yes
The President and Vice President of the United States are elected indirectly through the Electoral College. The voters in each state vote for a group of appointed electors who then cast their votes for the candidates based on the popular vote in their respective states.
to be the same as or corresponding to
Voters cast a single vote for both the President and the Vice President.
Candidates for president and vice-president run as a team- they are elected as a team by the voters through an indirect process spelled out in the US Constitution. A body known as the electoral college officially elects the president and vice-president but the voters choose the electors based on the candidates they promise to vote for.
An electorate is a member of the electoral college. The Electoral College are the people of the United States that are selected by their state to vote for the President and Vice President of the United States. The actual general public do not vote for President or Vice President. Typically, it is a population of qualified voters.
the vice president has the deciding vote
We the ppl.We vote on who should be president of the U.S. And as for the vice presidents I think the president that we vote on decides who would be the vice president.
no. the vice president is chosen by the presedential nominee, whom you vote for.
We the ppl.We vote on who should be president of the U.S. And as for the vice presidents I think the president that we vote on decides who would be the vice president.
The president and vice president of the United States are officially elected by the Electoral College. Voters in each state cast their ballots for a slate of electors pledged to vote for their chosen candidate. These electors then formally cast their votes for president and vice president, with the results certified by Congress. The process reflects the federal structure of the U.S. government, balancing popular vote with state representation.
They are "electors" and as a group they are the "electoral college." Voters in Presidential elections are actually selecting the electors who represent a given party or candidate. Under the US Contitution, voters in each state select Presidential Electors who meet in their State Capitals and vote on the Presidential slates. Together, these Electors constitute the Electoral College, although the College never meets all together in one place. Although Electors are usually pledged to vote for one slate or another, there is no constitutional requirement that they do so. Originally they were expected to vote as they thought best for their states and the country.
The Vice President is the President of the Senate, although he is allowed to vote only in the case of a tie vote.