The electoral college elects the President and the Vice President. The members of the electoral college are called electors and each elector casts one electoral vote for president and one vote for vice-president. There are 538 electors. Each state gets a number of electors equal to the total number of senators and representatives it has. Washington D.C. gets three even though it is not a state.
Each political party chooses the people it wants to serve as electors if it wins that state. On election day, although the names of the presidential candidates appear on the ballots, people are actually voting to choose electors who are pledged to vote for that candidate.
In December, after the popular election, the electors meet in their respective state capitals and cast their ballots for president and vice president. Theoretically, except in a few states, they can actually vote for anybody they want to but of course in practice they almost always vote for whomever they were pledged to support. The person who gets a majority (over half) of the electoral votes becomes president. If no one gets a majority, the House of Representatives chooses the President from among the top three vote-getters.
The President and Vice President of the United States are elected indirectly through the Electoral College. The voters in each state vote for a group of appointed electors who then cast their votes for the candidates based on the popular vote in their respective states.
Electoral votes in the U.S. Electoral College determine the President of the United States.
Congressmen are elected by direct ballot in their district. The President is elected indirectly by electors which each state chooses.
The President of the U.S.A is elected through indirect voting. U.S. citizens cast personal ballots for members of the U.S. Electoral College. The Electoral College directly elects the President.
In the United States, Vice Presidents are indirectly elected through the Electoral College. This college is composed of electors that select the President and Vice President. Ballots are cast for the electors by voters in each state and the District of Columbia.
The President is elected by the members of an electoral college consisting of the elected members of both the Houses of Parliament and the elected members of the Legislative Assemblies of States and the Union Territories of Delhi and Pondicherry.
The electoral college serves only one purpose and that is to elect the president and vice president every four years. The president is, of course, the head of the executive branch of the US government.
Since 1832 the president has been elected by citizens through the electoral college.
The only branch directly elected by the people is the house of Representatives. Judges are appointed and the president is elected through electoral college
The president gets elected by Electoral College. The Supreme Court justices get chosen by the president, and have to approved of by Congress. The House of Representative and Senate members are elected through direct elections.
The plan that included what came to be known as the Electoral College was the Great Compromise, reached during the Constitutional Convention of 1787. This compromise established a bicameral legislature and addressed the issue of how to elect the President. The Electoral College was created as a method for electing the President indirectly through a body of electors chosen by the states, balancing the influence of populous and less populous states in the electoral process.
They are elected through a well-organised electoral system of the democratic country.