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A presidential elector is a person elected by the voters to represent them in making a formal selection of the Vice President and President.
That is the correct spelling of "elector", a voter or voting representative, especially those chosen to elect a US President and Vice President.
Electoral votes in the U.S. Electoral College determine the President and Vice President of the United States.
An elector is a member of an electoral college. An electoral college convenes to discuss, agree on and elect a president. The electoral college of Rome elects the Pope.
Any electoral college elector has the right to officaly support their political party's presidential nominee/candidate.
An elector is generally a voter; a citizen who has a legal right to vote. The more specific term is a voting representative, one of 535 individuals who cast ballots to elect a US President and Vice President in the Electoral College.
The framers the elector to choose both vice and the president by the most vote. This is chosen by a group.
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A sentence with elector in it is: "Do you have a sentence with the word elector in it?" George I, King of Great Britain, was also the Elector of Hannover.
The electors are the people who officially elect the president. When people vote for president, they are actually voting for an elector who is sworn to support one particular candidate.
It is only a norm that only a Sinhalese Buddhist can become a president in Sri Lanka. According to the Article 31 of the Sri Lankan constitution it says any citizen can become a president!The election and the term of office of President.31. (1) Any citizen who is qualified to be elected to the office of President may be nominated as a candidate for such office -(a) by a recognized political party, or(b) if he is or has been an elected member of the legislature, by any other political party or by an elector whose name has been entered in any register of electors.
A renegade elector is a member of the Electoral College who casts a vote for a person other than the one he or she has promised to vote for. If you vote for President, you don't vote for the presidential candidate, you vote for an elector who has pledged that he or she will vote for that candidate. This pledge is not legally binding. Any elector may vote for any candidate regardless of his/her pledge. The Electoral College was set up this way becaue the framers of the Constitution did not fully trust the general electorate. This is because more and more voters were coming from unpropertied classes, unlike the Framers. They feared the possibility that a popular vote might elect a person who threatened their property interests. At the time it was expected that electors would only be persons with property interests. Thus, if a president who theatened property interests were elected by the general public, it was expected that that person would vote for the more "responsible" candidate instead and prevent that person from becoming president.