Each state has a number of electoral votes (electors) equal to the number of Senators and Representatives that particular state is entitled to have in Congress. If a state is entitled to have 10 Representatives and 2 Senators, it gets 12 electoral votes. See Article 2, Section 2 of the US Constitution.
A state's electoral votes are determined by the amount of their Senators and Representatives.
electoral vote is the population of the state and and the amount of citizen that live state and popular votes is the amount of citizen that vote for a presidential election
Population of each state determines electoral vote.
How many rich white people they have
Each state is allowed a specific amount of electoral votes. The amount of electoral votes provided to the state can be determined by adding the amount of congressmen with the amount of senators the state has.
eleven.
The amount of electoral votes a candidate will get in Virginia is decided by a primary ballot. Virginia is not a caucus state.
Every vote counts equally. The popular vote determines which slate of electors will be allowed to cast the electoral votes for that state.
Each state has electoral votes equal to the total of the 2 representative the state has in the U.S. Senate plus the number of representative the state has in the U.S. House of Representatives. The District of Columbia gets 3 electoral votes. Therefore, the total number of electoral votes is 538 - 100 (senators) + 435 (representatives) +3 (for DC).
Add the amount of representatives the state has and 2 senators. Ex. Illinois -> 19 reps. + 2 senators = 21 electoral votes
Pennsylvania currently has more electoral votes with 20 electoral votes to Kansas' 6 electoral votes.
No, every state has at least three electoral votes