3) Why did the Framers believe a direct popular election of a president was impractical or undesirable? Provide three reasons. (6 points, 2 points each) · A low population over a larger area. · Lack of proper transportation. · The above two factors would mean that it would take a substantial and impractical amount of time to complete elections. Something that was not an option considering the important nature and position of the Chief Executive.
Making this change would require a Constitutional amendment which 2/3 of Congress would have to pass on and 3/4 of the states would have to ratify.
It therefore would require massive national support to make this change and I can not see evidence that such support will arise in the foreseeable future.
A constitutional amendment would be required. (:
Yes
A presidential election is one where citizens vote for the President. In this type of election, voters directly choose their preferred candidate for the position of President of their country. The candidate who receives the majority of the electoral votes or the popular votes (depending on the country's system) wins the election and becomes the President.
barak obama was
By popular vote. Uruguay has a free election.
Samuel Tilden
The election of the president is determined by a popular vote and by the electoral college. The presidential candidate needs a majority of electoral votes to win, and the electoral votes usually coincide with the popular vote (with the exception of the election of George W Bush in 2000)
based on what happened in the 2000 election, he (or she) becomes president.
President Obama won re-election on November 6, 2012; he defeated Mitt Romney in both popular and electoral votes, and earned a second term as president.
No US president was elected unanimously by popular vote. The only president elected unanimously by the electoral college was George Washington (There was no popular vote in this election).
The direct election of senators was adopted in 1913 under the 17th Amendment to the United States Constitution. This amendment changed the way senators were chosen, shifting the responsibility from state legislatures to the people through popular vote.
President Obama won the electoral college and the popular vote, earning a second term as president in the election of 2012.