Electoral College

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Transcript of Electoral College

Historical Background

The framers of the Constitution disagreed on how to elect a president—congressional selection or direct popular election.

The electoral college was a compromise, combining features of both approaches.

State Electoral VotesEach state is entitled to as many

electoral votes as the sum of its representation in the U.S. House and SenateTexas: 32 House members plus 2 senators = 34 electoral votesArkansas: 4 House members plus 2 senators = 6 electoral votesTotal: 435 House members plus 100 senators plus 3 electors for the District of Columbia = 538 electoral votes

Selection of ElectorsEach state determines the manner of

selectionAll but two states use a winner-take-all

statewide election systemIf Candidate A gets the most votes in a

state, Candidate A gets the whole slate of electors.

Maine and Nebraska award electors based on the statewide vote and the vote in each of the state’s congressional districts.

The Real Election

In December, the electors gather in their respective state capitols to cast ballots for president and vice president.

In January, Congress convenes, opens the ballots received from each state, and announces the official outcome.

What if no one receives a majority?

To win, a candidate needs a majority, that is, 270 electoral votes.

If no candidate has a majority, the House selects the president from among the three presidential candidates with the most electoral votes.

Each state delegation has one vote. This last happened in 1824 when Congress

chose John Quincy Adams over Andrew Jackson and William Crawford.

The Senate selects the vice president from the top two vice-presidential candidates.

Popular Vote vs. the Electoral Vote

In a close race, the popular vote winner may not win the electoral college.

One candidate may win states by lopsided margins while the other wins states by narrow margins.

Electoral vote winners who lost the popular vote

Bush over Gore in 2000Benjamin Harrison over Grover

Cleveland in 1888Rutherford B. Hayes over Samuel

Tilden in 1876

The 2000 Election

The Popular VoteAl Gore 50,996,039George W. Bush

50,456,141

The Electoral VoteGeorge W. Bush 271Al Gore 267

Criticisms of the Electoral College

The popular vote winner may lose the presidency.

Electors may vote for persons other than their party’s presidential and vice presidential candidates.

If no candidate receives a majority, Congress will pick the president and vice president.

Review Question

North Carolina has 13 U.S. representatives. How many electoral votes does the state have?

Answer

North Carolina has 15 electoral votes. The formula is the number of U.S. senators, which is two for each state, plus the number of U.S. representatives. Two plus 13 equals 15.

Review Question

Does it matter whether a candidate carries a state by a few votes or a lot of votes?

Answer

No. A candidate receives all of a state’s electoral votes whether the candidate carries the state by one vote or a million votes. In every state except Nebraska and Maine, the race is winner take all.

Discussion Question

How does the electoral college impact candidate strategy in presidential election campaigns?

Discussion Question

Do you favor or oppose replacing the electoral college with a different system for selecting a president? If you support reform, what sort of system would you prefer?