all U.S. presidential and vice presidential elections
No the next president is decided by the amount of electoral votes the candidate gets. They need to have so many electoral votes to win the elections.
The electoral college has decided the outcome of several presidential elections in US history. Some notable examples include the elections of 1824, 1876, 1888, 2000, and 2016. In these cases, the candidate who won the majority of the electoral college votes became the president, despite not winning the popular vote.
Since the establishment of the Electoral College in 1789, there have been a total of 19 elections decided by the House of Representatives. This occurs when no presidential candidate receives a majority of the electoral votes, leading the House to select the president from the top three candidates. The most recent instance was in the election of 1824.
The Electoral College.
Because the Electoral College decided to.
If the electoral college is not able to elect a President, the election goes to the House of Representatives.
electoral college
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A vote in the House of Representatives
Political parties have most dramatically reshaped the electoral college from its intended purpose. A result of party practices were the use of the electoral college as a "rubber stamp" for the popular vote.
The electoral college was set up to provide a balance between population-based and state-based voting. Remember the United State was founded as a Union of States. Without a electoral system the elections would have and still would be easily decided by the most populous states. The electoral system was a compromise. The above answer presupposes that a simple popular vote would be inadequate to elect the president. The above answer assumes that population-based voting would somehow result it unfair elections. REMEMBER, the number of electoral college representatives per state increases as a state's population increases. Thus, the most populous states often DO decide presidential elections. And there is nothing wrong with that. REMEMBER, the United States is a democratic republic. The electoral college was not created as a compromise in the same way that Congress (population-based) and the Senate (state-based) were created by compromise to compliment each other. The very fact that members of the electoral college are not statutorily required to vote for the candidate that took their state is strong evidence that the electoral college exists to prevent the election of a populist president. The electoral college was developed because the founders of the nation did not trust the people fully to directly elect their leaders. Some people (for example, Alexander Hamilton) did not have much faith in the common citizen. The overall opinion was that national leaders should be elected by educated, respected people who were selected by each state.
The president of the United States is elected to office by the electoral college as opposed to popular vote. Any candidate who wins the presidency has to have a majority of at least 270 electoral votes. If no candidate receives a majority, the election will need to be decided via a procedure outlined in the Twelfth Amendment of the Constitution.