Several states designated one senator per county or district, while in with per capita voting, which gave each senator, rather than each state.
People in your state vote for you
Each state has a senate that vote for them>
The citizens of the state who vote for the candidate running for the senate seat.
The US Senate has 100 members - 2 from each state- and all of them have one vote each.
The people of the state vote for the senate members.
Each state has two senators in the U.S. Senate. Each senator has 1 vote.
That is not correct. If no candidate receives a majority of electoral votes, the Twelfth Amendment of the United State Constitution provides that the U.S. House of Representatives will select the president, with each of the fifty state delegations casting one vote, and the U.S. Senate will select the vice-president.
We vote for them every 6 years.
You vote for them. Those are the people who run for state senate, state house, state assembly, or for the U.S. House or U.S. Senate.
The Vice-President, who is President of the Senate, can vote to break a tie vote.
House and Senate leaders are chosen by their party caucuses (so the party that holds the majority of seats chooses the majority leader and the Speaker of the House, while the party in the minority chooses the minority leader).
The election is in each state and registered voters vote for senate.