EYE.DEE.KAY
A presidential elector is a person elected by the voters to represent them in making a formal selection of the Vice President and President.
Any electoral college elector has the right to officaly support their political party's presidential nominee/candidate.
Three, as Montana has.
Yes i would, i will tell them if they're right or wrong. I would not run for elector unless I could conscientiously vote for the candidate of my party.
271 for Bush; 266 for Gore. (one elector abstaining)
two would be my guess
The state with the lowest elector to population ratio is California.
In 2004 an anonymous Minnesota elector, pledged for Democrats John Kerry and John Edwards, cast his presidential electoral vote for "John Ewards" rather than Kerry, presumably by accident.
Most states provide by law that candidates for the office of presidential elector shall be nominated by the recognized political parties at their state level conventions. A few states authorize the state party committees to make the choice, while other leave the process to the discretion of the parties; under this system, party organizations generally choose to nominate their elector candidates by convention, or through the state party committee. Several states provide unique mechanisms for selection of elector candidates. Pennsylvania, for instance, provides that the party presidential candidate may choose the presidential elector candidates for his or her party. In California, Republicans choose recent nominees for state and federal office to serve as elector candidates, while in the Democratic Party, candidates for the office of US Representative, and the two most recent candidates for US Senate, each choose one candidate for the office of presidential elector.
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.
No, a presidential pardon cannot be refused by the recipient. Once granted, it is considered final and cannot be rejected or overturned.
Delaware had three electors in the first presidential election. Each elector was allowed to cast two votes in those days.