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In the United States, individual casting of electoral votes for president occurs when members of the Electoral College cast their votes for the presidential candidate that won their state's popular vote. Each elector has the discretion to vote for the candidate of their choice. However, some states have laws that require electors to vote according to the popular vote result in their state.
You mean delegate votes, not electoral votes. The quick answer is that the Democrats have more total delegates appointed to attend their conventions than the Republicans do. In either case, the candidate must have 50 percent plus 1 vote to be nominated.
Finally, a question is posted here that has millions of Americans thinking about when they go and vote in a national election. Shouldn't every vote count throughout the 50 states? Critics state that a populous vote would unfairly elect the next president. Yet, in all fairness to each voter in each state a percentage of electoral votes could be applied to each candidate who either took the majority of populous votes or not--keeping the electoral college intact and fair.
The Electoral College was created by the United States Constitution. Article II of the United States Constitution states that "Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress." Abolishment of the Electoral College would require amendment of the United States Constitution.The electoral college was created in 1788 by the United States Constitution. The first U.S. presidential election was in 1789. George Washington was elected as the first president of the United States. The election was conducted under the new United States Constitution, which had been ratified earlier in 1788. In the election, George Washington received all 69 electoral votes and was unanimously elected president. Elimination of the electoral college would require amendment of the United States Constitution.
There have been elections (such as 2000), where the candidate who won the majority of all votes cast did not win a majority of the electoral college. Some people believe that the president should be elected directly by the people so this cannot happen. The electoral college gives smaller states a slightly larger vote proportionally, and just as having two houses of Congress, balances between state's rights and simple majority. The founding fathers recognized that states with large population could control elections, while states with smaller population wanted a voice in their government. Therefore, the electoral college gives two votes to each state, plus one vote for each congressional district.
The electoral college was created by the United States Constitution in 1788. The first U.S. presidential election was in 1789. George Washington was elected as the first president of the United States. The election was conducted under the new United States Constitution, which had been ratified earlier in 1788. In the election, George Washington received all 69 electoral votes and was unanimously elected president. John Adams was elected vice-president. Abolishment of the U.S. electoral college would require amendment of the United States Constitution.
The bank manager at Suntrust does not require a college degree. With that being said, it may be helpful in being picked for the job The more experience you have, the more likely you will be picked as the perfect candidate for the job.
How a state allocates its electoral votes is up to that state. Most states allocate all electoral votes to the candidate with more votes than any other candidate in that state; this is called a plurality. Note, however, that some states require the electors to cast their ballots in the Electoral College for the winner of the popular vote, but others have no such requirement.
Changing the electoral college system in the United States would require a constitutional amendment, which involves a proposal by two-thirds of both houses of Congress or a constitutional convention called for by two-thirds of state legislatures, followed by ratification by three-fourths of the states.
The Electoral College. The President of the United States is not elected by the voters of the USA. The President is elected by members of the Electoral College. When we vote for President, we're actually voting for ELECTORS, who are pledged to vote for the winner of the nominee. However, there is no requirement that an elector must vote for the person he's supposed to represent. People who do not vote they way they are supposed to are called "faithless electors", and there have been several dozen over the 230-year history of the USA. Fortunately, no "faithless elector" has ever made the difference in the results of the election.
The electoral college is designed specifically to prevent the "tyranny of the majority". That is, the founders did not trust the election of such a powerful post (the President) to a simple majority of the population. The design of the electoral college is such that it requires a diverse majority to be achieved for election. It was originally conceived to help prevent a strong regional candidate from beating a candidate with less deep, but more broad appeal, under the theory that the United States was best served by one who appealed to the whole country, not just strongly to one region.The method it uses is a combination of geographic regionalism combined with pure populism. That is, it requires the President to win the popular vote in a majority of regions in the country, not just a pure plurality of the total population.Thus, those in favor of some form of electoral college are often those in lower-density population areas. Since the electoral college takes into account regions of the country when allocating votes, it "favors" those states with lower population densities. That is, a citizen in a low-population state received proportionally more electoral votes than a citizen in a high-population state. Others in favor of the system prefer it because it does require a higher diversity of support than a pure popular vote (that is, the electoral college system requires a candidate to have support in many different regions, which have different concerns, rather than a very large support base in only a very few heavily-populated regions)The current winner-take-all method of allocating state electors has exposed some severe weaknesses in the electoral college system. However, the original goals of the Electoral College can be obtained (and many, if not most, of the faults of the current method can be obviated) by adjusting the method of allocation of electors to follow what is known as the Congressional District Method, which is currently implemented in Maine and Nebraska. Under this system, the winner of the popular vote in each congressional district receives one electoral vote, and while the winner of the state-wide popular vote receives 2 additional electoral votes. This method increases the strength of the one-man-one-vote concept, while still retaining limits on pure populism (and rewarding those with broad-based support, rather than regionalism).