A tie for first in the electoral vote count is just one example of nobody receiving votes for president from more than half of the appointed electors. Whenever that happens, the House of Representatives elects the president from among the top three electoral vote recipients. In doing so, all of the Representatives from each state together have one vote, and the winner must have the votes of at least 26 of the 50 states.
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.
If no candidate gets a majority, the House of Representatives chooses using a special procedure in which each state gets one vote.
No. The Senate never chooses the President. The House of Representatives does, if the nobody win a majority in the electoral college. (See the related question.)
Four presidents have won the electoral college but not the popular vote. They are Rutherford B. Hayes, Benjamin Harrison, George W. Bush, and John Quincy Adams. In the case of John Quincy Adams it was decided in the House of Representatives after a tie in the electoral votes.
Several powers are reserved for the House of Representatives. These include: drafting appropriation bills, filing a case of impeachment against the President and electing a President if no candidate receives a majority of the electoral vote.
The legislative branch has the power to -Initiate revenue bills -Impeach federal officials -The House of Representatives decides the President in the case the electoral college ties -The Senate decides the Vice President in the case the electoral college ties -Enact laws that are "necessary and proper" -Declare war
It is a part of the legislatve power in the US. Its members introduce proposals for law and must approve new laws. The House also decides on taxes and spending as well as it choses the President in case no candidate has received majority in the Electoral College.
It is impossible for candidates NOT to receive electoral votes. The president is solely elected upon electoral votes. At the current point in time a candidate MUST receive at least 270 electoral votes to win. If a candidate does not receive 270 votes, the U.S, House of Representatives elects the President from among the 3 candidates receiving the most electoral votes. 12th Amendment to the constitution
There are 538 votes in the electoral college and a simple majority of 270 is required to win the presidency. If none of the candidates achieves this, the House votes again with only one vote per state; only 51% is required to win in either case.
The House of Representatives elects the President in this case. There is a special procedure for doing this specified in the Constitution.
When the Senate approves Presidential nominees to the Courts or Cabinet members it is called "Advise and Consent." I'm not aware of any case where the Senate would approve the President. In the case of a tie in the Electoral College, the House of Representatives votes to break the tie, thus deciding who will be President.
The House of Representatives has special powers that no other branch has. It has the power to: • To start all revenue (money) bills. • To impeach civil officers. • To elect a President if no candidate receives a majority of the electoral votes.
Because the popular vote decides which candidate wins that State's electoral college votes. In the present case, the electoral college will hardly have a choice and could be said to be redundant, but this has not always been the case.