the Electors that make up the Electoral College. “Article II, section I, clause 2 provides that no Senator or Representative or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States shall be appointed as Elector.” In the beginning, the 14th Amendment provided that any state officials who had engaged in an insurrection or rebellion against the United States or had given comfort and aid to the enemies of the United States would not be able to serve as an Elector in the Electoral College. This related to the post-Civil War era of the United States.…
The Electoral College system was first established in the constitution by the Founding Fathers. The creation of Electoral College is to make sure every states is a viable participant in electing the president, in which giving the small population states a chance. In the day of election, people cast their votes for their candidate and who wins it determines the electors of the state. The system was great when it was first introduced because of how people before relied more in the electors who are very educated and wise, but now people are different has gained more knowledge and can determine who will be a good president. Although electoral college has served the United States since 1787, it has become unfair because it ignores the will of the people, it creates faithless electors, and it gives too much power to the smaller states.…
But the method that the United States uses to elect its president violates this principle by making sure that some peoples votes count more than others. If the 538 Electoral College votes were split up equally among the population (309,000,000/ 538) then every votes would represent 574,000 people. But this is not what happens because the Electoral College only gives votes to states, not people. For example, there are 11.5 million people in Ohio so to be fair they should get 20 votes. But the Electoral College doesn’t give Ohio 20 votes. It gives them eighteen. Where did those other two votes go? Those votes go to states like Rhode Island. Rhode Island has 1.1 million people in it, so it should have about 2 votes, but instead it gets four. Why? According to the rules of the Electoral College, every state, no matter how many people live there, each get three votes to start with, then the votes are redistributed. Because of this, a lot of states that don’t have that many citizens, and should only have one or two votes, now have three or four. This makes votes in some states count more than others. For example, Alaska is a very small state but has 3 electoral votes, making the weight of their vote 2.5. North Carolina however, who gave up two of their votes to make sure one of the smaller states had at least three, has 15 Electoral College votes, making each vote weighted at 0.91 of a vote. A Vermonters vote, according…
Many people argue that the Electoral College is an outdated system. After all, many things have changed in the last two centuries. For one, technology is much more advanced now than it was two hundred years ago. With the internet and television, we can now learn everything about a candidate regardless of where the come from in the nation. It is feasible to have direct election of a president because of these improved methods of communication and the evolution of technology in general.…
This created an uneducated and ill-informed populace that the Founding Fathers did not trust to elect the president. Instead, they chose a solution that solved the problems of their time period and combined the will of the people with the more educated congressmen: the electoral college. In the electoral college, each state, and the District of Columbia, are given a certain amount of electors, or votes, based on their number of seats in Congress. Each state receives an automatic two votes for their senators, plus however many seats they hold in the House of Representatives. The number of electors a state receives is in direct correlation with its size since the number of seats in the House of Representatives is determined by population. There are a total of 538 electoral votes spread out among the states. The presidential election is basically fifty-one separate elections where each state decides what candidate receives…
U.S. citizens are given the right to vote every four years in November. The electoral votes are based on the population of a state and affect the election in the long run. The Senate of a state is granted two electoral votes towards the national election. The rest of the electoral votes are based on the popular vote in the districts of a state. The Electoral College was created by the U.S. founding fathers because they were afraid that a dictator could manipulate the votes of the people. The Electoral College is a controversial topic because some people believe in keeping it, others believe in abolishing it, and some would just like it to be changed. The Electoral College should be abolished because it is outdated in the common era, it is unfair…
Our founding fathers created a piece of paper that we still use today. Inside of that paper is the electoral college. Along with that, are some of our most valued rights like: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of press, the right to bear arms, the right to a fair and timely trial, and many more. The electoral college is something that should be valued more than this generation currently does. In times where the popular vote couldn’t determine our leader, the electoral college did. In times where candidates tried to use one region to win, they lost. Mitt Romney being a major example of this. So hopefully after reading this, you understand the importance of the electoral college and are ready to unite and stand behind it. After all, America isn’t a democracy, we are a…
With the use of the electoral college it is taking away the weight of the peoples vote. The amount of importance that a person’s vote has in a very spread out population than a densely populated area is much higher in that area, but is nothing when you look at the entire state. The election, for the president, was created to allow the population of the entire country the ability to choose their president. The electoral college is taking away the peoples vote and a large portion of the qualified population is not voting because they know their vote doesn’t really…
The Electoral College follows a winner-take all representative system, which means that the voices of some citizens will not matter. The Electoral College is a system of representatives included in the U.S. Constitution, created by the Founding Fathers, to help ensure that voters selecting the president were qualified and knowledgeable. These voters were chosen, because they knew what they were doing, rather than possible unreasonable voting by the public. However, this system is not required anymore, and can be detrimental to citizens of the United States of America. The Electoral College should be abolished, because it favors’ the voters of small states and because it does not accurately represent the voice of the people of the U.S.…