Donald Trump won Arizona's 11 electoral votes in the 2016 election. The 2016 presidential electors from Arizona pledged to vote for Donald Trump for President and Mike Pence for Vice President were J. Foster Morgan, Glendale; Walter Begay Jr., Kayenta; Bruce Ash, Tucson - National Committeeman; Sharon Giese, Mesa; James O'Connor, Scottsdale; Jerry Hayden, Scottsdale; Robert Graham, Phoenix - State Party Chairman; Edward Robson, Phoenix; Carole Joyce, Phoenix; Alberto Gutier, Phoenix; and Jane Pierpoint Lynch, Phoenix.
The citizens are the voters for the electoral college.
Three,
Eleven.
yes
The electoral role.
Amendment twenty-three of the U.S. constitution says that Washington DC gets three electoral voters
Arkansas has 6 electoral voters for 2012
Electoral role
California
A lot of money
electoral collage
Yes. If you consider the "majority of voters" to be a majority of voters nationwide without regard to the state they are from, then it is possible for a person to be elected president if he/she wins enough electoral even if nationwide the majority of voters chose the other candidate. This is because electoral votes are counted state by state not on a percentage basis of the national voters (except for Maine and Nebraska).