Electors
The President & Vice-President are elected by the ballots cast by citizens called electors.
Electors.
its equal to the number of senators and representatives in Congress.
The electors meet in the capitals of their respective states to cast their ballots. Their sealed ballots are then sent to the President of the US Senate.
The electors meet in their state capitals and cast their ballots. The ballots are sent ( presumably by registered mail) to the President of the Senate ( i.e. the vice-president of the US.)
None
Missouri had approximately 4,425,411 (give or take a handful) eligible voters in the 2008 Presidential election. 2,925,197 of these cast valid ballots. In the Electoral College, it had 11 electors.
Candidates for elector are chosen by the party leadership previous to the election and even though they are free to choose anyone they want, they are all sworn to vote for the party's candidate. The people choose the electors who will vote the way they want . After they are elected, the electors meet in the capitals of their states and cast their ballots for the president and vice president . Their ballots are sealed and certified and sent to the president of the Senate to be counted at a later date.
This is false. The amendment actually requires separate ballots for president and vice-president.
Presidential election is an indirect vote in that citizens cast ballots for a slate of members of the U.S. Electoral College; the electors in turn directly elect the President and Vice President
The formal election for president begins on the Monday following the second Wednesday in December when the electors meet in each state capital and cast their ballots. The ballots from each state are sealed and mailed to the president of the Senate for a formal count. This is more like When.