In short, they did not trust the general voting population to vote responsibly, meaning to protect a person's private property. The Framers of the Constitution were for the most part well-to-do individuals owning land and businesses. Many of the general population were not. Many were living on wages or working land for the true owners. They were always seen as a potential threat to the property interests of the wealthy in the sense that they would vote for candidates who would look after the interests of the non-landed classes. This fear is also seen in the fact that the original version of the Constitution required that each state's Senators would be chosen by the state legislature rather than by the voters. The Framers expected the members of the Electoral College would be the same as they were: wealthy, landed with property to be protected from the general public. The Electors were not required (and still are not required) to vote for the candidate they represent. This freedom was given so that if an irresponsible candidate won the popular vote, the wealthy Electors would be able to vote for the other, "more responsible" candidate. In other words the Electors would vote for their own interests rather than the way the general population wanted them to.
The Electoral College was also originally a hedge against dominance by the largest states, effectively giving the small states the same 2 (senator) votes as the large ones. It was not until the population became much more concentrated in a dozen or so larger states that the populous ones began to exert more electoral influence.
It also fostered the two-party system, for establishing national candidates rather than separate ones from each state (now known as "favorite son" candidates).
They did not trust the judgment of the common people in electing the President
The framers wanted a presidency that could withstand intense popular pressure. It set out to accomplish this by having the president elected via the electoral college.
To create a buffer between the population and the selected president.
The writers of the Declaration of Independence the articles of confederation and The constitution all used quill pens to create these famous documents
Match these items.1.number of delegates who signed the Constitutionlegislative branch2.can create, alter, or repeal laws393.number of senators in Senate1004.number of representatives in House4355.another name for House or Senatechamber
Check a history alive: the united states through industrialism textbook.
Check a history alive: the united states through industrialism textbook.
At the time when the founding fathers wrote the Constitution, most U.S. citizens were not very politically knowledgable, and news traveled fairly slowly. The founding fathers created the electoral college so that people who were knowledgable about politics and America's economic standing, etc. were the ones voting and making the smartest decision for the country. However, it is interesting to note that the electoral college, though based off of the number of representatives in Congress, is not proportionally representative of the American people. This, as well as today's citizens being able to be politically knowledgable and faithless electors, has caused debate over whether there should still be an electoral college. However, today's voter turnout and political efficacy are both low, so there is still some reason to keep the electoral college. Anyways, I hope that was helpful!
It can be argued that the electoral collage is not the best method due to the more modern we get, based on a system set up with the Constitution back in the 18th century. However, until the day the government decides to create a new system, it is the best we have.
Shays' Rebellion led some to the believe that the U.S. Constitution should create a more powerful federal government. The rebellion was led in part by Daniel Shays.
The Constitution has the laws and rules so yes it was very necessary to create the constitution.
So that no portion of government could become to powerful and overthrow other portions of the government and to guard against any one branch becoming too powerful, the Constitution provides a system of checks and balances.