The average would be just less than two percent.
Pennsylvania currently has more electoral votes with 20 electoral votes to Kansas' 6 electoral votes.
No, every state has at least three electoral votes
California, with 55 electoral votes in 2012.
North Carolina is the only state with 15 electoral votes.
The number of the state's representatives + its 2 senators
It depends on the state. Most have a winner-take-all approach, where whoever wins gets all the electoral votes. A few states can split their electoral votes, depending on who wins in each district.
About 2.3 percent,
Electoral votes are distributed by state, not by county. In 2012, the state of Illinois had 20 votes.
New Jersey has 15 electoral votes.
all of the state's electoral votes
Electoral votes are not divided between democrats and republicans. They are allocated among the states. Each state has electoral votes equal to the total of the 2 representative the state has in the U.S. Senate plus the number of representative the state has in the House of Representatives. Since every state has two senators and at least one representative to the House, every state has at least 3 electoral votes. Each state then votes that states electoral votes for the U.S. presidential candidate who won the election in that state.
The non- state with electoral votes is the District of Columbia (DC)