California, Texas, New York, Florida, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Georgia, New Jersey, and North Carolina The total electoral votes from these states for the 2001-2010 census equals 270, the number needed to win the presidency.
270 electoral votes are needed to win the presidency.
Any combination whose electoral votes total at least 270 will win the election. This can done by winning just the eleven largest states.
The number of electors required to win the presidency in the United States is 270 (as of 2014). The candidate has to receive the absolute majority of the votes.
Yes, The large states California, Texas, New York, Florida, Pennsylvania, and Illinois have a combined total of 189 electorial votes. The rest of the states has a total of 349 electorial votes, and so yes, you can win the rest of the states and win the election.
Just winning the top 11 states is by itself all that is needed to win. If the candidate wins some other states, then he can lose whatever combination of top states that total to the same number of votes as the smaller states that he wins. I do not understand what you mean by "4 different combinations". Winning any one of the top states is enough if he can win all of others plus DC.
Bill Clinton won the presidency in 1992. He served as the 42nd President of the United States from 1993 to 2001.
The United States requires 270 electoral votes for a candidate to win the presidency. Since there are a total of 538 votes available, a candidate can lose with 268 votes.
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The president of the United States is the president in all 50 states including Indiana. 270 electoral votes in the Electoral College are needed to win the U.S. presidency.
270 is the answer.
Mitt Romney
Abraham Lincoln did not win any slave states in the 1860 presidential election. He secured the presidency primarily through victories in free states, receiving no electoral votes from the Southern slave states. His election was a significant factor in the secession of several Southern states and the onset of the Civil War.