It is unclear what the question is asking.
1) Question: By what method would an American citizen in the early days of the republic have complained about the US Electoral College?
There are several ways that an American citizen could have complained about the electoral college, such as: protesting; writing his opinion in letters or newspapers; and discussing the issue with his local, state, or federal representatives.
2) Question: What issues would an American citizen in the early days of the republic have had with the existence or powers of the US Electoral College?
The main issue that American citizens would have had (and stil do have) with the Electoral College is that it divorces the election of the US President, the most powerful statesman in the United States, from the actual popular vote. Other issues with the electoral college remain issues today, including: majority take all voting in the electoral college, that electors can completely disregard the popular vote (such as happened in the non-election of Horace Greeley), and there is no oversight of the Electoral College. An additional problem was that the US had not clarified (until the Twelfth Amendment) that the President and Vice President must come on a combined ticket, so this led to many faulting the US Electoral College for making Thomas Jefferson the Vice President for John Adams when the two were ideologically opposed, leading to stagnation within the executive branch.
you have to be voted in by the mojority constitiny of the citizen
YES
Athens, Greece was one of the birthplaces of democracy. Athenian democracy was a direct democracy in which every citizen voted directly on issues of importance, rather than electing representatives to vote for them.
507 BCE Cleisthenes established a limited democracy. This went back to oligarchy during the Persian invasion. 462 BCE Ephialtes reintoduced a full democracy. mid 440s BCE Pericles expelled conservatives and established a radical democracy driven by the citizen assembly.
In ancient Greece they practiced a true Democracy. That is when every citizen is part of the government. The US has a Democracy mixed with a Republic and that's why we elect officials no make all the rules.
There are several ways that an American citizen could have complained about the electoral college, such as: protesting; writing his opinion in letters or newspapers; and discussing the issue with his local, state, or federal representatives.
In order to preserve democracy a citizen must abide by the laws of democracy.
In order to preserve democracy a citizen must abide by the laws of democracy.
It contributes to the richness and health of a democracy
A 'passive citizen' in any democracy is an adult who doesn't vote and doesn't keep himself of herself informed about politics and current affairs. There are people in Britain who, for example, don't know the name of the current Foreign Secretary and have a confused view of how the electoral system works.
electoral vote is the population of the state and and the amount of citizen that live state and popular votes is the amount of citizen that vote for a presidential election
democracy generally means the right of a citizen to elect its leader or just say ruler. it shows the power and freedom of a citizen over birth-land.
Yes, the citizen election and the electoral votes election are connected. In the United States, citizens directly vote for the candidates of their choice in what is known as the citizen election. However, the final outcome of the presidential election is determined by the electoral votes a candidate receives, which are allocated based on the results of the citizen election in each state.
In Australia, no. It is very similar to an election and is run by the Australian Electoral Commission using the same electoral rolls. To be on the roll, you need to be a citizen.
The most common political system in South America is a federal republic. This usually has five branches of government namely executive, legislative, judiciary, electoral, and citizen.
DEmocracy
Citizen participation .