I feel that the electoral college system needs to be removed from our presidential elections. It causes more harm than good and, makes many voters not vote. There are pros and cons to the system but, there are too many cons for it to continue. Presidential candidates only care about big states “for the win”. Which makes voters think they're small electoral college state is worthless. So in this essay, I will convince you and, tell you the truth behind the Electoral College system.…
Each state has a number of electors equal to the number of its U.S. senators (2 in each state) plus the number of its U.S. representatives, which varies according to the state's population. Currently, the Electoral College includes 538 electors, 535 for the total number of congressional members, and three who represent Washington, D.C., as allowed by the 23rd Amendment. On the Monday following the second Wednesday in December,…
The electoral college is a set of electors who are selected to elect a candidate in a particular office. These electors are nominated by state legislatures. The number of electors are equal to the whole number of senators and representatives. Electoral college…
The Electoral College was established in 1787 as a compromise between having Congress select the next President of the United States, and having a direct democracy in which the popular vote selected the next President. The system has worked for over 200 years, so why change it now?…
Growing up as kids we were taught the design of our democracy and the constitutional principles. According to the Webster Dictionary a democracy is “ government in which people choose their leaders by voting, and where they are treated equally and have equal rights.” The definition does not capture what the United States feels it's a democracy. The United States is believe in the democratic ideology is, but is best known as a representative republic. In The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, 2001: "Traditionally a republic is distinguished from a true democracy in that the republic operates through a representative assembly chosen by the citizenry, while in a democracy the populace participates directly in governmental affairs. In actual practice,…
What if I were to tell you that something in the constitution was actually unconstitutional? The Electoral College is, and there are many more reasons it is a flawed system of electing our president. As it stands today, electoral votes only matter in a few states and some states do not matter in the grand scheme of things. Besides that, we have recently had a president elected who did not win the popular vote. This president has made a number of controversial decisions, and many call for him to be impeached for a large variety of reasons.…
Over the years the Electoral College has been proven to be outdated. People wonder constantly if their vote counts anymore or, if this method is affective any longer. There are three main reasons why the Electoral College is outdated and should be abolished. The presidential candidates only pay attention to the states with the most Electoral votes, we also have a larger and more educated population then when this was originally set up, lastly it does not seem as if your vote really counts since there have been at least four occurrences where the president with the popular vote has lost the election.…
The electoral college works as such: Every American citizen (In theory) puts forward one ballot in the respective state they live in. On this ballot, the individual votes for a Presidential Ticket, United States Senator (If the state’s Senate Election falls on a election year), State Judicial Representative, State Senator(s),…
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.…
The Electoral College always has it’s print on the elections and more importantly on the very close elections. It has done it’s job the over 200 plus years and throughout fifty presidential elections. So the electoral college is promising and durable. Both parties Republican and Democrat candidate feel at times as if they win the popular vote they win the election, but that’s when the electoral votes play their part. The electoral votes are combined by states…
When voting for a President and Vice President, Americans are actually voting for presidential electors, generally known as the electoral college. It is these electors who actually vote to elect the chief executive. Each state has a specific number of electors equal to the combined total of the state’s Senate and House of Representatives delegations. There is currently a combined total of 538 electors.…
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…
Before the tense and puzzling presidential election in 2000, many people thought the Electoral College was a place of education. Most people now know that it is not a place, but a process of how the President of the United States of America is elected. The Presidential Election of 2000 helped inform Americans that our President is not elected by the popular vote, but through the process of the Electoral College (Ballaro). The Electoral College has existed since the beginning of America. In the Electoral College, each state gets a specific amount of Electoral Votes. Electoral Voters are special electors who cast a vote that reflects his or her individual states choice for President. Together, all of the states come together to make up a total of 538 votes, which means the winning candidate needs 270 electoral votes to achieve victory (Ballaro).…
The United States Electoral College is an integral part of America’s political system. In 1787, the delegates of the Constitutional Convention decided on the creation of the Electoral College, or a system under which a body is elected with the expressed purpose of itself electing a higher body. The College was established by Article Two, Section One of the United States Constitution. (Lesson 2: Political Participation, n.d.) The Founding Fathers wished to provide the people of each state the ability every four years to choose the number of electors who would vote in the Electoral College, who would in turn determine which candidate would enter the White House as the nation’s next president. (Watts, 2010) For the past 200 years, the Electoral…
Who 's voting for the president? Not you. We live in a society where your vote…