In the 52 U.S. presidential elections that were after the vice presidential election was separated from the presidential election and in which the electoral college elected the president, the winning candidate received votes from an average of 71.9% of appointed electors. Multiplying that by the 538 electors we have had per election for the past 50 years gives 387 votes. The minimum is the lowest whole number that is greater than 50%. For the past 50 years, that minimum has been 270.
Electors are elected by popular vote but the president is elected by the electoral college. A president candidate can win the popular vote and still not win if he doesn't win the electoral college.
seven
The electoral college elected Washington as they do all president of the US.
The candidate who receives the most electoral votes wins the presidency. It is possible to lose the popular vote but win the electoral vote to be elected president.
is elected directly by the people. nope ! elected by representatives pledged to a candidate for President of U.S. in the Electoral College
If there is not a majority for one candidate in the Electoral College. See the Twelfth Amendment.
A Presidential candidate must obtain 270 Electoral Votes (the vote cast in the electoral college of the U.S. by the representatives of each state in a presidential election) to be elected President of the United States.
There are 538 electoral votes. The presedential candidate needs to win 270 in order to be elected president.
In the United States, the president and vice president are elected through the Electoral College system. Voters in each state cast their ballots for a slate of electors pledged to vote for their chosen candidate. These electors then formally cast their votes for the president and vice president, making the Electoral College the mechanism through which these officials are elected. The most recent president elected directly through the Electoral College was Joe Biden in the 2020 election.
currently (since 1964), 270
No, the president is not elected solely on electoral votes. Electoral votes play a significant role in determining the outcome of the presidential election in the United States. However, the president is ultimately elected by the Electoral College, which is made up of electors who are chosen based on the popular vote in each state.
False!!!!Per the US Constitution, the Electoral College actually is the body that elects the President. There have been some elections in the past where the popular vote was won by a candidate, but the Electoral College elected another candidate.