In the presidential election the people actually vote for a slate of electors all of whom are sworn to vote for a particular candidate. The number of electors varies from state to state and is the number of Congressmen it has plus 2 for its 2 senators.
Usually the candidate's name is on the ballot and people may think they are voting directly for the candidate. After the votes are counted the slate of electors with the most votes meet and send a letter certifying their vote to the president of the Senate who in the presence of both houses of Congress opens the letters , counts the vote and announces the results.
The entire electoral college does not meet together in one place. Electors meet in their respective state capitals (electors for the District of Columbia meet within the District) on the Monday after the second Wednesday in December, at which time they cast their electoral votes on separate ballots for president and vice-president. Each state then forwards the election results to the President of the U.S. Senate, the Archivist of the United States, the state's Secretary of State, and the chief judge of the United States district court where those electors met. A joint session of Congress takes place on January 6 in the calendar year immediately following the meetings of the presidential electors. The electoral votes are officially tabulated at the joint session of Congress and the winner of the election is officially declared. The sitting vice-president is expected to preside at the joint session. In several cases the President pro tempore of the Senate has chaired the proceedings.
Not exactly- the electoral college is made up of electors whom the voters elect when they vote for president. The electors are sworn to vote for a certain candidate and voters vote for the elector who will vote they way they want.
The names of the electors usually do not appear on the ballot.The electoral college votes after the national election is over,
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 citizens are the voters for the electoral college.
The popular vote is when the people vote for the president. in actuallity the people don't elect the president. the electorial college do. they win states with the popular vote then the delegates from those states vote for the candidate their state chooses.
The electoral college is chosen by the voters of the individual states. When one votes during the general election, when they choose their vote for president, they are actually casting their vote for the electors of the state. The college then generally (with few exceptions through history) votes for whomever won the mojority of the votes for that state.
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After the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913, Senators are by law directly elected by the voters in their respective states.Before 1913 it was up to the states to decide how they would choose their Senators. Some were directly elected, some were chosen by State Legislatures.
It Means that the Electoral College approves the vote
The electoral college does not vote on policies. The electoral college performs only one function. It elects the president of the United States.
The electoral college now reflects each state's popular vote.
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 electoral college is chosen by the voters of the individual states. When one votes during the general election, when they choose their vote for president, they are actually casting their vote for the electors of the state. The college then generally (with few exceptions through history) votes for whomever won the mojority of the votes for that state.
California