yes
In the event of a Electoral College tie, the House of Representative will be called upon to break the tie and elect the President.
There can not be a tie if the votes are divided between just two candidates since the total number of votes, 537, is an odd number. However, if more than two people receive votes, it is easily possible for a tie to occur.
There has only been one 'tie' in the electoral college: 1800 - Thomas Jefferson VS Aaron Burr. This tie lead to a constitutional amendment, the 12th amendment.
If the electoral college is not able to elect a President, the election goes to the House of Representatives.
In the electoral college, there are 538 electors (or electoral votes), with at least 270 needed to win the presidential election. Although highly unlikely, it is possible that the electoral votes could be tied 269-269. If this were to happen, the vote would then go to Congress. It would be the duty of The House of Representatives to break the tie for the presidential election, and the duty of the Senate to break the tie for the vice presidential position.
it is possible to tie in a college football game
In order to elect a president , one candidate must receive more than half the votes. If more than two candidates receive votes, then it is possible that no one will get the required majority and you could say the electoral college is deadlocked. As of 2014, with the total of electoral votes being 538, it is also possible that two candidates could each receive 269. This tie vote would sent the election to the US Congress.
The 12th amendment was added as a result of the tie in the electoral college between Thomas Jefferson and his running mate Aaron Burr in 1800.
269 electors vote Republican, and the other 269 electors vote Democratic.
If there had been a 269-269 tie in the Electoral College, the election would have been decided by the U.S. House of Representatives, which is controlled by the Republican Party.
In case of a tie in the Electoral College, where no presidential candidate receives a majority of electoral votes, the role of the House of Representatives is to select the president from the top three candidates. Each state delegation would have one vote, and a candidate must receive the support of at least 26 state delegations to win the presidency. However, this scenario is highly unlikely, as a tie in the Electoral College is a rare occurrence.
the people running for president must have a tie in electoral votes. the people running for president must have a tie in electoral votes. the people running for president must have a tie in electoral votes.