Alaska has 3 electoral college votes.
The last time they went to a Republican was in 1984.
if most members in the Congress from his states are Republican if his state has a republican governor if his state cast electoral votes in the last election for the Republican candidate
if most members in the Congress from his states are Republican if his state has a republican governor if his state cast electoral votes in the last election for the Republican candidate
if most members in the Congress from his states are Republican if his state has a republican governor if his state cast electoral votes in the last election for the Republican candidate
nominal
1. If most members in the congress from his state are republicans 2. If his state has a republican governor 3. His state cast electoral votes in the last election for the republican candidate
The number of electoral votes for each state is equal to the sum of its number of Senators and its number of Representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives. Based on the 2010 Census, there is 1 member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Alaska. Therefore, Alaska had 3 electoral votes in the 2016 presidential election.
It never has voted for a Republican in a presidential election. The 23rd Amendment, ratified in 1961, gave Washington D.C. the right to cast electoral votes for a president. Since then, it has always cast its votes for a Democrat (even in 1984 when Minnesota was the only state to vote for Mondale over Reagan).
There are three ways for a republican state chairman to become a member of his party's national committee. He must participate in the electoral votes, most members of the Congress from his state must be republicans, and the Governor in his state must be republican.
The last presidential candidate to receive the 14 NJ electoral votes was George H. W. Bush
Michigan voted Republican in the 2016 election, and Democratic in the past three presidential elections in 2012, 2008, and 2004.