Yes. We choose electors, and they elect the president.
They are called electors and as a group they form the electoral college.
They are called electors and as a group they form the electoral college.
They are called electors and as a group they form the electoral college.
They are called electors and as a group they form the electoral college.
Presidents of the US are elected by the electoral college, they are not elected directly by the public. The public (in effect) elects the electors who form the electoral college. It has happened on several occasions that the winner of the popular vote was not the winner in the electoral college.
the indirect form is indirect form hahaha :)
The U.S. Electoral College system is a system of indirect election. In accordance with Article II of the United States Constitution, electoral votes determine the President and Vice President of the United States. The electors are elected by direct popular vote in each state and each candidate for elector swears in advance whom he will vote for. The electors from each of the 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia then cast their electoral votes to elect the President and Vice President of the United States. Examples of direct popular elections are elections of the representatives in the U. S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
The word 'electoral' is the adjective form for the noun elector.
The electoral college is the ultimate form of election. People vote for electors, who then distribute themselves to the various states at an allotment ratio based on the population of people that bothered to vote in the previous election. They then poll the residents and politicians of that state and, once they've verified the polling results, go to Washington DC to consider voting for the candidates that the state they were assigned to voted for. After meeting with high ranking government officials for a last round of debate and campaigning, the college retreats to a room in the Capitol building where they lock themselves in and don't come out until they are done. They vote in secret and burn white smoke atop the Capitol dome as a signal once they have agreed on the next president of the United States.
The President of the United States is chosen by 538 "Electors", who together form the Electoral College, as defined by Article II of the United States Constitution. As they each represent one of the 56 returning areas, they may also incorrectly be referred to as "Representatives" in the Electoral College, or "Delegates" to the Electoral College, but neither of these terms is legally used.
They are called electors. As a group they form the electoral college.
The College is made up of people selected by the states. Those designated to perform this task are known as the electors. The state of Pennsylvania oversees the inner workings of the Electoral College. The College makes the decision of electing the President of the United States. chose wisely