the electoral college works like this the convention delegates settled on a system in which each state legislature would choose a number of electors. The electoral college would select the president and vice president.
You ask yourself if it works and makes sense for you.
no itz NT cuz itz government keep changing the way it works n NT stayin da same.
States are given electoral votes equivalent to their populations. During the Presidential elections, the candidate with the most votes takes all the votes assigned to that state. For example, winner takes all. The purpose of this formula is to insure that rural or lightly populated areas of the nation are still afforded some representation and consideration by candidates and politicians. If the electoral college were not in place and the President was elected by a simple majority then candidates would completely disregard over 75% of the nation that is sparsely populated. For example, they would only campaign in the densely populated urban areas of the coasts and major cities. This would result in the disenfranchisement of a great number of middle class, midwestern and southern citizens and probably the dissolution of the union or worse. In their ulimate wisdom, our founding fathers foresaw this eventuality and created the electoral college that forced candidates to campaign across the entire nation.
howit works is the smaller states wanted equal number of Representatives for each state.
The Electoral college gives the same number of votes to all of the states (NovaNET)----the electoral college gives the same number of votes to all of the states (novanet)----
the electoral college works like this the convention delegates settled on a system in which each state legislature would choose a number of electors. The electoral college would select the president and vice president.
His promise of tax cuts for low-income workers appealed to the electorate.
I believe you may be thinking of the commutative property. If so, it's a property of a binary operator (one that takes 2 arguments, like addition) that means changing the order of the arguments doesn't change the outcome. For example, addition is commutative: 1 + 3 = 4 and 3 + 1 = 4. This works regardless of the arguments. Subtraction, on the other hand, is NOT commutative: 1 - 3 = -2 and 3 - 1 = 2. In some cases (when the arguments are both the same) changing the order wouldn't matter, but the commutative property means that it works for any arguments, so subtraction doesn't have it.
The electoral college is the ultimate form of election. People vote for electors, who then distribute themselves to the various states at an allotment ratio based on the population of people that bothered to vote in the previous election. They then poll the residents and politicians of that state and, once they've verified the polling results, go to Washington DC to consider voting for the candidates that the state they were assigned to voted for. After meeting with high ranking government officials for a last round of debate and campaigning, the college retreats to a room in the Capitol building where they lock themselves in and don't come out until they are done. They vote in secret and burn white smoke atop the Capitol dome as a signal once they have agreed on the next president of the United States.
the national bonus plan would keep and electoral vate
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Some reasons why it is considered beneficial: It contributes to the cohesiveness of the country by requiring a distribution of popular support to be elected president. It enhances the status of minority interests. It contributes to the political stability of the nation by encouraging a two-party system. It maintains a federal system of government and representation. However, one of the college's initial benefits has been lost through the expansion and concentration of the US population (and of the elector distribution): it no longer affords an advantage to smaller states, which are marginalized because they cannot influence the outcome of the election. Additionally, while a two-party system benefits from the electoral college, the country as a whole does not directly benefit from the two-party system. Some political party platforms seem designed more to court certain voters than to properly run the country.
You ask yourself if it works and makes sense for you.
yes in fact the college my mom works at does majors in it