A tie in a popular vote can be handled several different ways depending on which state you're in. If the candidates who tied are not the frontrunner, it has no impact on the result of the election. The top vote getter still wins the election.
But, if the top two vote-getters tie, then it usually triggers a recount of the votes. Often, elections people have to recount every vote by hand to verify them. It is handled by highly trained teams of people with plenty of experience and overseen very carefully. If there is a winner by even 1 vote, the person with the extra vote wins.
If the result is still a tie after the second counting of the votes, a new election is held, but only with the two candidates who tied. If they continue to be tied, another hand count of the votes would be conducted to make sure that the votes are correct.
If they remain tied, not all states have the same requirements for what to do after this; but in some jurisidictions, the outcome can be determined by having the candidates each turn up turning up a card, calling heads or tails in a coin flip, or even picking straws. Whoever wins the contest wins the election. Those little games of chance are highly supervised so that there is no advantage for either candidate.
One little town out in the southwest got its name from a card draw game that actually did determine the outcome between two tied candidates. The low card won.
If two candidates tied in a state's popular vote, the next steps depend on the specific election rules of that state. Some states have provisions for conducting a recount, while others may determine the winner through a random drawing or another tiebreaker method. If there is a dispute over the winner, it can be resolved through legal avenues, such as filing a lawsuit or seeking a court order for recounts or investigations. Ultimately, the resolution would be determined based on the laws and procedures of the state in question.
proportional representation
All states except Maine and Nebraska grant all their electoral votes as a unit to the candidates who wins the state's popular vote.
In reality, states have no position in the nomination of presidential candidates other than holding legal elections. The parties determine the candidates.
The nouns are: "boundary" "dispute" "United States" "Spain"
The nomination or designation of candidates for public office by direct popular vote rather than through the action of a convention or body of elected nominating representatives or delegates. The term is applied both to the nomination of candidates without any nominating convention, and, loosely, to the nomination effected, as in the case of candidates for president or senator of the United States, by the election of nominating representatives pledged or instructed to vote for certain candidates dssignated by popular vote.
Candidates need a majority of electoral votes to be elected. Because most states* award all of their electoral votes to the top candidate in that state, candidates do not need to win the national popular vote to win a majority of electoral votes. The result is that winning a few large population states (called swing states), even by a tiny margin, can guarantee election to the presidency. In 1876, 1888, and 2000, the winning candidate did not get the most popular votes nationwide.
andrew jacksonAndrew Jackson received approximately 41% of the popular vote in the election of 1824, more than any other candidate. (The United States House of Representatives would decide the presidency that year as none of the four candidates received enough electoral votes to be elected and they elected John Quincy Adams.)
because no one candidate is certain to win the popular vote there
Officer Candidates School - United States Marine Corps - was created in 1891.
These two were the only major candidates in the November election. There are always minor parties who get their candidates' names on the ballots in some states and write-in votes are legal in some states, I think. Ralph Nader was on the ballot in every state and won 0.56% of the popular vote. Of course, several people ran for the nominations in the primaries.
The direct vote of citizens to elect the President of the United States is called the Popular Vote. The race for President of the United States also takes into account Electoral Votes. Electoral Votes are given to candidates who win the Popular Vote in a particular state.
it is impossible since the electorial votes, the would have to be a tie in all fifty states and that will not happen. The movie that holly wood produced brought up a hypothetical view and nothing more.