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What happens if there is no winner of a MAJORITY of the votes in the Electoral College is as follows:

All the delegations of all the states get together (for example, both Wyoming's senators and their one representative, or California's two senators and all 53 of their representatives) and cast their collective vote for one candidate. Every state gets only ONE (1) vote. The way in which they determine who receives their vote is up to them.

The only time this happened was in 1877, when no one candidate won the 1876 election. The Democrats, mostly representing the South, agreed to give the election to the Republican candidate if he would remove all federal troops from the South, who were still there even after the Civil War to protect the freed slaves and ensure that the South did not try to rise again.

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Q: Who elects the president of the us if there is no clear cut winner in the electoral college?
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What happens if the electors fail to select a president and vice president?

If there is no clear winner in hte electoral college, the House of Representatives elects the president by simple majority vote.


How might a presidential election winner lose the popular vote?

Presidents of the US are elected by the electoral college, they are not elected directly by the public. The public (in effect) elects the electors who form the electoral college. It has happened on several occasions that the winner of the popular vote was not the winner in the electoral college.


Who elects the President if the people don't?

The Electoral College formally elects the President, a few weeks after the popular vote. Electoral votes go state by state, and equal the number of Representatives (aka Congresspeople) in each state. In the case of a stalemate, the United States Supreme Court steps in, and declares a winner. This happened in 2000, to settle the stalemate between Al Gore and George W. Bush.


What was the constitutional institution for choosing presidents that came under severe criticism after the 2000 popular vote winner failed to win the office?

The electoral college elects the president, not the direct popular vote. There is a reason for this, but Gore supporters were disappointed when their man was not elected president after carrying the popular vote.


How is the electoral college used to elect the president of the US?

In a US Presidential election, the voters in each state cast votes for electors, who are political party representatives for their state. These electors meet after the election and cast ballots that determine the winner of the election. To win election, a candidate must win more than half of the total of all electoral votes (as of 2014, 270 out of 538). If no candidate wins enough electoral votes, the US House of Representatives elects the President (this has only occurred once, in 1824) and the Senate elects the Vice President. In most cases, all of the electoral votes for a particular state go to the candidate who received the most votes in that state, even if only by a small margin. (Maine and Nebraska have modified this.)


How many electoral collage votes do you need to become the us president?

To be declared the winner, a candidate needs at least 270 electoral college votes.


After people vote in their state the is used to determine the winner of the presidential race?

electoral college The Electoral College probabably electoral college


Why might electing a president with a minority vote be more controversial under a popular vote system than under the Electoral college system?

In order to win in the electoral college, a majority is required. There is no such thing as a minority winner there. If no one gets a majority, the House of Representatives elects the President from the three top vote-getters. Every state gets one vote. If they choose a candidate with a minority of the votes, the result would probably be just as controversial as when a person with a plurality of popular votes loses in the electoral college.


What is a presidential winner decided by?

The Electoral College.


Does the winner of the popular vote or the winner of the electoral vote become president?

Yes


Who elects president of the US?

The electors, aka the Electoral College (though that term is not used in the Constitution). The US Constitution specifies the number of electors and the way they are to be apportioned among the states. It doesn't explicitly state how the states are to choose their electors. At present, all state choose their electors based on the results of the popular election; in most states it's on a "winner take all" basis, but they're not required to do it that way.


Can the house of representatives elect the president?

Yes, the responsibility of electing the U. S. President falls to the U. S. House of Representatives when the electoral college fails to elect a clear winner, with an absolute majority of electoral votes.