fbpx
Wikipedia

United States Electoral College

In the United States, the Electoral College is the group of presidential electors required by the Constitution to form every four years for the sole purpose of voting for the president and vice president. Each state appoints electors under the methods described by its legislature, equal in number to its congressional delegation (representatives and senators). The federal District of Columbia also has 3 electors under an amendment adopted in 1961. Federal office holders, including senators and representatives, cannot be electors. Of the current 538 electors, a simple majority of 270 or more electoral votes is required to elect the president and vice president. If no candidate achieves a majority there, a contingent election is held by the House of Representatives to elect the president and by the Senate to elect the vice president.

Electoral votes, out of 538, allocated to each state and the District of Columbia for presidential elections to be held in 2024 and 2028 based on the 2020 census; every jurisdiction is entitled to at least 3.
In the 2020 presidential election (held using 2010 census data) Joe Biden received 306 () and Donald Trump 232 () of the total 538 electoral votes.
In Maine (upper-right) and Nebraska (center), the small circled numbers indicate congressional districts. These are the only 2 states to use a district method for some of their allocated electors, instead of a complete winner-takes-all party block voting.

The states and the District of Columbia hold a statewide or districtwide popular vote on Election Day in November to choose electors based upon how they have pledged to vote for president and vice president, with some state laws prohibiting faithless electors. All states except Maine and Nebraska use a party block voting, or general ticket method, to choose their electors, meaning all their electors go to one winning ticket. Maine and Nebraska choose one elector per congressional district and 2 electors for the ticket with the highest statewide vote. The electors meet and vote in December, and the inauguration of the president and vice president take place in January.

The merits of the electoral college system is a matter of ongoing debate in the United States, which came closest to switching to direct voting for president in 1969–70.[1] Supporters argue that it requires presidential candidates to have broad appeal across the country to win, while critics argue that it is not representative of the popular will of the nation.[a] Winner-take-all systems, especially with representation not proportional to population, do not align with the principle of "one person, one vote".[b][5] Critics object to the inequity that, due to the distribution of electors, individual citizens in states with smaller populations have more voting power than those in larger states.[6] This is because the number of electors each state appoints is equal to the size of its congressional delegation, each state is entitled to at least 3 regardless of its population, and the apportionment of the statutorily fixed number of the rest is only roughly proportional. This allocation has contributed to runners-up of the nationwide popular vote being elected president in 1824, 1876, 1888, 2000, and 2016.[7][8] In addition, faithless electors may not vote in accord with their pledge.[9][c] Further objection is that candidates focus their campaigns on swing states.[11] Electoral colleges have been abandoned around the world in favor of direct elections for an executive president.[12][13]

Procedure edit

 
The New York electoral college delegation voting for Benjamin Harrison for president. In the 1888 election, Harrison became one of the five presidents elected without winning the popular vote.

Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the United States Constitution directs each state to appoint a quantity of electors equal to that state's congressional delegation (the number of members of the House of Representatives plus two Senators). The same clause empowers each state legislature to determine the manner by which that state's electors are chosen but prohibits federal office holders from being named electors. Following the national presidential election day on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November,[14] each state, and the federal district, selects its electors according to its laws. After a popular election, the states identify and record their appointed electors in a Certificate of Ascertainment, and those appointed electors then meet in their respective jurisdictions and produce a Certificate of Vote for their candidate; both certificates are then sent to Congress to be opened and counted.[15]

In 48 of the 50 states, state laws mandate that the winner of the plurality of the statewide popular vote receive all of that state's electoral votes.[16] In Maine and Nebraska, two electoral votes are assigned in this manner, while the remaining electoral votes are allocated based on the plurality of votes in each of their congressional districts.[17] The federal district, Washington, D.C., allocates its 3 electoral votes to the winner of its single district election. States generally require electors to pledge to vote for that state's winning ticket; to prevent electors from being faithless electors, most states have adopted various laws to enforce the electors' pledge.[18]

The electors of each state meet in their respective state capital on the first Monday after the second Wednesday of December (between December 13 and 19) to cast their votes.[16] The results are sent to and counted by the Congress, where they are tabulated in the first week of January before a joint meeting of the Senate and the House of Representatives, presided over by the current vice president, as president of the Senate.[16][19] Should a majority of votes not be cast for a candidate, a contingent election takes place: the House holds a presidential election session, where one vote is cast by each of the fifty states; the Senate is responsible for electing the vice president, with each senator having one vote.[20] The elected president and vice president are inaugurated on January 20.

Since 1964, there have been 538 electors. States select 535 of the electors, this number matches the aggregate total of their congressional delegations.[21][22][23] The additional three electors come from the Twenty-third Amendment, ratified in 1961, providing that the district established pursuant to Article I, Section 8, Clause 17 as the seat of the federal government (namely, Washington, D.C.) is entitled to the same number of electors as the least populous state.[24] In practice, that results in Washington D.C. being entitled to 3 electors.[25][26]

Background edit

The Electoral College was settled-on as the means of electing president towards the end of the Constitutional Convention due to pressure from slave states wanting to increase their voting power (since they could count slaves as 3/5 of a person when allocating electors) and by small states who increased their power due to the minimum of 3 electors per state.[27] The compromise was reached after other proposals, including to get a direct election for president (as proposed by Hamilton among others), failed to get traction among slave states.[27]

The Constitutional Convention in 1787 used the Virginia Plan as the basis for discussions, as the Virginia proposal was the first. The Virginia Plan called for Congress to elect the president.[28][non-primary source needed] Delegates from a majority of states agreed to this mode of election. After being debated, however, delegates came to oppose nomination by Congress for the reason that it could violate the separation of powers. James Wilson then made a motion for electors for the purpose of choosing the president.[29][non-primary source needed]

Later in the convention, a committee formed to work out various details including the mode of election of the president, including final recommendations for the electors, a group of people apportioned among the states in the same numbers as their representatives in Congress (the formula for which had been resolved in lengthy debates resulting in the Connecticut Compromise and Three-Fifths Compromise), but chosen by each state "in such manner as its Legislature may direct". Committee member Gouverneur Morris explained the reasons for the change; among others, there were fears of "intrigue" if the president were chosen by a small group of men who met together regularly, as well as concerns for the independence of the president if he were elected by Congress.[30][non-primary source needed]

However, once the Electoral College had been decided on, several delegates (Mason, Butler, Morris, Wilson, and Madison) openly recognized its ability to protect the election process from cabal, corruption, intrigue, and faction. Some delegates, including James Wilson and James Madison, preferred popular election of the executive.[31][32][non-primary source needed] Madison acknowledged that while a popular vote would be ideal, it would be difficult to get consensus on the proposal given the prevalence of slavery in the South:

There was one difficulty, however of a serious nature attending an immediate choice by the people. The right of suffrage was much more diffusive in the Northern than the Southern States; and the latter could have no influence in the election on the score of Negroes. The substitution of electors obviated this difficulty and seemed on the whole to be liable to the fewest objections.[33]

The Convention approved the committee's Electoral College proposal, with minor modifications, on September 6, 1787.[34][non-primary source needed] Delegates from states with smaller populations or limited land area, such as Connecticut, New Jersey, and Maryland, generally favored the Electoral College with some consideration for states.[35][non-primary source needed] At the compromise providing for a runoff among the top five candidates, the small states supposed that the House of Representatives, with each state delegation casting one vote, would decide most elections.[36]

In The Federalist Papers, James Madison explained his views on the selection of the president and the Constitution. In Federalist No. 39, Madison argued that the Constitution was designed to be a mixture of state-based and population-based government. Congress would have two houses: the state-based Senate and the population-based House of Representatives. Meanwhile, the president would be elected by a mixture of the two modes.[37][non-primary source needed]

Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No. 68, published on March 12, 1788, laid out what he believed were the key advantages to the Electoral College. The electors come directly from the people and them alone, for that purpose only, and for that time only. This avoided a party-run legislature or a permanent body that could be influenced by foreign interests before each election.[38][non-primary source needed] Hamilton explained that the election was to take place among all the states, so no corruption in any state could taint "the great body of the people" in their selection. The choice was to be made by a majority of the Electoral College, as majority rule is critical to the principles of republican government. Hamilton argued that electors meeting in the state capitals were able to have information unavailable to the general public, in a time before telecommunications. Hamilton also argued that since no federal officeholder could be an elector, none of the electors would be beholden to any presidential candidate.[38][non-primary source needed]

Another consideration was that the decision would be made without "tumult and disorder", as it would be a broad-based one made simultaneously in various locales where the decision makers could deliberate reasonably, not in one place where decision makers could be threatened or intimidated. If the Electoral College did not achieve a decisive majority, then the House of Representatives was to choose the president from among the top five candidates,[39][citation needed] ensuring selection of a presiding officer administering the laws would have both ability and good character. Hamilton was also concerned about somebody unqualified but with a talent for "low intrigue, and the little arts of popularity" attaining high office.[38][non-primary source needed]

Additionally, in the Federalist No. 10, James Madison argued against "an interested and overbearing majority" and the "mischiefs of faction" in an electoral system. He defined a faction as "a number of citizens whether amounting to a majority or minority of the whole, who are united and actuated by some common impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community." A republican government (i.e., representative democracy, as opposed to direct democracy) combined with the principles of federalism (with distribution of voter rights and separation of government powers), would countervail against factions. Madison further postulated in the Federalist No. 10 that the greater the population and expanse of the Republic, the more difficulty factions would face in organizing due to such issues as sectionalism.[40][non-primary source needed]

Although the United States Constitution refers to "Electors" and "electors", neither the phrase "Electoral College" nor any other name is used to describe the electors collectively. It was not until the early 19th century that the name "Electoral College" came into general usage as the collective designation for the electors selected to cast votes for president and vice president. The phrase was first written into federal law in 1845, and today the term appears in 3 U.S.C. § 4, in the section heading and in the text as "college of electors".[41][non-primary source needed]

History edit

Original plan edit

Article II, Section 1, Clause 3 of the Constitution provided the original plan by which the electors voted for president. Under the original plan, each elector cast two votes for president; electors did not vote for vice president. Whoever received a majority of votes from the electors would become president, with the person receiving the second most votes becoming vice president.

According to Stanley Chang, the original plan of the Electoral College was based upon several assumptions and anticipations of the Framers of the Constitution:[42]

  1. Choice of the president should reflect the "sense of the people" at a particular time, not the dictates of a faction in a "pre-established body" such as Congress or the State legislatures, and independent of the influence of "foreign powers".[43]
  2. The choice would be made decisively with a "full and fair expression of the public will" but also maintaining "as little opportunity as possible to tumult and disorder".[44]
  3. Individual electors would be elected by citizens on a district-by-district basis. Voting for president would include the widest electorate allowed in each state.[45]
  4. Each presidential elector would exercise independent judgment when voting, deliberating with the most complete information available in a system that over time, tended to bring about a good administration of the laws passed by Congress.[43]
  5. Candidates would not pair together on the same ticket with assumed placements toward each office of president and vice president.

Election expert, William C. Kimberling, reflected on the original intent as follows:

"The function of the College of Electors in choosing the president can be likened to that in the Roman Catholic Church of the College of Cardinals selecting the Pope. The original idea was for the most knowledgeable and informed individuals from each State to select the president based solely on merit and without regard to State of origin or political party."[46]

According to Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, in a dissenting opinion, the original intention of the framers was that the electors would not feel bound to support any particular candidate, but would vote their conscience, free of external pressure.

"No one faithful to our history can deny that the plan originally contemplated, what is implicit in its text, that electors would be free agents, to exercise an independent and nonpartisan judgment as to the men best qualified for the Nation's highest offices."[47]

In support for his view, Justice Jackson cited Federalist No. 68:

'It was desirable that the sense of the people should operate in the choice of the person to whom so important a trust was to be confided. This end will be answered by committing the right of making it, not to any pre-established body, but to men chosen by the people for the special purpose, and at the particular conjuncture... It was equally desirable, that the immediate election should be made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station, and acting under circumstances favorable to deliberation, and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice. A small number of persons, selected by their fellow citizens from the general mass, will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated investigations.'

Dr. Philip J. VanFossen of Purdue University explains that the original purpose of the electors was not to reflect the will of the citizens, but rather to "serve as a check on a public who might be easily misled."[48]

Dr. Randall Calvert, the Eagleton Professor of Public Affairs and Political Science at Washington University in St. Louis, stated, "At the framing the more important consideration was that electors, expected to be more knowledgeable and responsible, would actually do the choosing."[49][better source needed]

Breakdown and revision edit

In spite of Hamilton's assertion that electors were to be chosen by mass election, initially, state legislatures chose the electors in most of the states.[50][non-primary source needed] States progressively changed to selection by popular election. In 1824, there were six states in which electors were still legislatively appointed. By 1832, only South Carolina had not transitioned. Since 1864, electors in every state have been chosen based on a popular election held on Election Day.[21] The popular election for electors means the president and vice president are in effect chosen through indirect election by the citizens.[51]

The emergence of parties and campaigns edit

The framers of the Constitution did not anticipate political parties.[52] Indeed George Washington's Farewell Address in 1796 included an urgent appeal to avert such parties. Neither did the framers anticipate candidates "running" for president. Within just a few years of the ratification of the Constitution, however, both phenomena became permanent features of the political landscape of the United States.[citation needed]

The emergence of political parties and nationally coordinated election campaigns soon complicated matters in the elections of 1796 and 1800. In 1796, Federalist Party candidate John Adams won the presidential election. Finishing in second place was Democratic-Republican Party candidate Thomas Jefferson, the Federalists' opponent, who became the vice president. This resulted in the president and vice president being of different political parties.[citation needed]

In 1800, the Democratic-Republican Party again nominated Jefferson for president and also again nominated Aaron Burr for vice president. After the electors voted, Jefferson and Burr were tied with one another with 73 electoral votes each. Since ballots did not distinguish between votes for president and votes for vice president, every ballot cast for Burr technically counted as a vote for him to become president, despite Jefferson clearly being his party's first choice. Lacking a clear winner by constitutional standards, the election had to be decided by the House of Representatives pursuant to the Constitution's contingency election provision.[citation needed]

Having already lost the presidential contest, Federalist Party representatives in the lame duck House session seized upon the opportunity to embarrass their opposition by attempting to elect Burr over Jefferson. The House deadlocked for 35 ballots as neither candidate received the necessary majority vote of the state delegations in the House (The votes of nine states were needed for a conclusive election.). On the 36th ballot, Delaware's lone Representative, James A. Bayard, made it known that he intended to break the impasse for fear that failure to do so could endanger the future of the Union. Bayard and other Federalists from South Carolina, Maryland, and Vermont abstained, breaking the deadlock and giving Jefferson a majority.[53]

Responding to the problems from those elections, Congress proposed on December 9, 1803, and three-fourths of the states ratified by June 15, 1804, the Twelfth Amendment. Starting with the 1804 election, the amendment requires electors to cast separate ballots for president and vice president, replacing the system outlined in Article II, Section 1, Clause 3.[citation needed]

Evolution from unpledged to pledged electors edit

Some Founding Fathers hoped that each elector would be elected by the citizens of a district, and that elector was to be free to analyze and deliberate regarding who is best suited to be president.[citation needed]

In Federalist No. 68 Alexander Hamilton described the Founding Fathers' view of how electors would be chosen:

A small number of persons, selected by their fellow-citizens from the general mass, will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated [tasks]... They [the framers of the constitution] have not made the appointment of the President to depend on any preexisting bodies of men [i.e. Electors pledged to vote one way or another], who might be tampered with beforehand to prostitute their votes [i.e., to be told how to vote]; but they have referred it in the first instance to an immediate act of the people of America, to be exerted in the choice of persons [Electors to the Electoral College] for the temporary and sole purpose of making the appointment. And they have EXCLUDED from eligibility to this trust, all those who from situation might be suspected of too great devotion to the President in office [in other words, no one can be an Elector who is prejudiced toward the president]... Thus without corrupting the body of the people, the immediate agents in the election will at least enter upon the task free from any sinister bias [Electors must not come to the Electoral College with bias]. Their transient existence, and their detached [unbiased] situation, already taken notice of, afford a satisfactory prospect of their continuing so, to the conclusion of it."[54]

However, when electors were pledged to vote for a specific candidate, the slate of electors chosen by the state were no longer free agents, independent thinkers, or deliberative representatives. They became, as Justice Robert H. Jackson wrote, "voluntary party lackeys and intellectual non-entities."[55] According to Hamilton, writing in 1788, the selection of the president should be "made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station [of president]."[54] Hamilton stated that the electors were to analyze the list of potential presidents and select the best one. He also used the term "deliberate." In a 2020 opinion of the U.S. Supreme Court, the Court additionally cited John Jay's view that the electors' choices would reflect “discretion and discernment.”[56] Reflecting on this original intention, a U.S. Senate report in 1826 critiqued the evolution of the system:

It was the intention of the Constitution that these electors should be an independent body of men, chosen by the people from among themselves, on account of their superior discernment, virtue, and information; and that this select body should be left to make the election according to their own will, without the slightest control from the body of the people. That this intention has failed of its object in every election, is a fact of such universal notoriety that no one can dispute it. Electors, therefore, have not answered the design of their institution. They are not the independent body and superior characters which they were intended to be. They are not left to the exercise of their own judgment: on the contrary, they give their vote, or bind themselves to give it, according to the will of their constituents. They have degenerated into mere agents, in a case which requires no agency, and where the agent must be useless...[57]

In 1833, Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story detailed how badly from the framers' intention the Electoral Process had been "subverted":

"In no respect have the views of the framers of the constitution been so completely frustrated as relates to the independence of the electors in the electoral colleges. It is notorious, that the electors are now chosen wholly with reference to particular candidates, and are silently pledged to vote for them. Nay, upon some occasions the electors publicly pledge themselves to vote for a particular person; and thus, in effect, the whole foundation of the system, so elaborately constructed, is subverted.[58][non-primary source needed]

Story observed that if an elector does what the framers of the Constitution expected him to do, he would be considered immoral:

So, that nothing is left to the electors after their choice, but to register votes, which are already pledged; and an exercise of an independent judgment would be treated, as a political usurpation, dishonorable to the individual, and a fraud upon his constituents.[58]

Evolution to the general ticket edit

Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the Constitution states:

Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative, or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States, shall be appointed an Elector.

According to Hamilton and Madison, they intended that this would take place district by district.[59][60][non-primary source needed] The district plan was last carried out in Michigan in 1892.[61][non-primary source needed] For example, in Massachusetts in 1820, the rule stated "the people shall vote by ballot, on which shall be designated who is voted for as an Elector for the district."[62][non-primary source needed] In other words, the name of a candidate for president was not on the ballot. Instead, citizens voted for their local elector.

Some state leaders began to adopt the strategy that the favorite partisan presidential candidate among the people in their state would have a much better chance if all of the electors selected by their state were sure to vote the same way—a "general ticket" of electors pledged to a party candidate.[63] Once one state took that strategy, the others felt compelled to follow suit in order to compete for the strongest influence on the election.[63]

When James Madison and Alexander Hamilton, two of the most important architects of the Electoral College, saw this strategy being taken by some states, they protested strongly.[59][60][non-primary source needed] Madison said that when the Constitution was written, all of its authors assumed individual electors would be elected in their districts, and it was inconceivable that a "general ticket" of electors dictated by a state would supplant the concept. Madison wrote to George Hay:

The district mode was mostly, if not exclusively in view when the Constitution was framed and adopted; & was exchanged for the general ticket [many years later].[64]

Each state government was free to have its own plan for selecting its electors, and the Constitution does not explicitly require states to popularly elect their electors. However, Federalist No. 68, insofar as it reflects the intent of the founders, states that Electors will be "selected by their fellow-citizens from the general mass," and with regard to choosing Electors, "they [the framers] have referred it in the first instance to an immediate act of the people of America." Several methods for selecting electors are described below.

Madison and Hamilton were so upset by the trend to "general tickets" that they advocated a constitutional amendment to prevent anything other than the district plan. Hamilton drafted an amendment to the Constitution mandating the district plan for selecting electors.[65][non-primary source needed] However, Hamilton's untimely death in a duel with Aaron Burr in 1804 prevented him from advancing his proposed reforms any further. "[T]he election of Presidential Electors by districts, is an amendment very proper to be brought forward," Madison told George Hay in 1823.[64][non-primary source needed] Madison also drafted a constitutional amendment that would insure the original "district" plan of the framers.[66][non-primary source needed] Jefferson agreed with Hamilton and Madison saying, "all agree that an election by districts would be the best."[61][non-primary source needed] Jefferson explained to Madison's correspondent why he was doubtful of the amendment being ratified: "the states are now so numerous that I despair of ever seeing another amendment of the constitution."[67][non-primary source needed]

Evolution of selection plans edit

In 1789, the at-large popular vote, the winner-take-all method, began with Pennsylvania and Maryland. Massachusetts, Virginia and Delaware used a district plan by popular vote, and state legislatures chose in the five other states participating in the election (Connecticut, Georgia, New Hampshire, New Jersey, and South Carolina).[68][failed verification] New York, North Carolina and Rhode Island did not participate in the election. New York's legislature deadlocked and abstained; North Carolina and Rhode Island had not yet ratified the Constitution.[69]

By 1800, Virginia and Rhode Island voted at large; Kentucky, Maryland, and North Carolina voted popularly by district; and eleven states voted by state legislature. Beginning in 1804 there was a definite trend towards the winner-take-all system for statewide popular vote.[70][non-primary source needed]

By 1832, only South Carolina legislatively chose its electors, and it abandoned the method after 1860.[70][non-primary source needed] Maryland was the only state using a district plan, and from 1836 district plans fell out of use until the 20th century, though Michigan used a district plan for 1892 only. States using popular vote by district have included ten states from all regions of the country.[71][non-primary source needed]

Since 1836, statewide winner-take-all popular voting for electors has been the almost universal practice.[72][non-primary source needed] Currently, Maine (since 1972) and Nebraska (since 1996) use a district plan, with two at-large electors assigned to support the winner of the statewide popular vote.[73][non-primary source needed]

Correlation between popular vote and electoral college votes edit

Since the mid-19th century, when all electors have been popularly chosen, the Electoral College has elected the candidate who received the most (though not necessarily a majority) popular votes nationwide, except in four elections: 1876, 1888, 2000, and 2016. In 1824, when there were six states in which electors were legislatively appointed, rather than popularly elected, the true national popular vote is uncertain. The electors in 1824 failed to select a winning candidate, so the matter was decided by the House of Representatives.[74][better source needed]

Three-fifths clause and the role of slavery edit

After the initial estimates agreed to in the original Constitution, Congressional and Electoral College reapportionment was made according to a decennial census to reflect population changes, modified by counting three-fifths of slaves. On this basis after the first census, the Electoral College still gave the free men of slave-owning states (but never slaves) extra power (Electors) based on a count of these disenfranchised people, in the choice of the U.S. president.[75]

At the Constitutional Convention, the college composition, in theory, amounted to 49 votes for northern states (in the process of abolishing slavery) and 42 for slave-holding states (including Delaware). In the event, the first (i.e. 1788) presidential election lacked votes and electors for unratified Rhode Island (3) and North Carolina (7) and for New York (8) which reported too late; the Northern majority was 38 to 35.[76] For the next two decades, the three-fifths clause led to electors of free-soil Northern states numbering 8% and 11% more than Southern states. The latter had, in the compromise, relinquished counting two-fifths of their slaves and, after 1810, were outnumbered by 15.4% to 23.2%.[77]

While House members for Southern states were boosted by an average of 13,[78] a free-soil majority in the college maintained over this early republic and Antebellum period.[79] Scholars further conclude that the three-fifths clause had low impact on sectional proportions and factional strength, until denying the North a pronounced supermajority, as to the Northern, federal initiative to abolish slavery. The seats that the South gained from such "slave bonus" were quite evenly distributed between the parties. In the First Party System (1795–1823), the Jefferson Republicans gained 1.1 percent more adherents from the slave bonus, while the Federalists lost the same proportion. At the Second Party System (1823–1837) the emerging Jacksonians gained just 0.7% more seats, versus the opposition loss of 1.6%.[80]

The three-fifths slave-count rule is associated with three or four outcomes, 1792–1860:

  • The clause, having reduced the South's power, led to John Adams's win in 1796 over Thomas Jefferson.[81]
  • In 1800, historian Garry Wills argues, Jefferson's victory over Adams was due to the slave bonus count in the Electoral College as Adams would have won if citizens' votes were used for each state.[82] However, historian Sean Wilentz points out that Jefferson's purported "slave advantage" ignores an offset by electoral manipulation by anti-Jefferson forces in Pennsylvania. Wilentz concludes that it is a myth to say that the Electoral College was a pro-slavery ploy.[83]
  • In 1824, the presidential selection was passed to the House of Representatives, and John Quincy Adams was chosen over Andrew Jackson, who won fewer citizens' votes. Then Jackson won in 1828, but would have lost if the college were citizen-only apportionment. Scholars conclude that in the 1828 race, Jackson benefited materially from the Three-fifths clause by providing his margin of victory.

The first "Jeffersonian" and "Jacksonian" victories were of great importance as they ushered in sustained party majorities of several Congresses and presidential party eras.[84]

Besides the Constitution prohibiting Congress from regulating foreign or domestic slave trade before 1808 and a duty on states to return escaped "persons held to service",[85] legal scholar Akhil Reed Amar argues that the college was originally advocated by slaveholders as a bulwark to prop up slavery. In the Congressional apportionment provided in the text of the Constitution with its Three-Fifths Compromise estimate, "Virginia emerged as the big winner [with] more than a quarter of the [votes] needed to win an election in the first round [for Washington's first presidential election in 1788]." Following the 1790 United States census, the most populous state was Virginia, with 39.1% slaves, or 292,315 counted three-fifths, to yield a calculated number of 175,389 for congressional apportionment.[86] "The "free" state of Pennsylvania had 10% more free persons than Virginia but got 20% fewer electoral votes."[87] Pennsylvania split eight to seven for Jefferson, favoring Jefferson with a majority of 53% in a state with 0.1% slave population.[88] Historian Eric Foner agrees the Constitution's Three-Fifths Compromise gave protection to slavery.[89]

Supporters of the College have provided many counterarguments to the charges that it defended slavery. Abraham Lincoln, the president who helped abolish slavery, won a College majority in 1860 despite winning 39.8% of citizen's votes.[90] This, however, was a clear plurality of a popular vote divided among four main candidates.

Benner notes that Jefferson's first margin of victory would have been wider had the entire slave population been counted on a per capita basis.[91] He also notes that some of the most vociferous critics of a national popular vote at the constitutional convention were delegates from free states, including Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania, who declared that such a system would lead to a "great evil of cabal and corruption," and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts, who called a national popular vote "radically vicious".[91] Delegates Oliver Ellsworth and Roger Sherman of Connecticut, a state which had adopted a gradual emancipation law three years earlier, also criticized a national popular vote.[91] Of like view was Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, a member of Adams' Federalist Party, presidential candidate in 1800. He hailed from South Carolina and was a slaveholder.[91] In 1824, Andrew Jackson, a slaveholder from Tennessee, was similarly defeated by John Quincy Adams, a strong critic of slavery.[91]

Fourteenth amendment edit

Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a state's representation in the House of Representatives to be reduced if the state denies the right to vote to any male citizen aged 21 or older, unless on the basis of "participation in rebellion, or other crime". The reduction is to be proportionate to such people denied a vote. This amendment refers to "the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States" (among other elections). It is the only part of the Constitution currently alluding to electors being selected by popular vote.

On May 8, 1866, during a debate on the Fourteenth Amendment, Thaddeus Stevens, the leader of the Republicans in the House of Representatives, delivered a speech on the amendment's intent. Regarding Section 2, he said:[92]

The second section I consider the most important in the article. It fixes the basis of representation in Congress. If any State shall exclude any of her adult male citizens from the elective franchise, or abridge that right, she shall forfeit her right to representation in the same proportion. The effect of this provision will be either to compel the States to grant universal suffrage or so shear them of their power as to keep them forever in a hopeless minority in the national Government, both legislative and executive.[93]

Federal law (2 U.S.C. § 6) implements Section 2's mandate.

Meeting of electors edit

 
Cases of certificates of the electoral college votes confirming the results of the 2020 US election, after they had been removed from the House Chambers by congressional staff during the January 6 United States Capitol attack

Article II, Section 1, Clause 4 of the Constitution authorizes Congress to fix the day on which the electors shall vote, which must be the same day throughout the United States. And both Article II, Section 1, Clause 3 and the Twelfth Amendment that replaced it specifies that "the President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted."

In 1887, Congress passed the Electoral Count Act, now codified in Title 3, Chapter 1 of the United States Code, establishing specific procedures for the counting of the electoral votes. The law was passed in response to the disputed 1876 presidential election, in which several states submitted competing slates of electors. Among its provisions, the law established deadlines that the states must meet when selecting their electors, resolving disputes, and when they must cast their electoral votes.[19][94]

Since 1936, the date fixed by Congress for the meeting of the Electoral College is "on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December next following their appointment".[95][non-primary source needed]

Article II, Section 1, Clause 2, disqualifies all elected and appointed federal officials from being electors. The Office of the Federal Register is charged with administering the Electoral College.[96]

After the vote, each state sends to Congress a certified record of their electoral votes, called the Certificate of Vote. These certificates are opened during a joint session of Congress, held on January 6[97][non-primary source needed] unless another date is specified by law, and read aloud by the incumbent vice president, acting in his capacity as president of the Senate. If any person receives an absolute majority of electoral votes, that person is declared the winner.[98][non-primary source needed] If there is a tie, or if no candidate for either or both offices receives an absolute majority, then choice falls to Congress in a procedure known as a contingent election.

Modern mechanics edit

 
After the popular election in November, a state's Certificate of Ascertainment officially announces the state's electors for the Electoral College. The appointed Electoral College members later meet in the state capital in December to cast their votes.

Summary edit

Even though the aggregate national popular vote is calculated by state officials, media organizations, and the Federal Election Commission, the people only indirectly elect the president and vice president. The president and vice president of the United States are elected by the Electoral College, which consists of 538 electors from the fifty states and Washington, D.C. Electors are selected state-by-state, as determined by the laws of each state. Since the 1824 election, the majority of states have chosen their presidential electors based on winner-take-all results in the statewide popular vote on Election Day.[99] As of 2020, Maine and Nebraska are exceptions as both use the congressional district method, Maine since 1972 and in Nebraska since 1996.[100] In most states, the popular vote ballots list the names of the presidential and vice presidential candidates (who run on a ticket). The slate of electors that represent the winning ticket will vote for those two offices. Electors are nominated by the party and, usually, they vote for the ticket to which are promised.[non-primary source needed][101] Many states require an elector to vote for the candidate to which the elector is pledged, but some "faithless electors" have voted for other candidates or refrained from voting. A candidate must receive an absolute majority of electoral votes (currently 270) to win the presidency or the vice presidency. If no candidate receives a majority in the election for president or vice president, the election is determined via a contingency procedure established by the Twelfth Amendment. In such a situation, the House chooses one of the top three presidential electoral vote winners as the president, while the Senate chooses one of the top two vice presidential electoral vote winners as vice president.

Electors edit

Apportionment edit

 
Population per electoral vote for each state and Washington, D.C. (2020 census). A single elector could represent more than 700,000 people or under 200,000.

A state's number of electors equals the number of representatives plus two electors for the senators the state has in the United States Congress.[102][103] Each state is entitled to at least one representative, the remaining number of representatives per state is apportioned based on their respective populations, determined every ten years by the United States census. In summary, 153 electors are divided equally among the states and the District of Columbia (3 each), and the remaining 385 are assigned by an apportionment among states.[104][non-primary source needed]

Under the Twenty-third Amendment, Washington, D.C., is allocated as many electors as it would have if it were a state but no more electors than the least populous state. Because the least populous state (Wyoming, according to the 2020 census) has three electors, D.C. cannot have more than three electors. Even if D.C. were a state, its population would entitle it to only three electors. Based on its population per electoral vote, D.C. has the third highest per capita Electoral College representation, after Wyoming and Vermont.[105][non-primary source needed]

Currently, there are 538 electors, based on 435 representatives, 100 senators from the fifty states and three electors from Washington, D.C. The six states with the most electors are California (54), Texas (40), Florida (30), New York (28), Illinois (19), and Pennsylvania (19). The District of Columbia and the six least populous states—Alaska, Delaware, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming—have three electors each.[106][non-primary source needed]

Nominations edit

The custom of allowing recognized political parties to select a slate of prospective electors developed early. In contemporary practice, each presidential-vice presidential ticket has an associated slate of potential electors. Then on Election Day, the voters select a ticket and thereby select the associated electors.[21]

Candidates for elector are nominated by state chapters of nationally oriented political parties in the months prior to Election Day. In some states, the electors are nominated by voters in primaries the same way other presidential candidates are nominated. In some states, such as Oklahoma, Virginia, and North Carolina, electors are nominated in party conventions. In Pennsylvania, the campaign committee of each candidate names their respective electoral college candidates (an attempt to discourage faithless electors). Varying by state, electors may also be elected by state legislatures or appointed by the parties themselves.[107][unreliable fringe source?]

Selection process edit

Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the Constitution requires each state legislature to determine how electors for the state are to be chosen, but it disqualifies any person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States, from being an elector.[108] Under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment, any person who has sworn an oath to support the United States Constitution in order to hold either a state or federal office, and later rebelled against the United States directly or by giving assistance to those doing so, is disqualified from being an elector. However, Congress may remove this disqualification by a two-thirds vote in each House.

All states currently choose presidential electors by popular vote. As of 2020, eight states[d] name the electors on the ballot. Mostly, the "short ballot" is used; the short ballot displays the names of the candidates for president and vice president, rather than the names of prospective electors.[109] Some states support voting for write-in candidates; those that do may require pre-registration of write-in candidacy, with designation of electors being done at that time.[110][111] Since 1996, all but two states have followed the winner takes all method of allocating electors by which every person named on the slate for the ticket winning the statewide popular vote are named as presidential electors.[112][113] Maine and Nebraska are the only states not using this method.[100] In those states, the winner of the popular vote in each of its congressional districts is awarded one elector, and the winner of the statewide vote is then awarded the state's remaining two electors.[112][114] This method has been used in Maine since 1972 and in Nebraska since 1996. The Supreme Court previously upheld the power for a state to choose electors on the basis of congressional districts, holding that states possess plenary power to decide how electors are appointed in McPherson v. Blacker, 146 U.S. 1 (1892).

The Tuesday following the first Monday in November has been fixed as the day for holding federal elections, called the Election Day.[115] After the election, each state prepares seven Certificates of Ascertainment, each listing the candidates for president and vice president, their pledged electors, and the total votes each candidacy received.[116][non-primary source needed] One certificate is sent, as soon after Election Day as practicable, to the National Archivist in Washington. The Certificates of Ascertainment are mandated to carry the state seal and the signature of the governor (or mayor of D.C.).[117][non-primary source needed]

Meetings edit

 
When the state's electors meet in December, they cast their ballots and record their vote on a Certificate of Vote, which is then sent to the U.S. Congress. (From the election of 1876)
External media
Images
  A 2020 Pennsylvania elector holds a ballot for Joe Biden (Biden's name is handwritten on the blank line). Reuters. December 14, 2020.
  A closeup of the 2020 Georgia Electoral College ballot for Kamala Harris (using a format in which Harris's name is checked on the pre-printed card). The New Yorker. December 18, 2020.
Video
  2020 California State Electoral College meeting, YouTube video. Reuters. December 14, 2020.

The Electoral College never meets as one body. Electors meet in their respective state capitals (electors for the District of Columbia meet within the District) on the same day (set by Congress as the Monday after the second Wednesday in December) at which time they cast their electoral votes on separate ballots for president and vice president.[118][119][120][non-primary source needed]

Although procedures in each state vary slightly, the electors generally follow a similar series of steps, and the Congress has constitutional authority to regulate the procedures the states follow.[citation needed] The meeting is opened by the election certification official—often that state's secretary of state or equivalent—who reads the certificate of ascertainment. This document sets forth who was chosen to cast the electoral votes. The attendance of the electors is taken and any vacancies are noted in writing. The next step is the selection of a president or chairman of the meeting, sometimes also with a vice chairman. The electors sometimes choose a secretary, often not an elector, to take the minutes of the meeting. In many states, political officials give short speeches at this point in the proceedings.[non-primary source needed]

When the time for balloting arrives, the electors choose one or two people to act as tellers. Some states provide for the placing in nomination of a candidate to receive the electoral votes (the candidate for president of the political party of the electors). Each elector submits a written ballot with the name of a candidate for president. Ballot formats vary between the states: in New Jersey for example, the electors cast ballots by checking the name of the candidate on a pre-printed card; in North Carolina, the electors write the name of the candidate on a blank card. The tellers count the ballots and announce the result. The next step is the casting of the vote for vice president, which follows a similar pattern.[non-primary source needed]

Under the Electoral Count Act (updated and codified in 3 U.S.C. § 9), each state's electors must complete six certificates of vote. Each Certificate of Vote (or Certificate of the Vote) must be signed by all of the electors and a certificate of ascertainment must be attached to each of the certificates of vote. Each Certificate of Vote must include the names of those who received an electoral vote for either the office of president or of vice president. The electors certify the Certificates of Vote, and copies of the certificates are then sent in the following fashion:[121][non-primary source needed]

A staff member of the President of the Senate collects the certificates of vote as they arrive and prepares them for the joint session of the Congress. The certificates are arranged—unopened—in alphabetical order and placed in two special mahogany boxes. Alabama through Missouri (including the District of Columbia) are placed in one box and Montana through Wyoming are placed in the other box.[122] Before 1950, the Secretary of State's office oversaw the certifications, but since then the Office of Federal Register in the Archivist's office reviews them to make sure the documents sent to the archive and Congress match and that all formalities have been followed, sometimes requiring states to correct the documents.[96]

Faithless electors edit

An elector votes for each office, but at least one of these votes (president or vice president) must be cast for a person who is not a resident of the same state as that elector.[123] A "faithless elector" is one who does not cast an electoral vote for the candidate of the party for whom that elector pledged to vote. Faithless electors are comparatively rare because electors are generally chosen among those who are already personally committed to a party and party's candidate.[124] Thirty-three states plus the District of Columbia have laws against faithless electors,[125] which were first enforced after the 2016 election, where ten electors voted or attempted to vote contrary to their pledges. Faithless electors have never changed the outcome of a U.S. election for president. Altogether, 23,529 electors have taken part in the Electoral College as of the 2016 election; only 165 electors have cast votes for someone other than their party's nominee. Of that group, 71 did so because the nominee had died – 63 Democratic Party electors in 1872, when presidential nominee Horace Greeley died; and eight Republican Party electors in 1912, when vice presidential nominee James S. Sherman died.[126]

While faithless electors have never changed the outcome of any presidential election, there are two occasions where the vice presidential election has been influenced by faithless electors:

  • In the 1796 election, 18 electors pledged to the Federalist Party ticket cast their first vote as pledged for John Adams, electing him president, but did not cast their second vote for his running mate Thomas Pinckney. As a result, Adams attained 71 electoral votes, Jefferson received 68, and Pinckney received 59, meaning Jefferson, rather than Pinckney, became vice president.[127]
  • In the 1836 election, Virginia's 23 electors, who were pledged to Richard Mentor Johnson, voted instead for former U.S. Senator William Smith, which left Johnson one vote short of the majority needed to be elected. In accordance with the Twelfth Amendment, a contingent election was held in the Senate between the top two receivers of electoral votes, Johnson and Francis Granger, for vice president, with Johnson being elected on the first ballot.[128]

Some constitutional scholars argued that state restrictions would be struck down if challenged based on Article II and the Twelfth Amendment.[129] However, the United States Supreme Court has consistently ruled that state restrictions are allowed under the Constitution. In Ray v. Blair, 343 U.S. 214 (1952), the Court ruled in favor of state laws requiring electors to pledge to vote for the winning candidate, as well as removing electors who refuse to pledge. As stated in the ruling, electors are acting as a functionary of the state, not the federal government. In Chiafalo v. Washington, 591 U.S. ___ (2020), and a related case, the Court held that electors must vote in accord with their state's laws.[130][131] Faithless electors also may face censure from their political party, as they are usually chosen based on their perceived party loyalty.[132]

Joint session of Congress edit

External videos
  A joint session of Congress confirms the 2020 electoral college results, YouTube video. Global News. January 6, 2021.

The Twelfth Amendment mandates Congress assemble in joint session to count the electoral votes and declare the winners of the election.[133] The session is ordinarily required to take place on January 6 in the calendar year immediately following the meetings of the presidential electors.[134] Since the Twentieth Amendment, the newly elected joint Congress declares the winner of the election; all elections before 1936 were determined by the outgoing House.

The Office of the Federal Register is charged with administering the Electoral College.[96] The meeting is held at 1 p.m. in the chamber of the U.S. House of Representatives.[134] The sitting vice president is expected to preside, but in several cases the president pro tempore of the Senate has chaired the proceedings. The vice president and the speaker of the House sit at the podium, with the vice president sitting to the right of the speaker of the House. Senate pages bring in two mahogany boxes containing each state's certified vote and place them on tables in front of the senators and representatives. Each house appoints two tellers to count the vote (normally one member of each political party). Relevant portions of the certificate of vote are read for each state, in alphabetical order.

Before an amendment to the law in 2022, members of Congress could object to any state's vote count, provided objection is presented in writing and is signed by at least one member of each house of Congress. In 2022, the number of members required to make an objection was raised to one-fifth of each House. An appropriately made objection is followed by the suspension of the joint session and by separate debates and votes in each House of Congress; after both Houses deliberate on the objection, the joint session is resumed.

A state's certificate of vote can be rejected only if both Houses of Congress vote to accept the objection via a simple majority,[135] meaning the votes from the State in question are not counted. Individual votes can also be rejected, and are also not counted.

If there are no objections or all objections are overruled, the presiding officer simply includes a state's votes, as declared in the certificate of vote, in the official tally.

After the certificates from all states are read and the respective votes are counted, the presiding officer simply announces the final state of the vote. This announcement concludes the joint session and formalizes the recognition of the president-elect and of the vice president-elect. The senators then depart from the House chamber. The final tally is printed in the Senate and House journals.

Historical objections and rejections edit

Objections to the electoral vote count are rarely raised, although it has occurred a few times.

  • In 1864, all votes from Louisiana and Tennessee were rejected because of the American Civil War.
  • In 1872, all votes from Arkansas and Louisiana plus three of the eleven electoral votes from Georgia were rejected, due to allegations of electoral fraud, and due to submitting votes for a candidate that had died.[136]
  • After the crises of the 1876 election, where in a few states it was claimed there were two competing state governments, and thus competing slates of electors, Congress adopted the Electoral Count Act to regularize objection procedure.[137]
  • During the vote count in 2001 after the close 2000 presidential election between Governor George W. Bush of Texas and Vice President Al Gore. The election had been controversial, and its outcome was decided by the court case Bush v. Gore. Gore, who as vice president was required to preside over his own Electoral College defeat (by five electoral votes), denied the objections, all of which were raised by representatives and would have favored his candidacy, after no senators would agree to jointly object.
  • Objections were raised in the vote count of the 2004 election, alleging voter suppression and machine irregularities in Ohio, and on that occasion one representative and one senator objected, following protocols mandated by the Electoral Count Act. The joint session was suspended as outlined in these protocols, and the objections were quickly disposed of and rejected by both Houses of Congress.
  • Eleven objections were raised during the vote count for the 2016 election, all by various Democratic representatives. As no senator joined the representatives in any objection, all objections were blocked by Vice President Joe Biden.[138]
  • In the 2020 election, there were two objections, and the proceeding was interrupted by an attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of outgoing President Donald Trump. Objections to the votes from Arizona and Pennsylvania were each raised by a House member and a senator, and triggered separate debate in each chamber, but were soundly defeated.[139] A few House members raised objections to the votes from Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin, but they could not move forward because no senator joined in those objections.[140]

Contingencies edit

Contingent presidential election by House edit

If no candidate for president receives an absolute majority of the electoral votes (since 1964, 270 of the 538 electoral votes), then the Twelfth Amendment requires the House of Representatives to go into session immediately to choose a president. In this event, the House of Representatives is limited to choosing from among the three candidates who received the most electoral votes for president. Each state delegation votes en bloc—each delegation having a single vote; the District of Columbia does not get to vote. A candidate must receive an absolute majority of state delegation votes (i.e., from 1959 (which is the last time a new state was admitted to the union), a minimum of 26 votes) in order for that candidate to become the president-elect. Additionally, delegations from at least two thirds of all the states must be present for voting to take place. The House continues balloting until it elects a president.

The House of Representatives has been required to choose the president only twice: in 1801 under Article II, Section 1, Clause 3; and in 1825 under the Twelfth Amendment.

Contingent vice presidential election by Senate edit

If no candidate for vice president receives an absolute majority of electoral votes, then the Senate must go into session to choose a vice president. The Senate is limited to choosing from the two candidates who received the most electoral votes for vice president. Normally this would mean two candidates, one less than the number of candidates available in the House vote. However, the text is written in such a way that all candidates with the most and second-most electoral votes are eligible for the Senate election—this number could theoretically be larger than two. The Senate votes in the normal manner in this case (i.e., ballots are individually cast by each senator, not by state delegations). However, two-thirds of the senators must be present for voting to take place.

Additionally, the Twelfth Amendment states a "majority of the whole number" of senators (currently 51 of 100) is necessary for election.[141] Further, the language requiring an absolute majority of Senate votes precludes the sitting vice president from breaking any tie that might occur,[142] although some academics and journalists have speculated to the contrary.[143]

The only time the Senate chose the vice president was in 1837. In that instance, the Senate adopted an alphabetical roll call and voting aloud. The rules further stated, "[I]f a majority of the number of senators shall vote for either the said Richard M. Johnson or Francis Granger, he shall be declared by the presiding officer of the Senate constitutionally elected Vice President of the United States"; the Senate chose Johnson.[144]

Deadlocked election edit

Section 3 of the Twentieth Amendment specifies that if the House of Representatives has not chosen a president-elect in time for the inauguration (noon EST on January 20), then the vice president-elect becomes acting president until the House selects a president. Section 3 also specifies that Congress may statutorily provide for who will be acting president if there is neither a president-elect nor a vice president-elect in time for the inauguration. Under the Presidential Succession Act of 1947, the Speaker of the House would become acting president until either the House selects a president or the Senate selects a vice president. Neither of these situations has ever arisen.

Continuity of government and peaceful transitions of power edit

In Federalist No. 68, Alexander Hamilton argued that one concern that led the Constitutional Convention to create the Electoral College was to ensure peaceful transitions of power and continuity of government during transitions between presidential administrations.[145] While recognizing that the question had not been presented in the case, the U.S. Supreme Court stated in the majority opinion in Chiafalo v. Washington (2020) that "nothing in this opinion should be taken to permit the States to bind electors to a deceased candidate" after noting that more than one-third of the cumulative faithless elector votes in U.S. presidential elections history were cast during the 1872 presidential election when Liberal Republican Party and Democratic Party nominee Horace Greeley died after the polls were held and vote tabulations were completed by the states but before the Electoral College cast its ballots, and acknowledging the petitioners concern about the potential turmoil that the death of a presidential candidate between Election Day and the Electoral College meetings could cause.[146][147] In 1872, Greeley had carried the popular vote in 6 states (Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Tennessee, and Texas) and had 66 electoral votes pledged to him, but after his death on November 29, 1872, 63 of the electors pledged to him voted faithlessly while 3 votes (from Georgia) that remained pledged to him were rejected at the Electoral College vote count on February 12, 1873, on the grounds that he had died.[148][149]

However, Greeley's running mate, B. Gratz Brown, still received the 3 electoral votes from Georgia for vice president that were rejected for Greeley, which brought Brown's number of electoral votes for vice president to 47 since he still received all 28 electoral votes from Maryland, Tennessee, and Texas and 16 other electoral votes from Georgia, Kentucky, and Missouri in total (while the other 19 electors from the latter states voted faithlessly for vice president).[150] During the presidential transition following the 1860 presidential election, Abraham Lincoln had to arrive in Washington, D.C. in disguise and on an altered train schedule after the Pinkerton National Detective Agency found evidence that suggested a secessionist plot to assassinate Lincoln would be attempted in Baltimore.[151][152] During the presidential transition following the 1928 presidential election, an Argentine anarchist group plotted to assassinate Herbert Hoover while Hoover was traveling through Central and South America and crossing the Andes from Chile by train, but were prevented because the plotters were arrested before the attempt was made.[153][154]

During the presidential transition following the 1932 presidential election, Giuseppe Zangara attempted to assassinate Franklin D. Roosevelt by gunshot while Roosevelt was giving an impromptu speech in a car in Miami, but instead killed Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak (who was also a passenger in the car) and wounded 5 bystanders.[155][156] During the presidential transition following the 1960 presidential election, Richard Paul Pavlick plotted to assassinate John F. Kennedy while Kennedy was vacationing in Palm Beach, Florida by detonating a dynamite-laden car where Kennedy was staying, but Pavlick delayed his attempt and was subsequently arrested and committed to a mental hospital.[157][158][159][160] During the presidential transition following the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama was targeted in separate security incidents by an assassination plot and a death threat,[161][162] after an assassination plot in Denver during the 2008 Democratic National Convention and an assassination plot in Tennessee during the election were prevented.[163][164]

Ratified in 1933, Section 3 of the 20th Amendment requires that if a President-elect dies before Inauguration Day that the Vice President-elect becomes the President.[165][166] Akhil Amar has noted that the explicit text of the 20th Amendment does not specify when the candidates of the winning presidential ticket officially become the President-elect and Vice President-elect, and that the text of Article II, Section I and the 12th Amendment suggests that candidates for president and vice president are only formally elected upon the Electoral College vote count.[167] Conversely, a 2020 report issued by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) stated that the balance of scholarly opinion has concluded that the winning presidential ticket is formally elected as soon as the majority of the electoral votes they receive are cast according to the 1932 House committee report on the 20th Amendment.[165]

If a vacancy on a presidential ticket occurs before Election Day—as in 1912 when Republican nominee for Vice President James S. Sherman died less than a week before the election and was replaced by Nicholas Murray Butler at the Electoral College meetings, and in 1972 when Democratic nominee for Vice President Thomas Eagleton withdrew his nomination less than three weeks after the Democratic National Convention and was replaced by Sargent Shriver—the internal rules of the political parties apply for filling vacancies.[168] If a vacancy on a presidential ticket occurs between Election Day and the Electoral College meetings, the 2020 CRS report notes that most legal commentators have suggested that political parties would still follow their internal rules for filling the vacancies.[169] However, in 1872, the Democratic National Committee did not meet to name a replacement for Horace Greeley,[148] and the 2020 CRS report notes that presidential electors may argue that they are permitted to vote faithlessly if a vacancy occurs between Election Day and the Electoral College meetings since they were pledged to vote for a specific candidate.[169]

Under the Presidential Succession Clause of Article II, Section I, Congress is delegated the power to "by Law provide for the Case of Removal, Death, Resignation or Inability, both of the President and Vice President, declaring what Officer shall then act as President, and such Officer shall act accordingly, until the Disability be removed, or a President shall be elected."[170][e][f] Pursuant to the Presidential Succession Clause, the 2nd United States Congress passed the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 that required a special election by the Electoral College in the case of a dual vacancy in the Presidency and Vice Presidency.[174][175] Despite vacancies in the Vice Presidency from 1792 to 1886,[g] the special election requirement would be repealed with the rest of the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 by the 49th United States Congress in passing the Presidential Succession Act of 1886.[178][179]

In a special message to the 80th United States Congress calling for revisions to the Presidential Succession Act of 1886, President Harry S. Truman proposed restoring special elections for dual vacancies in the Presidency and Vice Presidency, and while most of Truman's proposal was included in the final version of the Presidential Succession Act of 1947, the restoration of special elections for dual vacancies was not.[180][181] Along with six other recommendations related to presidential succession,[182] the Continuity of Government Commission recommended restoring special elections for president in the event of a dual vacancy in the Presidency and Vice Presidency due to a catastrophic terrorist attack or nuclear strike in part because all members of the presidential line of succession live and work in Washington, D.C.[183] Under the 12th Amendment, presidential electors are still required to meet and cast their ballots for president and vice president within their respective states.[184] Additionally, the CRS has noted in a separate report released in 2020 that members of the presidential line of succession after vice president only become an acting president under the Presidential Succession Clause and Section 3 of the 20th Amendment rather than fully succeeding to the Presidency.[185]

Current electoral vote distribution edit

Electoral votes (EV) allocations for the 2024 and 2028 presidential elections.[186]
Triangular markers (  ) indicate gains or losses following the 2020 census.[187]
EV × States States*
54 × 1 = 54  California
40 × 1 = 40   Texas
30 × 1 = 30  Florida
28 × 1 = 28  New York
19 × 2 = 38  Illinois,  Pennsylvania
17 × 1 = 17  Ohio
16 × 2 = 32 Georgia,  North Carolina
15 × 1 = 15  Michigan
14 × 1 = 14 New Jersey
13 × 1 = 13 Virginia
12 × 1 = 12 Washington
11 × 4 = 44 Arizona, Indiana, Massachusetts, Tennessee
10 × 5 = 50  Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin
9 × 2 = 18 Alabama, South Carolina
8 × 3 = 24 Kentucky, Louisiana,  Oregon
7 × 2 = 14 Connecticut, Oklahoma
6 × 6 = 36 Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Mississippi, Nevada, Utah
5 × 2 = 10 Nebraska**, New Mexico
4 × 7 = 28 Hawaii, Idaho, Maine**,  Montana, New Hampshire, Rhode Island,  West Virginia
3 × 7 = 21 Alaska, Delaware, District of Columbia*, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, Wyoming
= 538 Total electors
* The Twenty-third Amendment grants DC the same number of electors as the least populous state. This has always been three.
** Maine's four electors and Nebraska's five are distributed using the Congressional district method.

Chronological table edit

Number of presidential electors by state and year
Election
year
1788–1800 1804–1900 1904–2000 2004–
'88 '92 '96
'00
'04
'08
'12 '16 '20 '24
'28
'32 '36
'40
'44 '48 '52
'56
'60 '64 '68 '72 '76
'80
'84
'88
'92 '96
'00
'04 '08 '12
'16
'20
'24
'28
'32
'36
'40
'44
'48
'52
'56
'60 '64
'68
'72
'76
'80
'84
'88
'92
'96
'00
'04
'08
'12
'16
'20
'24
'28
# Total 81 135 138 176 218 221 235 261 288 294 275 290 296 303 234
251
294 366 369 401 444 447 476 483 531 537 538
State
22 Alabama 3 5 7 7 9 9 9 9 0 8 10 10 10 11 11 11 11 12 11 11 11 11 10 9 9 9 9 9 9
49 Alaska 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
48 Arizona 3 3 4 4 4 5 6 7 8 10 11 11
25 Arkansas 3 3 3 4 4 0 5 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
31 California 4 4 5 5 6 6 8 9 9 10 10 13 22 25 32 32 40 45 47 54 55 55 54
38 Colorado 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 10
5 Connecticut 7 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7
D.C. 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
1 Delaware 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
27 Florida 3 3 3 0 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 7 8 10 10 14 17 21 25 27 29 30
4 Georgia 5 4 4 6 8 8 8 9 11 11 10 10 10 10 0 9 11 11 12 13 13 13 13 14 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 13 15 16 16
50 Hawaii 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
43 Idaho 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
21 Illinois 3 3 5 5 9 9 11 11 16 16 21 21 22 24 24 27 27 29 29 28 27 27 26 26 24 22 21 20 19
19 Indiana 3 3 5 9 9 12 12 13 13 13 13 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 14 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 11 11 11
29 Iowa 4 4 4 8 8 11 11 13 13 13 13 13 13 11 10 10 10 9 8 8 7 7 6 6
34 Kansas 3 3 5 5 9 10 10 10 10 10 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 6 6 6 6
15 Kentucky 4 4 8 12 12 12 14 15 15 12 12 12 12 11 11 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 11 11 10 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 8
18 Louisiana 3 3 3 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 9 9 8 8
23 Maine 9 9 10 10 9 9 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
7 Maryland 8 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 10 10 8 8 8 8 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
6 Massachusetts 10 16 16 19 22 22 15 15 14 14 12 12 13 13 12 12 13 13 14 15 15 16 16 18 17 16 16 16 14 14 13 12 12 11 11
26 Michigan 3 5 5 6 6 8 8 11 11 13 14 14 14 14 15 19 19 20 20 21 21 20 18 17 16 15
32 Minnesota 4 4 4 5 5 7 9 9 11 11 12 11 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
20 Mississippi 3 3 4 4 6 6 7 7 0 0 8 8 9 9 9 10 10 10 9 9 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 6
24 Missouri 3 3 4 4 7 7 9 9 11 11 15 15 16 17 17 18 18 18 15 15 13 13 12 12 11 11 11 10 10
41 Montana 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 4
37 Nebraska 3 3 3 5 8 8 8 8 8 7 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 5
36 Nevada 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 6 6
9 New Hampshire 5 6 6 7 8 8 8 8 7 7 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
3 New Jersey 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 9 9 9 10 10 12 12 14 16 16 16 16 17 17 16 15 15 14 14
47 New Mexico 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5
11 New York 8 12 12 19 29 29 29 36 42 42 36 36 35 35 33 33 35 35 36 36 36 39 39 45 47 47 45 45 43 41 36 33 31 29 28
12 North Carolina 12 12 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 11 11 10 10 0 9 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 12 13 14 14 14 13 13 13 14 15 15 16
39 North Dakota 3 3 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3
17 Ohio 3 8 8 8 16 21 21 23 23 23 23 21 21 22 22 23 23 23 23 23 24 26 25 25 25 26 25 23 21 20 18 17
46 Oklahoma 7 10 11 10 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7
33 Oregon 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 7 8
2 Pennsylvania 10 15 15 20 25 25 25 28 30 30 26 26 27 27 26 26 29 29 30 32 32 34 34 38 36 35 32 32 29 27 25 23 21 20 19
13 Rhode Island 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
8 South Carolina 7 8 8 10 11 11 11 11 11 11 9 9 8 8 0 6 7 7 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9
40 South Dakota 4 4 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3
16 Tennessee 3 5 8 8 8 11 15 15 13 13 12 12 10 10 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 11 12 11 11 11 10 11 11 11 11 11
28 Texas 4 4 4 0 0 8 8 13 15 15 18 18 20 23 23 24 24 25 26 29 32 34 38 40
45 Utah 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 6 6
14 Vermont 4 4 6 8 8 8 7 7 7 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
10 Virginia 12 21 21 24 25 25 25 24 23 23 17 17 15 15 0 0 11 11 12 12 12 12 12 12 11 11 12 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13
42 Washington 4 4 5 5 7 8 8 9 9 9 9 10 11 11 12 12
35 West Virginia 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 7 6 6 5 5 5 4
30 Wisconsin 4 5 5 8 8 10 10 11 12 12 13 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 11 11 11 10 10 10
44 Wyoming 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
# Total 81 135 138 176 218 221 235 261 288 294 275 290 296 303 234
251
294 366 369 401 444 447 476 483 531 537 538

Source: Presidential Elections 1789–2000 at Psephos (Adam Carr's Election Archive)
Note: In 1788, 1792, 1796, and 1800, each elector cast two votes for president.

 
This cartogram shows the number of electors from each state for the 2012, 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. Following the 2010 census, New York and Ohio lost two electoral votes, 8 states lost one,[h] 6 states gained one,[i] Florida gained two, and Texas gained four.

Alternative methods of choosing electors edit

Methods of presidential elector selection, by state, 1789–1832[188]
Year AL CT DE GA IL IN KY LA ME MD MA MS MO NH NJ NY NC OH PA RI SC TN VT VA
1789 L D L A H H L A L D
1792 L L L D A H H L L L A L L L D
1796 L L A D D H H L L D A L L H L D
1800 L L L D D L L L L D L A L H L A
1804 L L L D D D A A L D A A A L D L A
1808 L L L D D L A A L D A A A L D L A
1812 L L L D L D D A L L L A A A L D L A
1816 L L L L D L D L A A L A A A A L D L A
1820 L A L L D L D L D D D A L A A L A A A A L D L A
1824 A A L L D A D L D D A A D A A L A A A A L D L A
1828 A A L A A A A A D D A A A A A D A A A A L D A A
1832 A A A A A A A A A D A A A A A A A A A A L A A A
Year AL CT DE GA IL IN KY LA ME MD MA MS MO NH NJ NY NC OH PA RI SC TN VT VA
Key A Popular vote, At-large D Popular vote, Districting L Legislative selection H Hybrid system

Before the advent of the "short ballot" in the early 20th century (as described in Selection process) the most common means of electing the presidential electors was through the general ticket. The general ticket is quite similar to the current system and is often confused with it. In the general ticket, voters cast ballots for individuals running for presidential elector (while in the short ballot, voters cast ballots for an entire slate of electors). In the general ticket, the state canvass would report the number of votes cast for each candidate for elector, a complicated process in states like New York with multiple positions to fill. Both the general ticket and the short ballot are often considered at-large or winner-takes-all voting. The short ballot was adopted by the various states at different times; it was adopted for use by North Carolina and Ohio in 1932. Alabama was still using the general ticket as late as 1960 and was one of the last states to switch to the short ballot.

The question of the extent to which state constitutions may constrain the legislature's choice of a method of choosing electors has been touched on in two U.S. Supreme Court cases. In McPherson v. Blacker, 146 U.S. 1 (1892), the Court cited Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 which states that a state's electors are selected "in such manner as the legislature thereof may direct" and wrote these words "operat[e] as a limitation upon the state in respect of any attempt to circumscribe the legislative power". In Bush v. Palm Beach County Canvassing Board, 531 U.S. 70 (2000), a Florida Supreme Court decision was vacated (not reversed) based on McPherson. On the other hand, three dissenting justices in Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98 (2000), wrote: "[N]othing in Article II of the Federal Constitution frees the state legislature from the constraints in the State Constitution that created it."[189] Extensive research on alternate methods of electoral allocation have been conducted by Collin Welke, Dylan Shearer, and Riley Wagie in 2019.

Appointment by state legislature edit

In the earliest presidential elections, state legislative choice was the most common method of choosing electors. A majority of the state legislatures selected presidential electors in both 1792 (9 of 15) and 1800 (10 of 16), and half of them did so in 1812.[190] Even in the 1824 election, a quarter of state legislatures (6 of 24) chose electors. (In that election, Andrew Jackson lost in spite of having a plurality of both the popular vote and the number of electoral votes representing them;[191] yet, as six states did not hold a popular election for their electoral votes, the full expression of the popular vote nationally cannot be known.) Some state legislatures simply chose electors, while other states used a hybrid method in which state legislatures chose from a group of electors elected by popular vote.[192] By 1828, with the rise of Jacksonian democracy, only Delaware and South Carolina used legislative choice.[191] Delaware ended its practice the following election (1832), while South Carolina continued using the method until it seceded from the Union in December 1860.[191] South Carolina used the popular vote for the first time in the 1868 election.[193]

Excluding South Carolina, legislative appointment was used in only four situations after 1832:

  • In 1848, Massachusetts statute awarded the state's electoral votes to the winner of the at-large popular vote, but only if that candidate won an absolute majority. When the vote produced no winner between the Democratic, Free Soil, and Whig parties, the state legislature selected the electors, giving all 12 electoral votes to the Whigs (which had won the plurality of votes in the state).[194]
  • In 1864, Nevada, having joined the Union only a few days prior to Election Day, had no choice but to legislatively appoint.[194]
  • In 1868, the newly reconstructed state of Florida legislatively appointed its electors, having been readmitted too late to hold elections.[194]
  • Finally, in 1876, the legislature of the newly admitted state of Colorado used legislative choice due to a lack of time and money to hold a popular election.[194]

Legislative appointment was brandished as a possibility in the 2000 election. Had the recount continued, the Florida legislature was prepared to appoint the Republican slate of electors to avoid missing the federal safe-harbor deadline for choosing electors.[195]

The Constitution gives each state legislature the power to decide how its state's electors are chosen[191] and it can be easier and cheaper for a state legislature to simply appoint a slate of electors than to create a legislative framework for holding elections to determine the electors. As noted above, the two situations in which legislative choice has been used since the Civil War have both been because there was not enough time or money to prepare for an election. However, appointment by state legislature can have negative consequences: bicameral legislatures can deadlock more easily than the electorate. This is precisely what happened to New York in 1789 when the legislature failed to appoint any electors.[196]

Electoral districts edit

Another method used early in U.S. history was to divide the state into electoral districts. By this method, voters in each district would cast their ballots for the electors they supported and the winner in each district would become the elector. This was similar to how states are currently separated into congressional districts. However, the difference stems from the fact that every state always had two more electoral districts than congressional districts. As with congressional districts, moreover, this method is vulnerable to gerrymandering.

Congressional district method edit

 
Projected results of the 2020 United States presidential election using one of the Congressional district methods

There are two versions of the congressional district method: one has been implemented in Maine and Nebraska; another was used in New York in 1828 and proposed for use in Virginia. Under the implemented method, one electoral vote goes per the plurality of the popular votes of each congressional district (for the U.S. House of Representatives); and two per the statewide popular vote. This may result in greater proportionality. But it can give results similar to the winner-takes-all states, as in 1992, when George H. W. Bush won all five of Nebraska's electoral votes with a clear plurality on 47% of the vote; in a truly proportional system, he would have received three and Bill Clinton and Ross Perot each would have received one.[197]

In 2013, the Virginia proposal was tabled. Like the other congressional district methods, this would have distributed the electoral votes based on the popular vote winner within each of Virginia's 11 congressional districts; the two statewide electoral votes would be awarded based on which candidate won the most congressional districts.[198] A similar method was used in New York in 1828: the two at large electors were elected by the electors selected in districts.

A congressional district method is more likely to arise than other alternatives to the winner-takes-whole-state method, in view of the main two parties' resistance to scrap first-past-the-post. State legislation is sufficient to use this method.[199][non-primary source needed] Advocates of the method believe the system encourages higher voter turnout or incentivizes candidates, to visit and appeal to some states deemed safe, overall, for one party.[200] Winner-take-all systems ignore thousands of votes; in Democratic California there are Republican districts, in Republican Texas there are Democratic districts. Because candidates have an incentive to campaign in competitive districts, with a district plan, candidates have an incentive to actively campaign in over thirty states versus about seven "swing" states.[201][202] Opponents of the system, however, argue candidates might only spend time in certain battleground districts instead of the entire state and cases of gerrymandering could become exacerbated as political parties attempt to draw as many safe districts as they can.[203]

Unlike simple congressional district comparisons, the district plan popular vote bonus in the 2008 election would have given Obama 56% of the Electoral College versus the 68% he did win; it "would have more closely approximated the percentage of the popular vote won [53%]".[204] However, the district plan would have given Obama 49% of the Electoral College in 2012, and would have given Romney a win in the Electoral College even though Obama won the popular vote by nearly 4% (51.1–47.2) over Romney.[205]

Implementation edit

Of the 44 multi-district states whose 517 electoral votes are amenable to the method, only Maine (4 EV) and Nebraska (5 EV) apply it.[citation needed] Maine began using the congressional district method in the election of 1972. Nebraska has used the congressional district method since the election of 1992.[206][207] Michigan used the system for the 1892 presidential election,[197][208][209] and several other states used various forms of the district plan before 1840: Virginia, Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, North Carolina, Massachusetts, Illinois, Maine, Missouri, and New York.[210]

The congressional district method allows a state the chance to split its electoral votes between multiple candidates. Prior to 2008, neither Maine nor Nebraska had ever split their electoral votes.[197] Nebraska split its electoral votes for the first time in 2008, giving John McCain its statewide electors and those of two congressional districts, while Barack Obama won the electoral vote of Nebraska's 2nd congressional district.[211] Following the 2008 split, some Nebraska Republicans made efforts to discard the congressional district method and return to the winner-takes-all system.[212] In January 2010, a bill was introduced in the Nebraska legislature to revert to a winner-take-all system;[213] the bill died in committee in March 2011.[214] Republicans had passed bills in 1995 and 1997 to do the same, which were vetoed by Democratic Governor Ben Nelson.[212]

Recent abandoned adoption in other states edit

In 2010, Republicans in Pennsylvania, who controlled both houses of the legislature as well as the governorship, put forward a plan to change the state's winner-takes-all system to a congressional district method system. Pennsylvania had voted for the Democratic candidate in the five previous presidential elections, so this was seen an attempt to take away Democratic electoral votes. Democrat Barack Obama won Pennsylvania in 2008 with 55% of its vote. The district plan would have awarded him 11 of its 21 electoral votes, a 52.4% which was much closer to the popular vote percentage.[215][216] The plan later lost support.[217] Other Republicans, including Michigan state representative Pete Lund,[218] RNC Chairman Reince Priebus, and Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, have floated similar ideas.[219][220]

Proportional vote edit

In a proportional system, electors would be selected in proportion to the votes cast for their candidate or party, rather than being selected by the statewide plurality vote.[221]

Impacts and reception edit

Gary Bugh's research of congressional debates over proposed constitutional amendments to abolish the Electoral College reveals reform opponents have often appeal to tradition and the preference for indirect elections, whereas reform advocates often champion a more egalitarian one person, one vote system.[222] Electoral colleges have been scrapped by all other democracies around the world in favor of direct elections for an executive president.[12][13]

Critics argue that the Electoral College is less democratic than a national direct popular vote and is subject to manipulation because of faithless electors;[9][10] that the system is antithetical to a democracy that strives for a standard of "one person, one vote";[5] and there can be elections where one candidate wins the national popular vote but another wins the electoral vote, as in the 2000 and 2016 elections.[8] Individual citizens in less populated states with 5% of the Electoral College have proportionately more voting power than those in more populous states,[6] and candidates can win by focusing on just a few "swing states".[11][223]

Polling ~40% edit

21st century polling data shows that a majority of Americans consistently favor having a direct popular vote for presidential elections. The popularity of the Electoral College has hovered between 35% and 44%.[224][j]

Difference with popular vote edit

 
This graphic demonstrates how the winner of the popular vote can still lose in an electoral college system similar to the U.S. Electoral College.
 
Bar graph of popular votes in presidential elections (through 2020). Black stars mark the five cases where the winner did not have the plurality of the popular vote. Black squares mark the two cases where the electoral vote resulted in a tie, or the winner did not have the majority of electoral votes. An H marks each of two cases where the election was decided by the House; an S marks the one case where the election was finalized by the Supreme Court.

Opponents of the Electoral College claim such outcomes do not logically follow the normative concept of how a democratic system should function. One view is the Electoral College violates the principle of political equality, since presidential elections are not decided by the one-person one-vote principle.[225]

While many assume the national popular vote observed under the Electoral College system would reflect the popular vote observed under a National Popular Vote system, supporters contend that's not necessarily the case as each electoral institution produces different incentives for, and strategy choices by, presidential campaigns.[226][227]

Notable elections edit

The elections of 1876, 1888, 2000, and 2016 produced an Electoral College winner who did not receive at least a plurality of the nationwide popular vote.[225] In 1824, there were six states in which electors were legislatively appointed, rather than popularly elected, so it is uncertain what the national popular vote would have been if all presidential electors had been popularly elected. When no presidential candidate received a majority of electoral votes in 1824, the election was decided by the House of Representatives and so could be considered distinct from the latter four elections in which all of the states had popular selection of electors.[228] The true national popular vote was also uncertain in the 1960 election, and the plurality for the winner depends on how votes for Alabama electors are allocated.[229]

Elections where the popular vote and electoral college results differed

  • 1800: Jefferson won with 61.4% of the popular vote; Adams had 38.6%*
  • 1824: Adams won with 30.9% of the popular vote; Jackson had 41.4%*
  • 1836 (only for vice president): Johnson won with 63.5% of the popular vote; Granger had 30.8%*
  • 1876: Tilden (D) received 50.9% of the vote, Hayes (R) received 47.9%
  • 1888: Cleveland (D) received 48.6% of the vote, Harrison (R) received 47.8%
  • 2000: Gore (D) received 48.4% of the vote, Bush (R) received 47.9%
  • 2016: Clinton (D) received 48.2% of the vote, Trump (R) received 46.1%

*These popular vote tallies are partial because several of the states still used their legislature to choose electors not a popular vote. In both elections a tied electoral college threw the contest over to Congress to decide.

Favors largest swing states edit

 
These maps show the amount of attention given to each state by the Bush and Kerry campaigns (combined) during the final five weeks of the 2004 election: each waving hand (purple map) represents a visit from a presidential or vice presidential candidate; each dollar sign (green map) represents one million dollars spent on TV advertising.[230]

The Electoral College encourages political campaigners to focus on a few so-called swing states while ignoring the rest of the country. Populous states in which pre-election poll results show no clear favorite are inundated with campaign visits, saturation television advertising, get-out-the-vote efforts by party organizers, and debates, while four out of five voters in the national election are "absolutely ignored", according to one assessment.[231] Since most states use a winner-takes-all arrangement in which the candidate with the most votes in that state receives all of the state's electoral votes, there is a clear incentive to focus almost exclusively on only a few key undecided states.[225]

Not all votes count the same edit

Each state gets a minimum of three electoral votes, regardless of population, which has increasingly given low-population states more electors per voter (or more voting power).[232][233] For example, an electoral vote represents nearly four times as many people in California as in Wyoming.[232][234] On average, voters in the ten least populated states have 2.5 more electors per person compared with voters in the ten most populous states.[232]

In 1968, John F. Banzhaf III developed the Banzhaf power index (BPI) which argued that a voter in the state of New York had, on average, 3.3 times as much voting power in presidential elections as the average voter outside New York.[235] Mark Livingston used a similar method and estimated that individual voters in the largest state (based on 1990 census) had 3.3 times more individual power to choose a president than voters of Montana.[236][better source needed] However, others argue that Banzhaf's method ignores the demographic makeup of the states and for treating votes like independent coin-flips. Critics of Banzhaf's method say empirically based models used to analyze the Electoral College have consistently found that sparsely populated states benefit from having their resident's votes count for more than the votes of those residing in the more populous states.[237]

Lowers turnout edit

Except in closely fought swing states, voter turnout does not affect the election results due to entrenched political party domination in most states. The Electoral College decreases the advantage a political party or campaign might gain for encouraging voters to turn out, except in those swing states.[238] If the presidential election were decided by a national popular vote, in contrast, campaigns and parties would have a strong incentive to work to increase turnout everywhere.[239] Individuals would similarly have a stronger incentive to persuade their friends and neighbors to turn out to vote. The differences in turnout between swing states and non-swing states under the current electoral college system suggest that replacing the Electoral College with direct election by popular vote would likely increase turnout and participation significantly.[238]

Obscures disenfranchisement within states edit

According to this criticism, the electoral college reduces elections to a mere count of electors for a particular state, and, as a result, it obscures any voting problems within a particular state. For example, if a particular state blocks some groups from voting, perhaps by voter suppression methods such as imposing reading tests, poll taxes, registration requirements, or legally disfranchising specific groups (like women or people of color), then voting inside that state would be reduced, but as the state's electoral count would be the same, disenfranchisement has no effect on its overall electoral power. Critics contend that such disenfranchisement is not penalized by the Electoral College. A related argument is the Electoral College may have a dampening effect on voter turnout: there is no incentive for states to reach out to more of its citizens to include them in elections because the state's electoral count remains fixed in any event. According to this view, if elections were by popular vote, then states would be motivated to include more citizens in elections since the state would then have more political clout nationally. Critics contend the electoral college system insulates states from negative publicity as well as possible federal penalties for disenfranchising subgroups of citizens.

Legal scholars Akhil Amar and Vikram Amar have argued that the original Electoral College compromise was enacted partially because it enabled Southern states to disenfranchise their slave populations.[240] It permitted Southern states to disfranchise large numbers of slaves while allowing these states to maintain political clout and prevent Northern dominance within the federation by using the Three-Fifths Compromise. They noted that James Madison believed the question of counting slaves had presented a serious challenge, but that "the substitution of electors obviated this difficulty and seemed on the whole to be liable to the fewest objections."[241] Akhil and Vikram Amar added:

The founders' system also encouraged the continued disfranchisement of women. In a direct national election system, any state that gave women the vote would automatically have doubled its national clout. Under the Electoral College, however, a state had no such incentive to increase the franchise; as with slaves, what mattered was how many women lived in a state, not how many were empowered ... a state with low voter turnout gets precisely the same number of electoral votes as if it had a high turnout. By contrast, a well-designed direct election system could spur states to get out the vote.[240]

After the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery, white voters in Southern states benefited from elimination of the Three-Fifths Compromise because with all former slaves counted as one person, instead of 3/5, Southern states increased their share of electors in the Electoral College. Southern states also enacted laws that restricted access to voting by former slaves, thereby increasing the electoral weight of votes by southern whites.[242]

Minorities tend to be disproportionately located in noncompetitive states, reducing their impact on the overall election and over-representing white voters who have tended to live in the swing states that decide elections.[243][244]

Americans in U.S. territories cannot vote edit

Roughly four million Americans in Puerto Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and Guam, do not have a vote in presidential elections.[25][232] Only U.S. states (per Article II, Section 1, Clause 2) and Washington, D.C. (per the Twenty-third Amendment) are entitled to electors. Various scholars consequently conclude that the U.S. national-electoral process is not fully democratic.[245][246] Guam has held non-binding straw polls for president since the 1980s to draw attention to this fact.[247][248] The Democratic and Republican parties, as well as other third parties, have, however, made it possible for people in U.S. territories to vote in party presidential primaries.[249][250]

Disadvantages third parties edit

In practice, the winner-take-all manner of allocating a state's electors generally decreases the importance of minor parties.[251]

Federalism and state power edit

 
Half the U.S. population lives in 143 urban / suburban counties out of 3,143 counties or county equivalents (2019 American Community Survey)

For many years early in the nation's history, up until the Jacksonian Era (1830s), many states appointed their electors by a vote of the state legislature, and proponents argue that, in the end, the election of the president must still come down to the decisions of each state, or the federal nature of the United States will give way to a single massive, centralized government, to the detriment of the States.[252]

In his 2007 book A More Perfect Constitution, Professor Larry Sabato preferred allocating the electoral college (and Senate seats) in stricter proportion to population while keeping the Electoral College for the benefit of lightly populated swing states and to strengthen the role of the states in federalism.[253][252]

Willamette University College of Law professor Norman R. Williams has argued that the Constitutional Convention delegates chose the Electoral College to choose the President largely in reaction to the experience during the Confederation period where state governors were often chosen by state legislatures and wanting the new federal government to have an executive branch that was effectively independent of the legislative branch.[254] For example, Alexander Hamilton argued that the Electoral College would prevent, sinister bias, foreign interference and domestic intrigue in presidential elections by not permitting members of Congress or any other officer of the United States to serve as electors.[255]

Efforts to abolish or reform edit

Since 1800, over 700 proposals to reform or eliminate the system have been introduced in Congress. Proponents of these proposals argued that the electoral college system does not provide for direct democratic election, affords less-populous states an advantage, and allows a candidate to win the presidency without winning the most votes. None of these proposals have received the approval of two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of the states required to amend the Constitution.[256]

1969-1970: Bayh–Celler amendment edit

The closest the United States has come to abolishing the Electoral College occurred during the 91st Congress (1969–1971).[257] The 1968 election resulted in Richard Nixon receiving 301 electoral votes (56% of electors), Hubert Humphrey 191 (35.5%), and George Wallace 46 (8.5%) with 13.5% of the popular vote. However, Nixon had received only 511,944 more popular votes than Humphrey, 43.5% to 42.9%, less than 1% of the national total.[258][non-primary source needed]

Representative Emanuel Celler (D–New York), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, responded to public concerns over the disparity between the popular vote and electoral vote by introducing House Joint Resolution 681, a proposed Constitutional amendment that would have replaced the Electoral College with a simpler plurality system based on the national popular vote. With this system, the pair of candidates (running for president and vice-president) who had received the highest number of votes would win the presidency and vice presidency provided they won at least 40% of the national popular vote. If no pair received 40% of the popular vote, a runoff election would be held in which the choice of president and vice president would be made from the two pairs of persons who had received the highest number of votes in the first election.[259]

On April 29, 1969, the House Judiciary Committee voted 28 to 6 to approve the proposal.[260] Debate on the proposal before the full House of Representatives ended on September 11, 1969[261] and was eventually passed with bipartisan support on September 18, 1969, by a vote of 339 to 70.[262]

On September 30, 1969, President Nixon gave his endorsement for adoption of the proposal, encouraging the Senate to pass its version of the proposal, which had been sponsored as Senate Joint Resolution 1 by Senator Birch Bayh (D–Indiana).[263]

On October 8, 1969, the New York Times reported that 30 state legislatures were "either certain or likely to approve a constitutional amendment embodying the direct election plan if it passes its final Congressional test in the Senate." Ratification of 38 state legislatures would have been needed for adoption. The paper also reported that six other states had yet to state a preference, six were leaning toward opposition, and eight were solidly opposed.[264]

On August 14, 1970, the Senate Judiciary Committee sent its report advocating passage of the proposal to the full Senate. The Judiciary Committee had approved the proposal by a vote of 11 to 6. The six members who opposed the plan, Democratic senators James Eastland of Mississippi, John Little McClellan of Arkansas, and Sam Ervin of North Carolina, along with Republican senators Roman Hruska of Nebraska, Hiram Fong of Hawaii, and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, all argued that although the present system had potential loopholes, it had worked well throughout the years. Senator Bayh indicated that supporters of the measure were about a dozen votes shy from the 67 needed for the proposal to pass the full Senate.[265] He called upon President Nixon to attempt to persuade undecided Republican senators to support the proposal.[266] However, Nixon, while not reneging on his previous endorsement, chose not to make any further personal appeals to back the proposal.[267]

On September 8, 1970, the Senate commenced openly debating the proposal,[268] and the proposal was quickly filibustered. The lead objectors to the proposal were mostly Southern senators and conservatives from small states, both Democrats and Republicans, who argued that abolishing the Electoral College would reduce their states' political influence.[267] On September 17, 1970, a motion for cloture, which would have ended the filibuster, received 54 votes to 36 for cloture,[267] failing to receive the then-required two-thirds majority of senators voting.[269] [non-primary source needed]A second motion for cloture on September 29, 1970, also failed, by 53 to 34. Thereafter, the Senate majority leader, Mike Mansfield of Montana, moved to lay the proposal aside so the Senate could attend to other business.[270] However, the proposal was never considered again and died when the 91st Congress ended on January 3, 1971.

Carter proposal edit

On March 22, 1977, President Jimmy Carter wrote a letter of reform to Congress that also included his expression of abolishing the Electoral College. The letter read in part:

My fourth recommendation is that the Congress adopt a Constitutional amendment to provide for direct popular election of the President. Such an amendment, which would abolish the Electoral College, will ensure that the candidate chosen by the voters actually becomes President. Under the Electoral College, it is always possible that the winner of the popular vote will not be elected. This has already happened in three elections, 1824, 1876, and 1888. In the last election, the result could have been changed by a small shift of votes in Ohio and Hawaii, despite a popular vote difference of 1.7 million. I do not recommend a Constitutional amendment lightly. I think the amendment process must be reserved for an issue of overriding governmental significance. But the method by which we elect our President is such an issue. I will not be proposing a specific direct election amendment. I prefer to allow the Congress to proceed with its work without the interruption of a new proposal.[271]

President Carter's proposed program for the reform of the Electoral College was very liberal for a modern president during this time, and in some aspects of the package, it went beyond original expectations.[272] Newspapers like The New York Times saw President Carter's proposal at that time as "a modest surprise" because of the indication of Carter that he would be interested in only eliminating the electors but retaining the electoral vote system in a modified form.[272]

Newspaper reaction to Carter's proposal ranged from some editorials praising the proposal to other editorials, like that in the Chicago Tribune, criticizing the president for proposing the end of the Electoral College.[273]

In a letter to The New York Times, Representative Jonathan B. Bingham (D-New York) highlighted the danger of the "flawed, outdated mechanism of the Electoral College" by underscoring how a shift of fewer than 10,000 votes in two key states would have led to President Gerald Ford winning the 1976 election despite Jimmy Carter's nationwide 1.7 million-vote margin.[274]

Recent proposals to abolish edit

Since January 3, 2019, joint resolutions have been made proposing constitutional amendments that would replace the Electoral College with the popular election of the president and vice president.[275][276] Unlike the Bayh–Celler amendment, with its 40% threshold for election, these proposals do not require a candidate to achieve a certain percentage of votes to be elected.[277][278][279][non-primary source needed]

National Popular Vote Interstate Compact edit

As of May 2023, sixteen states plus the District of Columbia have joined the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.[280][281][better source needed] Those joining the compact will, acting together if and when reflecting a majority of electors (at least 270), pledge their electors to the winner of the national popular vote. The compact applies Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the Constitution, which gives each state legislature the plenary power to determine how it chooses electors.

Some scholars have suggested that Article I, Section 10, Clause 3 of the Constitution requires congressional consent before the compact could be enforceable;[282] thus, any attempted implementation of the compact without congressional consent could face court challenges to its constitutionality. Others have suggested that the compact's legality was strengthened by Chiafalo v. Washington, in which the Supreme Court upheld the power of states to enforce electors' pledges.[283][284]

The seventeen adherents of the compact have 205 electors, which is 76% of the 270 required for it to take effect, or be considered justiciable.[280][better source needed]

Litigation based on the 14th amendment edit

It has been argued that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution bars the winner-takes-all apportionment of electors by the states; according to this argument, the votes of the losing party are discarded entirely, thereby leading to an unequal position between different voters in the same state.[285] Lawsuits have been filed to this end in California, Massachusetts, Texas and South Carolina, though all have been unsuccessful.[285]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The constitutional convention of 1787 had rejected presidential selection by direct popular vote.[2] That being the case, election mechanics based on an electoral college were devised to render selection of the president independent of both state legislatures and the national legislature.[3]
  2. ^ Writing in the policy journal National Affairs, Allen Guelzo argues, "it is worthwhile to deal directly with three popular arguments against the Electoral College. The first, that the Electoral College violates the principle of "one man, one vote". In assigning electoral college votes by winner-take-all, the states themselves violate the one-person-one-vote principle. Hillary Clinton won 61.5% of the California vote, and she received all 55 of California's electoral votes as a result. The disparity in Illinois was "even more dramatic". Clinton won that state's popular vote 3.1 million to 2.1 million, and that 59.6% share granted her Illinois's 20 electoral votes.[4]
  3. ^ Although faithless electors have never changed the outcome of a state popular vote, or the national total, that scenario was further weakened by the 2020 court case Chiafalo v. Washington.[10]
  4. ^ Arizona, Idaho, Louisiana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee
  5. ^ Section 1 of the 25th Amendment superseded the text of the Presidential Succession Clause of Article II, Section I that stated "In Case of the Removal of the President from Office, or of his Death, Resignation, or Inability to discharge the Powers and Duties of the said Office, the Same shall devolve on the Vice President". Instead, Section 1 of the 25th Amendment provides that "In case of the removal of the President from office or of his death or resignation, the Vice President shall become President." Section 2 of the 25th Amendment authorizes the President to nominate a Vice President in the event of a vacancy subject to confirmation by both houses of Congress.[171][172]
  6. ^ In 1841, the death of William Henry Harrison as President caused debate in Congress about whether John Tyler had formally succeeded to the Presidency or whether he was an Acting President. Tyler took the oath of office and Congress implicitly ratified Tyler's decision in documents published subsequent to his ascension that referred to him as "the President of the United States." Tyler's ascension set the precedent that the Vice President becomes the President in the event of a vacancy until the ratification of the 25th Amendment.[173]
  7. ^ For nearly one-fourth of the period of time from 1792 to 1886, the Vice Presidency was vacant due to the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln and James A. Garfield in 1865 and 1881 respectively, the deaths of Presidents William Henry Harrison and Zachary Taylor in 1841 and 1850 respectively, the deaths of Vice Presidents George Clinton, Elbridge Gerry, William R. King, Henry Wilson, and Thomas A. Hendricks in 1812, 1814, 1853, 1875, and 1885 respectively, and the resignation of the Vice Presidency by John C. Calhoun in 1832.[176][177]
  8. ^ Iowa, Louisiana, Missouri, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Michigan, Illinois, Pennsylvania
  9. ^ Nevada, Utah, South Carolina, Arizona, Washington, Georgia
  10. ^ Americans favored a Constitutional Amendment to elect the president by a nationwide popular vote on average 61% and those for electoral college selection 35%. In 2016 polling, the gap closed to 51% direct election versus 44% electoral college. By 2020, American thinking had again diverged with 58% for direct election versus 40% for the electoral college choosing a president.[224]

References edit

  1. ^ Ziblatt, Daniel; Levitsky, Steven (September 5, 2023). "How American Democracy Fell So Far Behind". The Atlantic. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  2. ^ Beeman 2010, pp. 129–130
  3. ^ Beeman 2010, p. 135
  4. ^ Guelzo, Allen (April 2, 2018). "In Defense of the Electoral College". National Affairs. Retrieved November 5, 2020.
  5. ^ a b Lounsbury, Jud (November 17, 2016). "One Person One Vote? Depends on Where You Live". The Progressive. Madison, Wisconsin: Progressive, Inc. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  6. ^ a b Speel, Robert (November 15, 2016). "These 3 Common Arguments For Preserving the Electoral College Are All Wrong". Time. Retrieved January 5, 2019. "Rural states get a slight boost from the 2 electoral votes awarded to states due to their 2 Senate seats
  7. ^ Neale, Thomas H. (October 6, 2017). "Electoral College Reform: Contemporary Issues for Congress" (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service. Retrieved October 24, 2020.
  8. ^ a b Mahler, Jonathan; Eder, Steve (November 10, 2016). "The Electoral College Is Hated by Many. So Why Does It Endure?". The New York Times. Retrieved January 5, 2019.
  9. ^ a b West, Darrell M. (2020). "It's Time to Abolish the Electoral College" (PDF).
  10. ^ a b "Should We Abolish the Electoral College?". Stanford Magazine. September 2016. Retrieved September 3, 2020.
  11. ^ a b Tropp, Rachel (February 21, 2017). . Harvard Political Review. Archived from the original on August 5, 2020. Retrieved January 5, 2019.
  12. ^ a b Ziblatt, Steven Levitsky, Daniel (September 5, 2023). "How American Democracy Fell So Far Behind". The Atlantic. Retrieved September 20, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ a b Collin, Richard Oliver; Martin, Pamela L. (January 1, 2012). An Introduction to World Politics: Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781442218031.
  14. ^ Statutes at Large, 28th Congress, 2nd Session, p. 721.
  15. ^ Neale, Thomas H. (January 17, 2021). . Congressional Research Service. Archived from the original on November 9, 2020. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
  16. ^ a b c "What is the Electoral College?". National Archives. December 23, 2019. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  17. ^ "Distribution of Electoral Votes". National Archives. March 6, 2020. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
  18. ^ "Faithless Elector State Laws". Fair Vote. July 7, 2020. Retrieved July 7, 2020. There are 33 states (plus the District of Columbia) that require electors to vote for a pledged candidate. Most of those states (16 plus DC) nonetheless do not provide for any penalty or any mechanism to prevent the deviant vote from counting as cast.
  19. ^ a b Counting Electoral Votes: An Overview of Procedures at the Joint Session, Including Objections by Members of Congress (Report). Congressional Research Service. November 15, 2016. Retrieved August 2, 2020.[dead link]
  20. ^ "Vision 2020: What happens if the US election is contested?". AP NEWS. September 16, 2020. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
  21. ^ a b c Neale, Thomas H. (May 15, 2017). "The Electoral College: How It Works in Contemporary Presidential Elections" (PDF). CRS Report for Congress. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service. p. 13. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  22. ^ Elhauge, Einer R. "Essays on Article II: Presidential Electors". The Heritage Guide to The Constitution. The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
  23. ^ Ross, Tara (2017). The Indispensable Electoral College: How the Founders' Plan Saves Our Country from Mob Rule. Washington, D.C.: Regenary Gateway. p. 26. ISBN 978-1-62157-707-2.
  24. ^ United States Government Printing Office. "Presidential Electors for D.C. – Twenty-third Amendment" (PDF).
  25. ^ a b Murriel, Maria (November 1, 2016). "Millions of Americans can't vote for president because of where they live". PRI's The World. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
  26. ^ King, Ledyard (May 7, 2019). . USA Today. Archived from the original on July 31, 2020. Retrieved September 6, 2019.
  27. ^ a b Levitsky, Steven; Ziblatt, Daniel (2023). "Chapter 5". Tyranny of the Minority: why American democracy reached the breaking point. New York: Crown. ISBN 978-0-593-44307-1.
  28. ^ "Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787: May 29". Avalon Project. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  29. ^ "Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787: June 2". Avalon Project. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  30. ^ "Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787: September 4". Avalon Project. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  31. ^ "James Wilson, popular sovereignty, and the Electoral College". National Constitution Center. November 28, 2016. Retrieved April 9, 2019.
  32. ^ "The Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 by James Madison" (PDF). Ashland University. Retrieved July 30, 2020.
  33. ^ Records of the Federal Convention, p. 57 Farrand's Records, Volume 2, A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774–1875, Library of Congress
  34. ^ "Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787: September 6". Avalon Project. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  35. ^ Madison, James (1966). Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787. The Norton Library. p. 294. ASIN B003G6AKX2.
  36. ^ Patrick, John J.; Pious, Richard M.; Ritchie, Donald A. (2001). The Oxford Guide to the United States Government. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 208. ISBN 978-0-19-514273-0.
  37. ^ "The Federalist 39". Avalon Project. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  38. ^ a b c Hamilton. The Federalist Papers: No. 68 The Avalon Project, Yale Law School. viewed November 10, 2016.
  39. ^ The Twelfth Amendment changed this to the top three candidates,
  40. ^ The Federalist Papers: Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay The New American Library, 1961.
  41. ^ "U. S. Electoral College: Frequently Asked Questions". archives.gov. September 19, 2019.
  42. ^ Chang, Stanley (2007). (PDF). Harvard Journal on Legislation. Cambridge, MA: President and Fellows of Harvard College. 44 (205, at 208). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2022. Retrieved May 28, 2020.
  43. ^ a b Hamilton, Alexander. "The Federalist Papers : No. 68", The Avalon Project, 2008. From the Lillian Goldman Law Library. Retrieved 22 Jan 2022.
  44. ^ Hamilton, Alexander. Draft of a Resolution for the Legislature of New York for the Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, 29 January 1802, National Archives, Founders Online, viewed March 2, 2019.
  45. ^ Describing how the Electoral College was designed to work, Alexander Hamilton wrote, "A small number of persons, selected by their fellow-citizens from the general mass, will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated investigations [decisions regarding the selection of a president]." (Hamilton, Federalist 68). Hamilton strongly believed this was to be done district by district, and when states began doing otherwise, he proposed a constitutional amendment to mandate the district system (Hamilton, Draft of a Constitutional Amendment). Madison concurred, "The district mode was mostly, if not exclusively in view when the Constitution was framed and adopted." (Madison to Hay, 1823 May 25, 2017, at the Wayback Machine)
  46. ^ William C. Kimberling, Essays in Elections: The Electoral College (1992).
  47. ^ "Ray v. Blair". LII / Legal Information Institute.
  48. ^ VanFossen, Phillip J. (November 4, 2020). "Who invented the Electoral College?". The Conversation.
  49. ^ "WashU Expert: Electoral College ruling contradicts Founders' 'original intent' – The Source – Washington University in St. Louis". The Source. July 6, 2020.
  50. ^ "Article 2, Section 1, Clauses 2 and 3: [Selection of Electors, 1796—1832], McPherson v. Blacker". press-pubs.uchicago.edu.
  51. ^ "Electoral College". history.com. A+E Networks. Retrieved August 6, 2018.
  52. ^ Davis, Kenneth C. (2003). Don't Know Much About History: Everything You Need to Know About American History but Never Learned (1st ed.). New York: HarperCollins. p. 620. ISBN 978-0-06-008381-6.
  53. ^ "Today in History – February 17". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
  54. ^ a b "Federalist No. 68". The Avalon Project.
  55. ^ Justice Robert Jackson, Ray v. Blair, dissent, 1952
  56. ^ "Chiafalo v. Washington, 591 U.S. ___ (2020)". Justia Law.
  57. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 – 1875". memory.loc.gov.
  58. ^ a b "Article 2, Section 1, Clauses 2 and 3: Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution 3:§§ 1449—52, 1454—60, 1462—67". press-pubs.uchicago.edu.
  59. ^ a b "Founders Online: Draft of a Resolution for the Legislature of New York for the …". founders.archives.gov.
  60. ^ a b . May 25, 2017. Archived from the original on May 25, 2017.
  61. ^ a b Senate, United States Congress (November 3, 1961). "Hearings". U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.
  62. ^ "Resolves of the General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts: Passed at Their Session, which Commenced on Wednesday, the Thirty First of May, and Ended on the Seventeenth of June, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Twenty. Published Agreeably to Resolve of 16th January, 1812. Boston, Russell & Gardner, for B. Russell, 1820; [repr". Boston Book Company. January 1, 1820 – via Google Books.
  63. ^ a b "How the Electoral College Became Winner-Take-All". FairVote. August 21, 2012. Retrieved February 13, 2024.
  64. ^ a b . Archived from the original on May 25, 2017.
  65. ^ "Founders Online: Draft of a Resolution for the Legislature of New York for the ..." founders.archives.gov.
  66. ^ "Founders Online: From James Madison to George Hay, 23 August 1823". founders.archives.gov.
  67. ^ "Founders Online: From Thomas Jefferson to George Hay, 17 August 1823". founders.archives.gov.
  68. ^ . U. S. Electoral College. U.S. National Archives. Archived from the original on June 1, 2006. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
  69. ^ "United States presidential election of 1789". Encyclopedia Britannica. September 19, 2013. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
  70. ^ a b Presidential Elections 1789–1996. Congressional Quarterly, Inc. 1997, ISBN 978-1-5680-2065-5, pp. 9–10.
  71. ^ Presidential Elections 1789–1996. Congressional Quarterly, Inc. 1997, ISBN 978-1-5680-2065-5, pp. 10–11.
  72. ^ "Batan v. McMaster, No. 19-1297 (4th Cir., 2020), p. 5" (PDF).
  73. ^ Presidential Elections 1789–1996. Congressional Quarterly, Inc. 1997, ISBN 978-1-5680-2065-5, p. 11.
  74. ^ Gore, D'Angelo (December 23, 2016). "Presidents Winning Without Popular Vote". FactCheck.org.
  75. ^ , House of Representatives, History, Art & Archives, viewed January 27, 2019. Unlike composition in the College, from 1803 to 1846, the U.S. Senate sustained parity between free-soil and slave-holding states. Later a run of free-soil states, including Iowa, Wisconsin, California, Minnesota, Oregon and Kansas, were admitted before the outbreak of the Civil War.
  76. ^ U.S. Constitution Transcript, held at the U.S. National Archives, viewed online on February 5, 2019.
  77. ^ Brian D. Humes, Elaine K. Swift, Richard M. Valelly, Kenneth Finegold, and Evelyn C. Fink, "Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives: Measuring the Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause" in David W. Brady and Mathew D. McCubbins, eds., Party, Process and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress (2002), Stanford University Press ISBN 978-0-8047-4571-0 p. 453, and Table 15.1, "Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause on Slave and Nonslave Representation (1790–1861)", p. 454.
  78. ^ Leonard L. Richards, Slave Power: The Free North and Southern Domination, 1780–1860 (2001), referenced in a review at Humanities and Social Sciences Net Online, viewed February 2, 2019.
  79. ^ Brian D. Humes, et al. "Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives: Measuring the Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause" in David W. Brady and Mathew D. McCubbins, eds., Party, Process and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress (2002), Stanford University Press, ISBN 978-0-8047-4571-0, pp. 464–65, Table 16.6, "Impact of the Three-fifths Clause on the Electoral College, 1792–1860". The continuing, uninterrupted northern free-soil majority margin in the Electoral College would have been significantly smaller had slaves been counter-factually counted as whole persons, but still the South would have been a minority in the Electoral College over these sixty-eight years.
  80. ^ Brian D. Humes, et al. "Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives: Measuring the Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause" in David W. Brady and Mathew D. McCubbins, eds., Party, Process and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress (2002), Stanford University Press ISBN 978-0-8047-4571-0, pp. 454–55.
  81. ^ Brian D. Humes, Elaine K. Swift, Richard M. Valley, Kenneth Finegold, and Evelyn C. Fink, "Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives: Measuring the Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause", Chapter 15 in David W. Brady and Mathew D. McCubbins, eds., Party, Process and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress (2002), Stanford University Press ISBN 978-0-8047-4571-0, p. 453, and Table 15.1, "Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause on Slave and Nonslave Representation (1790–1861)", p. 454.
  82. ^ Wills, Garry (2005). Negro President: Jefferson and the Slave Power. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-0618485376.
  83. ^ Wilentz, Sean (April 4, 2019). "Opinion | The Electoral College Was Not a Pro-Slavery Ploy". The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  84. ^ Brian D. Humes, et al. "Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives: Measuring the Impact of the Three-Fifths Clause" in David W. Brady and Mathew D. McCubbins, eds., Party, Process and Political Change in Congress: New Perspectives on the History of Congress (2002), Stanford University Press, ISBN 978-0-8047-4571-0, p. 464.
  85. ^ Constitution of the United States: A Transcription, online February 9, 2019. See Article I, Section 9, and in Article IV, Section 2.
  86. ^ First Census of the United States, Chapter III in "A Century of Population Growth from the first Census", volume 900, United States Census Office, 1909 In the 1790, Virginia's...population was 747,610, Pennsylvania was 433,633. (p. 8). Virginia had 59.1 percent white and 1.7 percent free black counted whole, and 39.1 percent, or 292,315 counted three-fifths, or a 175,389 number for congressional apportionment. Pennsylvania had 97.5 percent white and 1.6 percent free black, and 0.9 percent slave, or 7,372 persons, p. 82.
  87. ^ Amar, Akhil (November 10, 2016). "The Troubling Reason the Electoral College Exists". Time.
  88. ^ , National Archives, The Center for Legislative Archives, viewed January 27, 2019.
  89. ^ Foner, Eric (2010). The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery. W.W. Norton & Company. p. 16. ISBN 978-0393080827.
  90. ^ Guelzo, Adam; Hulme, James (November 15, 2016). "In Defense of the Electoral College". The Washington Post.
  91. ^ a b c d e Benner, Dave (November 15, 2016). "Cherry Picking James Madison". Abbeville Institute.
  92. ^ (archived from the original on 2011-10-27)
  93. ^ The selected papers of Thaddeus Stevens, v. 2, Stevens, Thaddeus, 1792–1868, Palmer, Beverly Wilson, 1936, Ochoa, Holly Byers, 1951, Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh, Digital Research Library, 2011, pp. 135–36.
  94. ^ Dovere, Edward-Isaac (September 9, 2020). "The Deadline That Could Hand Trump the Election". The Atlantic. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  95. ^ 3 U.S.C. § 7
  96. ^ a b c Zak, Dan (November 16, 2016). "The electoral college isn't a real place: But someone has to answer all the angry phone calls these days". Washington Post. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
  97. ^ 3 U.S.C. § 15
  98. ^ "What is the Electoral College?". U.S. Electoral College. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  99. ^ McCarthy, Devin. "How the Electoral College Became Winner-Take-All". Fairvote. Archived from the original on March 10, 2014. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
  100. ^ a b . FairVote. Archived from the original on October 12, 2011. Retrieved November 16, 2011.
  101. ^ "The Electoral College". National Conference of State Legislatures. November 11, 2020. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  102. ^ The present allotment of electors by state is shown in the Electoral vote distribution section.
  103. ^ The number of electors allocated to each state is based on Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the Constitution, subject to being reduced pursuant to Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment.
  104. ^ Table C2. Apportionment Population and Number of Seats in U.S. House of Representatives by State: 1910 to 2020 U.S. 2020 Census.
  105. ^ Table 1. Apportionment Population and Number of Representatives by State U.S. 2020 Census.
  106. ^ Distribution of Electoral Votes U.S. National Archives.
  107. ^ "How is the president elected? Here is a basic guide to the electoral college system". Raw Story. October 25, 2016.
  108. ^ Sabrina Eaton (October 29, 2004). (PDF). Cleveland Plain Dealer (reprint at Edison Research). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 10, 2011. Retrieved January 3, 2008.
  109. ^ Darrell J. Kozlowski (2010). Federalism. Infobase Publishing. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-1-60413-218-2.
  110. ^ "Write-in Votes". electoral-vote.com. Retrieved August 3, 2020.
  111. ^ "Planning to write in Paul Ryan or Bernie Sanders? It won't count in most states". The Washington Post. November 3, 2015.
  112. ^ a b . FairVote. Takoma Park, Maryland. Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  113. ^ "About the Electors". U.S. Electoral College. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  114. ^ "Split Electoral Votes in Maine and Nebraska". 270 to Win. Retrieved August 1, 2018.
  115. ^ 3 U.S.C. § 1 A uniform national date for presidential elections was not set until 1845, although the Congress always had constitutional authority to do so. — Kimberling, William C. (1992) The Electoral College, p. 7
  116. ^ "Electoral College Instructions to State Officials" (PDF). National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved January 22, 2014.
  117. ^ (archived from the original on 2006-03-05)
  118. ^ "Twelfth Amendment". FindLaw. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  119. ^ "Twenty-third Amendment". FindLaw. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  120. ^ "U.S.C. § 7 : US Code – Section 7: Meeting and vote of electors". FindLaw. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  121. ^ . National Archives and Records Administration. Archived from the original on October 25, 2012. Retrieved November 7, 2012.
  122. ^ Associated Press (January 9, 2009). "Congress meets to count electoral votes". NBC News. Retrieved April 5, 2012.
  123. ^ Kuroda, Tadahisa (1994). The Origins of the Twelfth Amendment: The Electoral College in the Early Republic, 1787–1804. Greenwood. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-313-29151-7.
  124. ^ Johnson, Linda S. (November 2, 2020). "Electors seldom go rogue in casting a state's votes for president". Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  125. ^ "Faithless Elector State Laws". Fair Vote. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  126. ^ Penrose, Drew (March 19, 2020). . Fair Vote. Archived from the original on February 9, 2021. Retrieved March 19, 2020.
  127. ^ Chernow, Ron. Alexander Hamilton. New York: Penguin, 2004. p. 514.
  128. ^ Bomboy, Scott (December 19, 2016). "The one election where Faithless Electors made a difference". Constitution Daily. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: National Constitution Center. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
  129. ^ Barrow, Bill (November 19, 2016). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 20, 2016. Retrieved November 19, 2016.
  130. ^ Williams, Pete (July 6, 2020). "Supreme Court rules 'faithless electors' can't go rogue at Electoral College". NBC News. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  131. ^ Howe, Amy (July 6, 2020). "Opinion analysis: Court upholds 'faithless elector' laws". SCOTUSblog. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  132. ^ Guzmán, Natasha (October 22, 2016). "How Are Electors Selected For The Electoral College? This Historic Election Process Decides The Winner". Bustle. Retrieved July 6, 2020.
  133. ^ "The President of the Senate shall, in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives, open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted." Constitution of the United States: Amendments 11–27, National Archives and Records Administration.
  134. ^ a b 3 U.S.C. § 15, Counting electoral votes in Congress.
  135. ^ "EXPLAINER: How Congress will count Electoral College votes". AP NEWS. December 15, 2020. Retrieved December 19, 2020.
  136. ^ David A. McKnight (1878). The Electoral System of the United States: A Critical and Historical Exposition of Its Fundamental Principles in the Constitution and the Acts and Proceedings of Congress Enforcing It. Wm. S. Hein Publishing. p. 313. ISBN 978-0-8377-2446-1.
  137. ^ Blakemore, Erin (January 5, 2021). . National Geographic. Archived from the original on January 6, 2021.
  138. ^ Williams, Brenna. "11 times electoral vote count was interrupted". CNN. Retrieved June 28, 2022.
  139. ^ "The House just rejected an objection to Pennsylvania's electoral vote". CNN. January 6, 2021. Retrieved January 7, 2021.
  140. ^ "Objections To Four Swing States' Electors Fall Flat After Senators Refuse To Participate; Hawley Forces Debate On Pennsylvania". forbes.com. January 7, 2020.
  141. ^ . Ncseonline.org. Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  142. ^ Longley, Lawrence D.; Peirce, Neal R. (1999). "The Electoral College Primer 2000". Yale University Press. New Haven, CT: 13.
  143. ^ . USA Today. December 12, 2000. Archived from the original on May 15, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2016.
  144. ^ "Senate Journal from 1837". Memory.loc.gov. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  145. ^ Rossiter 2003, p. 410.
  146. ^ Chiafalo v. Washington, No. 19-465, 591 U.S. ___, slip op. at 16–17 (2020)
  147. ^ Shelly, Jacob D. (July 10, 2020). Supreme Court Clarifies Rules for Electoral College: States May Restrict Faithless Electors (Report). Congressional Research Service. p. 3. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  148. ^ a b Neale 2020b, p. 4.
  149. ^ Senate Journal 42(3), pp. 334–337.
  150. ^ Senate Journal 42(3), p. 346.
  151. ^ Donald, David Herbert (1996). Lincoln. New York, New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 273–279. ISBN 978-0-684-82535-9.
  152. ^ Holzer, Harold (2008). Lincoln President-elect: Abraham Lincoln and the Great Secession Winter, 1860-1861. Simon & Schuster. p. 378. ISBN 978-0-7432-8947-4.
  153. ^ Jeansonne, Glen (2012). The Life of Herbert Hoover: Fighting Quaker, 1928-1933. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-1-137-34673-5. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  154. ^ . West Branch, Iowa: Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
  155. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 31–32.
  156. ^ Picchi, Blaise (1998). The Five Weeks of Giuseppe Zangara : The Man Who Would Assassinate FDR. Chicago: Academy Chicago Publishers. pp. 19–20. ISBN 9780897334433. OCLC 38468505.
  157. ^ Oliver, Willard; Marion, Nancy E. (2010). Killing the President: Assassinations, Attempts, and Rumored Attempts on U.S. Commanders-in-Chief: Assassinations, Attempts, and Rumored Attempts on U.S. Commanders-in-Chief. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780313364754.
  158. ^ Hunsicker, A. (2007). The Fine Art of Executive Protection: Handbook for the Executive Protection Officer. Universal-Publishers. ISBN 9781581129847.
  159. ^ Russo, Gus; Molton, Stephen (2010). Brothers in Arms: The Kennedys, the Castros, and the Politics of Murder. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 978-1-60819-247-2.
  160. ^ Greene, Bob (October 24, 2010). "The man who did not kill JFK". CNN.
  161. ^ "Dirty Bomb parts found in Slain man's home". February 10, 2009.
  162. ^ Jeff Zeleny; Jim Rutenberg (December 5, 2009). "Threats Against Obama Spiked Early". The New York Times.
  163. ^ Piazza, Jo; Meek, James Gordon; Kennedy, Helen (August 27, 2008). "Feds: Trio of would-be Obama assassins not much of "threat"". New York Daily News. Retrieved September 1, 2008.
  164. ^ Date, Jack (October 27, 2008). "Feds thwart alleged Obama assassination plot". ABC News. Retrieved October 28, 2008.
  165. ^ a b Neale 2020b, pp. 5–6.
  166. ^ Rossiter 2003, p. 564.
  167. ^ Amar, Akhil Reed (1995). "Presidents, Vice Presidents, and Death: Closing the Constitution's Succession Gap" (PDF). Arkansas Law Review. University of Arkansas School of Law. 48: 215–221. Retrieved July 3, 2023.
  168. ^ Neale 2020b, pp. 2–3.
  169. ^ a b Neale 2020b, pp. 3–4.
  170. ^ Rossiter 2003, p. 551.
  171. ^ Neale 2020a, pp. 6–7.
  172. ^ Rossiter 2003, p. 567.
  173. ^ Neale 2020a, pp. 3–4.
  174. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 25–26.
  175. ^ Neale 2020a, p. 3.
  176. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 66–67.
  177. ^ Neale 2020a, pp. 25–26.
  178. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 26–30.
  179. ^ Neale 2020a, p. 4.
  180. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 32–33, 64–65.
  181. ^ Neale 2020a, pp. 4–6.
  182. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 45–49.
  183. ^ Continuity of Government Commission 2009, pp. 39, 47.
  184. ^ Rossiter 2003, p. 560.
  185. ^ Neale 2020a, pp. 1–7.
  186. ^ "2020 Census Apportionment Results". Washington, D.C.: U.S. Census Bureau. April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 26, 2021. Each state's number of electoral votes is equal to its total congressional representation (its number of Representatives plus its two Senators).
  187. ^ "Winners and losers from first release of 2020 census data". Associated Press. April 26, 2021.
  188. ^ Moore, John L., ed. (1985). Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly, Inc. pp. 254–56.
  189. ^ Bush v. Gore, (Justice Stevens dissenting) (quote in second paragraph).
  190. ^ Moore, John L., ed. (1985). Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly, Inc. p. 255.
  191. ^ a b c d Kolodny, Robin (1996). "The Several Elections of 1824". Congress & the Presidency. 23 (2): 139–64. doi:10.1080/07343469609507834.
  192. ^ (PDF). Princeton Press. Princeton University Press. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 2, 2014. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
  193. ^ Black, Eric (October 14, 2012). "Our Electoral College system is weird – and not in a good way". MinnPost. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
  194. ^ a b c d Moore, John L., ed. (1985). Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly, Inc. p. 266.
  195. ^ . Pbs.org. Archived from the original on January 24, 2001. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  196. ^ Moore, John L., ed. (1985). Congressional Quarterly's Guide to U.S. Elections (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly, Inc. p. 254.
  197. ^ a b c . Franklin & Marshall College. March 9, 2005. Archived from the original on September 3, 2006. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  198. ^ Henderson, Nia-Malika; Haines, Errin (January 25, 2013). "Republicans in Virginia, other states seeking electoral college changes". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  199. ^ (PDF). Dos.state.pa.us. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 1, 2008. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  200. ^ McNulty, Timothy (December 23, 2012). "Pennsylvania looks to alter state's electoral vote system". Pittsburgh Post Gazette.
  201. ^ Sabato, Larry. "A more perfect Constitution[permanent dead link]" viewed November 22, 2014. (archived from the original[dead link] on 2016-01-02).
  202. ^ Levy, Robert A., Should we reform the Electoral College? Cato Institute, viewed November 22, 2014.
  203. ^ . Fairvote.org. Archived from the original on February 21, 2015. Retrieved August 14, 2014.
  204. ^ Congressional Research Services Electoral College, p. 15, viewed November 22, 2014.
  205. ^ . www.270towin.com. Archived from the original on January 16, 2022. Retrieved July 31, 2022.
  206. ^ "Methods of Choosing Presidential Electors". Uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved August 26, 2010.
  207. ^ Schwartz, Maralee (April 7, 1991). "Nebraska's Vote Change". The Washington Post.
  208. ^ Skelley, Geoffrey (November 20, 2014). "What Goes Arou

united, states, electoral, college, electoral, colleges, general, electoral, college, other, uses, regions, electoral, college, disambiguation, united, states, electoral, college, group, presidential, electors, required, constitution, form, every, four, years,. For electoral colleges in general see Electoral college For other uses and regions see Electoral college disambiguation In the United States the Electoral College is the group of presidential electors required by the Constitution to form every four years for the sole purpose of voting for the president and vice president Each state appoints electors under the methods described by its legislature equal in number to its congressional delegation representatives and senators The federal District of Columbia also has 3 electors under an amendment adopted in 1961 Federal office holders including senators and representatives cannot be electors Of the current 538 electors a simple majority of 270 or more electoral votes is required to elect the president and vice president If no candidate achieves a majority there a contingent election is held by the House of Representatives to elect the president and by the Senate to elect the vice president Electoral votes out of 538 allocated to each state and the District of Columbia for presidential elections to be held in 2024 and 2028 based on the 2020 census every jurisdiction is entitled to at least 3 In the 2020 presidential election held using 2010 census data Joe Biden received 306 and Donald Trump 232 of the total 538 electoral votes In Maine upper right and Nebraska center the small circled numbers indicate congressional districts These are the only 2 states to use a district method for some of their allocated electors instead of a complete winner takes all party block voting The states and the District of Columbia hold a statewide or districtwide popular vote on Election Day in November to choose electors based upon how they have pledged to vote for president and vice president with some state laws prohibiting faithless electors All states except Maine and Nebraska use a party block voting or general ticket method to choose their electors meaning all their electors go to one winning ticket Maine and Nebraska choose one elector per congressional district and 2 electors for the ticket with the highest statewide vote The electors meet and vote in December and the inauguration of the president and vice president take place in January The merits of the electoral college system is a matter of ongoing debate in the United States which came closest to switching to direct voting for president in 1969 70 1 Supporters argue that it requires presidential candidates to have broad appeal across the country to win while critics argue that it is not representative of the popular will of the nation a Winner take all systems especially with representation not proportional to population do not align with the principle of one person one vote b 5 Critics object to the inequity that due to the distribution of electors individual citizens in states with smaller populations have more voting power than those in larger states 6 This is because the number of electors each state appoints is equal to the size of its congressional delegation each state is entitled to at least 3 regardless of its population and the apportionment of the statutorily fixed number of the rest is only roughly proportional This allocation has contributed to runners up of the nationwide popular vote being elected president in 1824 1876 1888 2000 and 2016 7 8 In addition faithless electors may not vote in accord with their pledge 9 c Further objection is that candidates focus their campaigns on swing states 11 Electoral colleges have been abandoned around the world in favor of direct elections for an executive president 12 13 Contents 1 Procedure 2 Background 3 History 3 1 Original plan 3 1 1 Breakdown and revision 3 1 2 The emergence of parties and campaigns 3 2 Evolution from unpledged to pledged electors 3 3 Evolution to the general ticket 3 4 Evolution of selection plans 3 5 Correlation between popular vote and electoral college votes 3 6 Three fifths clause and the role of slavery 3 7 Fourteenth amendment 3 8 Meeting of electors 4 Modern mechanics 4 1 Summary 4 2 Electors 4 2 1 Apportionment 4 2 2 Nominations 4 2 3 Selection process 4 2 4 Meetings 4 2 5 Faithless electors 4 3 Joint session of Congress 4 3 1 Historical objections and rejections 4 4 Contingencies 4 4 1 Contingent presidential election by House 4 4 2 Contingent vice presidential election by Senate 4 4 3 Deadlocked election 4 4 4 Continuity of government and peaceful transitions of power 4 5 Current electoral vote distribution 5 Chronological table 6 Alternative methods of choosing electors 6 1 Appointment by state legislature 6 2 Electoral districts 6 3 Congressional district method 6 3 1 Implementation 6 3 2 Recent abandoned adoption in other states 6 4 Proportional vote 7 Impacts and reception 7 1 Polling 40 7 2 Difference with popular vote 7 2 1 Notable elections 7 3 Favors largest swing states 7 4 Not all votes count the same 7 5 Lowers turnout 7 6 Obscures disenfranchisement within states 7 7 Americans in U S territories cannot vote 7 8 Disadvantages third parties 7 9 Federalism and state power 8 Efforts to abolish or reform 8 1 1969 1970 Bayh Celler amendment 8 2 Carter proposal 8 3 Recent proposals to abolish 8 4 National Popular Vote Interstate Compact 8 5 Litigation based on the 14th amendment 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Works cited 13 Further reading 14 External linksProcedure edit nbsp The New York electoral college delegation voting for Benjamin Harrison for president In the 1888 election Harrison became one of the five presidents elected without winning the popular vote Article II Section 1 Clause 2 of the United States Constitution directs each state to appoint a quantity of electors equal to that state s congressional delegation the number of members of the House of Representatives plus two Senators The same clause empowers each state legislature to determine the manner by which that state s electors are chosen but prohibits federal office holders from being named electors Following the national presidential election day on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November 14 each state and the federal district selects its electors according to its laws After a popular election the states identify and record their appointed electors in a Certificate of Ascertainment and those appointed electors then meet in their respective jurisdictions and produce a Certificate of Vote for their candidate both certificates are then sent to Congress to be opened and counted 15 In 48 of the 50 states state laws mandate that the winner of the plurality of the statewide popular vote receive all of that state s electoral votes 16 In Maine and Nebraska two electoral votes are assigned in this manner while the remaining electoral votes are allocated based on the plurality of votes in each of their congressional districts 17 The federal district Washington D C allocates its 3 electoral votes to the winner of its single district election States generally require electors to pledge to vote for that state s winning ticket to prevent electors from being faithless electors most states have adopted various laws to enforce the electors pledge 18 The electors of each state meet in their respective state capital on the first Monday after the second Wednesday of December between December 13 and 19 to cast their votes 16 The results are sent to and counted by the Congress where they are tabulated in the first week of January before a joint meeting of the Senate and the House of Representatives presided over by the current vice president as president of the Senate 16 19 Should a majority of votes not be cast for a candidate a contingent election takes place the House holds a presidential election session where one vote is cast by each of the fifty states the Senate is responsible for electing the vice president with each senator having one vote 20 The elected president and vice president are inaugurated on January 20 Since 1964 there have been 538 electors States select 535 of the electors this number matches the aggregate total of their congressional delegations 21 22 23 The additional three electors come from the Twenty third Amendment ratified in 1961 providing that the district established pursuant to Article I Section 8 Clause 17 as the seat of the federal government namely Washington D C is entitled to the same number of electors as the least populous state 24 In practice that results in Washington D C being entitled to 3 electors 25 26 Background editThe Electoral College was settled on as the means of electing president towards the end of the Constitutional Convention due to pressure from slave states wanting to increase their voting power since they could count slaves as 3 5 of a person when allocating electors and by small states who increased their power due to the minimum of 3 electors per state 27 The compromise was reached after other proposals including to get a direct election for president as proposed by Hamilton among others failed to get traction among slave states 27 This section possibly contains original research Too reliant on primary sourcesPlease improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Constitutional Convention in 1787 used the Virginia Plan as the basis for discussions as the Virginia proposal was the first The Virginia Plan called for Congress to elect the president 28 non primary source needed Delegates from a majority of states agreed to this mode of election After being debated however delegates came to oppose nomination by Congress for the reason that it could violate the separation of powers James Wilson then made a motion for electors for the purpose of choosing the president 29 non primary source needed Later in the convention a committee formed to work out various details including the mode of election of the president including final recommendations for the electors a group of people apportioned among the states in the same numbers as their representatives in Congress the formula for which had been resolved in lengthy debates resulting in the Connecticut Compromise and Three Fifths Compromise but chosen by each state in such manner as its Legislature may direct Committee member Gouverneur Morris explained the reasons for the change among others there were fears of intrigue if the president were chosen by a small group of men who met together regularly as well as concerns for the independence of the president if he were elected by Congress 30 non primary source needed However once the Electoral College had been decided on several delegates Mason Butler Morris Wilson and Madison openly recognized its ability to protect the election process from cabal corruption intrigue and faction Some delegates including James Wilson and James Madison preferred popular election of the executive 31 32 non primary source needed Madison acknowledged that while a popular vote would be ideal it would be difficult to get consensus on the proposal given the prevalence of slavery in the South There was one difficulty however of a serious nature attending an immediate choice by the people The right of suffrage was much more diffusive in the Northern than the Southern States and the latter could have no influence in the election on the score of Negroes The substitution of electors obviated this difficulty and seemed on the whole to be liable to the fewest objections 33 The Convention approved the committee s Electoral College proposal with minor modifications on September 6 1787 34 non primary source needed Delegates from states with smaller populations or limited land area such as Connecticut New Jersey and Maryland generally favored the Electoral College with some consideration for states 35 non primary source needed At the compromise providing for a runoff among the top five candidates the small states supposed that the House of Representatives with each state delegation casting one vote would decide most elections 36 In The Federalist Papers James Madison explained his views on the selection of the president and the Constitution In Federalist No 39 Madison argued that the Constitution was designed to be a mixture of state based and population based government Congress would have two houses the state based Senate and the population based House of Representatives Meanwhile the president would be elected by a mixture of the two modes 37 non primary source needed Alexander Hamilton in Federalist No 68 published on March 12 1788 laid out what he believed were the key advantages to the Electoral College The electors come directly from the people and them alone for that purpose only and for that time only This avoided a party run legislature or a permanent body that could be influenced by foreign interests before each election 38 non primary source needed Hamilton explained that the election was to take place among all the states so no corruption in any state could taint the great body of the people in their selection The choice was to be made by a majority of the Electoral College as majority rule is critical to the principles of republican government Hamilton argued that electors meeting in the state capitals were able to have information unavailable to the general public in a time before telecommunications Hamilton also argued that since no federal officeholder could be an elector none of the electors would be beholden to any presidential candidate 38 non primary source needed Another consideration was that the decision would be made without tumult and disorder as it would be a broad based one made simultaneously in various locales where the decision makers could deliberate reasonably not in one place where decision makers could be threatened or intimidated If the Electoral College did not achieve a decisive majority then the House of Representatives was to choose the president from among the top five candidates 39 citation needed ensuring selection of a presiding officer administering the laws would have both ability and good character Hamilton was also concerned about somebody unqualified but with a talent for low intrigue and the little arts of popularity attaining high office 38 non primary source needed Additionally in the Federalist No 10 James Madison argued against an interested and overbearing majority and the mischiefs of faction in an electoral system He defined a faction as a number of citizens whether amounting to a majority or minority of the whole who are united and actuated by some common impulse of passion or of interest adverse to the rights of other citizens or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community A republican government i e representative democracy as opposed to direct democracy combined with the principles of federalism with distribution of voter rights and separation of government powers would countervail against factions Madison further postulated in the Federalist No 10 that the greater the population and expanse of the Republic the more difficulty factions would face in organizing due to such issues as sectionalism 40 non primary source needed Although the United States Constitution refers to Electors and electors neither the phrase Electoral College nor any other name is used to describe the electors collectively It was not until the early 19th century that the name Electoral College came into general usage as the collective designation for the electors selected to cast votes for president and vice president The phrase was first written into federal law in 1845 and today the term appears in 3 U S C 4 in the section heading and in the text as college of electors 41 non primary source needed History editThis section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources United States Electoral College news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Original plan edit Article II Section 1 Clause 3 of the Constitution provided the original plan by which the electors voted for president Under the original plan each elector cast two votes for president electors did not vote for vice president Whoever received a majority of votes from the electors would become president with the person receiving the second most votes becoming vice president According to Stanley Chang the original plan of the Electoral College was based upon several assumptions and anticipations of the Framers of the Constitution 42 Choice of the president should reflect the sense of the people at a particular time not the dictates of a faction in a pre established body such as Congress or the State legislatures and independent of the influence of foreign powers 43 The choice would be made decisively with a full and fair expression of the public will but also maintaining as little opportunity as possible to tumult and disorder 44 Individual electors would be elected by citizens on a district by district basis Voting for president would include the widest electorate allowed in each state 45 Each presidential elector would exercise independent judgment when voting deliberating with the most complete information available in a system that over time tended to bring about a good administration of the laws passed by Congress 43 Candidates would not pair together on the same ticket with assumed placements toward each office of president and vice president Election expert William C Kimberling reflected on the original intent as follows The function of the College of Electors in choosing the president can be likened to that in the Roman Catholic Church of the College of Cardinals selecting the Pope The original idea was for the most knowledgeable and informed individuals from each State to select the president based solely on merit and without regard to State of origin or political party 46 According to Supreme Court Justice Robert H Jackson in a dissenting opinion the original intention of the framers was that the electors would not feel bound to support any particular candidate but would vote their conscience free of external pressure No one faithful to our history can deny that the plan originally contemplated what is implicit in its text that electors would be free agents to exercise an independent and nonpartisan judgment as to the men best qualified for the Nation s highest offices 47 In support for his view Justice Jackson cited Federalist No 68 It was desirable that the sense of the people should operate in the choice of the person to whom so important a trust was to be confided This end will be answered by committing the right of making it not to any pre established body but to men chosen by the people for the special purpose and at the particular conjuncture It was equally desirable that the immediate election should be made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station and acting under circumstances favorable to deliberation and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice A small number of persons selected by their fellow citizens from the general mass will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated investigations Dr Philip J VanFossen of Purdue University explains that the original purpose of the electors was not to reflect the will of the citizens but rather to serve as a check on a public who might be easily misled 48 Dr Randall Calvert the Eagleton Professor of Public Affairs and Political Science at Washington University in St Louis stated At the framing the more important consideration was that electors expected to be more knowledgeable and responsible would actually do the choosing 49 better source needed Breakdown and revision edit In spite of Hamilton s assertion that electors were to be chosen by mass election initially state legislatures chose the electors in most of the states 50 non primary source needed States progressively changed to selection by popular election In 1824 there were six states in which electors were still legislatively appointed By 1832 only South Carolina had not transitioned Since 1864 electors in every state have been chosen based on a popular election held on Election Day 21 The popular election for electors means the president and vice president are in effect chosen through indirect election by the citizens 51 The emergence of parties and campaigns edit Main article Political parties in the United States See also George Washington s Farewell Address Political parties The framers of the Constitution did not anticipate political parties 52 Indeed George Washington s Farewell Address in 1796 included an urgent appeal to avert such parties Neither did the framers anticipate candidates running for president Within just a few years of the ratification of the Constitution however both phenomena became permanent features of the political landscape of the United States citation needed The emergence of political parties and nationally coordinated election campaigns soon complicated matters in the elections of 1796 and 1800 In 1796 Federalist Party candidate John Adams won the presidential election Finishing in second place was Democratic Republican Party candidate Thomas Jefferson the Federalists opponent who became the vice president This resulted in the president and vice president being of different political parties citation needed In 1800 the Democratic Republican Party again nominated Jefferson for president and also again nominated Aaron Burr for vice president After the electors voted Jefferson and Burr were tied with one another with 73 electoral votes each Since ballots did not distinguish between votes for president and votes for vice president every ballot cast for Burr technically counted as a vote for him to become president despite Jefferson clearly being his party s first choice Lacking a clear winner by constitutional standards the election had to be decided by the House of Representatives pursuant to the Constitution s contingency election provision citation needed Having already lost the presidential contest Federalist Party representatives in the lame duck House session seized upon the opportunity to embarrass their opposition by attempting to elect Burr over Jefferson The House deadlocked for 35 ballots as neither candidate received the necessary majority vote of the state delegations in the House The votes of nine states were needed for a conclusive election On the 36th ballot Delaware s lone Representative James A Bayard made it known that he intended to break the impasse for fear that failure to do so could endanger the future of the Union Bayard and other Federalists from South Carolina Maryland and Vermont abstained breaking the deadlock and giving Jefferson a majority 53 Responding to the problems from those elections Congress proposed on December 9 1803 and three fourths of the states ratified by June 15 1804 the Twelfth Amendment Starting with the 1804 election the amendment requires electors to cast separate ballots for president and vice president replacing the system outlined in Article II Section 1 Clause 3 citation needed Evolution from unpledged to pledged electors edit Some Founding Fathers hoped that each elector would be elected by the citizens of a district and that elector was to be free to analyze and deliberate regarding who is best suited to be president citation needed In Federalist No 68 Alexander Hamilton described the Founding Fathers view of how electors would be chosen A small number of persons selected by their fellow citizens from the general mass will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated tasks They the framers of the constitution have not made the appointment of the President to depend on any preexisting bodies of men i e Electors pledged to vote one way or another who might be tampered with beforehand to prostitute their votes i e to be told how to vote but they have referred it in the first instance to an immediate act of the people of America to be exerted in the choice of persons Electors to the Electoral College for the temporary and sole purpose of making the appointment And they have EXCLUDED from eligibility to this trust all those who from situation might be suspected of too great devotion to the President in office in other words no one can be an Elector who is prejudiced toward the president Thus without corrupting the body of the people the immediate agents in the election will at least enter upon the task free from any sinister bias Electors must not come to the Electoral College with bias Their transient existence and their detached unbiased situation already taken notice of afford a satisfactory prospect of their continuing so to the conclusion of it 54 However when electors were pledged to vote for a specific candidate the slate of electors chosen by the state were no longer free agents independent thinkers or deliberative representatives They became as Justice Robert H Jackson wrote voluntary party lackeys and intellectual non entities 55 According to Hamilton writing in 1788 the selection of the president should be made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station of president 54 Hamilton stated that the electors were to analyze the list of potential presidents and select the best one He also used the term deliberate In a 2020 opinion of the U S Supreme Court the Court additionally cited John Jay s view that the electors choices would reflect discretion and discernment 56 Reflecting on this original intention a U S Senate report in 1826 critiqued the evolution of the system It was the intention of the Constitution that these electors should be an independent body of men chosen by the people from among themselves on account of their superior discernment virtue and information and that this select body should be left to make the election according to their own will without the slightest control from the body of the people That this intention has failed of its object in every election is a fact of such universal notoriety that no one can dispute it Electors therefore have not answered the design of their institution They are not the independent body and superior characters which they were intended to be They are not left to the exercise of their own judgment on the contrary they give their vote or bind themselves to give it according to the will of their constituents They have degenerated into mere agents in a case which requires no agency and where the agent must be useless 57 In 1833 Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story detailed how badly from the framers intention the Electoral Process had been subverted In no respect have the views of the framers of the constitution been so completely frustrated as relates to the independence of the electors in the electoral colleges It is notorious that the electors are now chosen wholly with reference to particular candidates and are silently pledged to vote for them Nay upon some occasions the electors publicly pledge themselves to vote for a particular person and thus in effect the whole foundation of the system so elaborately constructed is subverted 58 non primary source needed Story observed that if an elector does what the framers of the Constitution expected him to do he would be considered immoral So that nothing is left to the electors after their choice but to register votes which are already pledged and an exercise of an independent judgment would be treated as a political usurpation dishonorable to the individual and a fraud upon his constituents 58 Evolution to the general ticket edit Article II Section 1 Clause 2 of the Constitution states Each State shall appoint in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct a Number of Electors equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress but no Senator or Representative or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States shall be appointed an Elector According to Hamilton and Madison they intended that this would take place district by district 59 60 non primary source needed The district plan was last carried out in Michigan in 1892 61 non primary source needed For example in Massachusetts in 1820 the rule stated the people shall vote by ballot on which shall be designated who is voted for as an Elector for the district 62 non primary source needed In other words the name of a candidate for president was not on the ballot Instead citizens voted for their local elector Some state leaders began to adopt the strategy that the favorite partisan presidential candidate among the people in their state would have a much better chance if all of the electors selected by their state were sure to vote the same way a general ticket of electors pledged to a party candidate 63 Once one state took that strategy the others felt compelled to follow suit in order to compete for the strongest influence on the election 63 When James Madison and Alexander Hamilton two of the most important architects of the Electoral College saw this strategy being taken by some states they protested strongly 59 60 non primary source needed Madison said that when the Constitution was written all of its authors assumed individual electors would be elected in their districts and it was inconceivable that a general ticket of electors dictated by a state would supplant the concept Madison wrote to George Hay The district mode was mostly if not exclusively in view when the Constitution was framed and adopted amp was exchanged for the general ticket many years later 64 Each state government was free to have its own plan for selecting its electors and the Constitution does not explicitly require states to popularly elect their electors However Federalist No 68 insofar as it reflects the intent of the founders states that Electors will be selected by their fellow citizens from the general mass and with regard to choosing Electors they the framers have referred it in the first instance to an immediate act of the people of America Several methods for selecting electors are described below Madison and Hamilton were so upset by the trend to general tickets that they advocated a constitutional amendment to prevent anything other than the district plan Hamilton drafted an amendment to the Constitution mandating the district plan for selecting electors 65 non primary source needed However Hamilton s untimely death in a duel with Aaron Burr in 1804 prevented him from advancing his proposed reforms any further T he election of Presidential Electors by districts is an amendment very proper to be brought forward Madison told George Hay in 1823 64 non primary source needed Madison also drafted a constitutional amendment that would insure the original district plan of the framers 66 non primary source needed Jefferson agreed with Hamilton and Madison saying all agree that an election by districts would be the best 61 non primary source needed Jefferson explained to Madison s correspondent why he was doubtful of the amendment being ratified the states are now so numerous that I despair of ever seeing another amendment of the constitution 67 non primary source needed Evolution of selection plans edit In 1789 the at large popular vote the winner take all method began with Pennsylvania and Maryland Massachusetts Virginia and Delaware used a district plan by popular vote and state legislatures chose in the five other states participating in the election Connecticut Georgia New Hampshire New Jersey and South Carolina 68 failed verification New York North Carolina and Rhode Island did not participate in the election New York s legislature deadlocked and abstained North Carolina and Rhode Island had not yet ratified the Constitution 69 By 1800 Virginia and Rhode Island voted at large Kentucky Maryland and North Carolina voted popularly by district and eleven states voted by state legislature Beginning in 1804 there was a definite trend towards the winner take all system for statewide popular vote 70 non primary source needed By 1832 only South Carolina legislatively chose its electors and it abandoned the method after 1860 70 non primary source needed Maryland was the only state using a district plan and from 1836 district plans fell out of use until the 20th century though Michigan used a district plan for 1892 only States using popular vote by district have included ten states from all regions of the country 71 non primary source needed Since 1836 statewide winner take all popular voting for electors has been the almost universal practice 72 non primary source needed Currently Maine since 1972 and Nebraska since 1996 use a district plan with two at large electors assigned to support the winner of the statewide popular vote 73 non primary source needed Correlation between popular vote and electoral college votes edit Since the mid 19th century when all electors have been popularly chosen the Electoral College has elected the candidate who received the most though not necessarily a majority popular votes nationwide except in four elections 1876 1888 2000 and 2016 In 1824 when there were six states in which electors were legislatively appointed rather than popularly elected the true national popular vote is uncertain The electors in 1824 failed to select a winning candidate so the matter was decided by the House of Representatives 74 better source needed Three fifths clause and the role of slavery edit After the initial estimates agreed to in the original Constitution Congressional and Electoral College reapportionment was made according to a decennial census to reflect population changes modified by counting three fifths of slaves On this basis after the first census the Electoral College still gave the free men of slave owning states but never slaves extra power Electors based on a count of these disenfranchised people in the choice of the U S president 75 At the Constitutional Convention the college composition in theory amounted to 49 votes for northern states in the process of abolishing slavery and 42 for slave holding states including Delaware In the event the first i e 1788 presidential election lacked votes and electors for unratified Rhode Island 3 and North Carolina 7 and for New York 8 which reported too late the Northern majority was 38 to 35 76 For the next two decades the three fifths clause led to electors of free soil Northern states numbering 8 and 11 more than Southern states The latter had in the compromise relinquished counting two fifths of their slaves and after 1810 were outnumbered by 15 4 to 23 2 77 While House members for Southern states were boosted by an average of 1 3 78 a free soil majority in the college maintained over this early republic and Antebellum period 79 Scholars further conclude that the three fifths clause had low impact on sectional proportions and factional strength until denying the North a pronounced supermajority as to the Northern federal initiative to abolish slavery The seats that the South gained from such slave bonus were quite evenly distributed between the parties In the First Party System 1795 1823 the Jefferson Republicans gained 1 1 percent more adherents from the slave bonus while the Federalists lost the same proportion At the Second Party System 1823 1837 the emerging Jacksonians gained just 0 7 more seats versus the opposition loss of 1 6 80 The three fifths slave count rule is associated with three or four outcomes 1792 1860 The clause having reduced the South s power led to John Adams s win in 1796 over Thomas Jefferson 81 In 1800 historian Garry Wills argues Jefferson s victory over Adams was due to the slave bonus count in the Electoral College as Adams would have won if citizens votes were used for each state 82 However historian Sean Wilentz points out that Jefferson s purported slave advantage ignores an offset by electoral manipulation by anti Jefferson forces in Pennsylvania Wilentz concludes that it is a myth to say that the Electoral College was a pro slavery ploy 83 In 1824 the presidential selection was passed to the House of Representatives and John Quincy Adams was chosen over Andrew Jackson who won fewer citizens votes Then Jackson won in 1828 but would have lost if the college were citizen only apportionment Scholars conclude that in the 1828 race Jackson benefited materially from the Three fifths clause by providing his margin of victory The first Jeffersonian and Jacksonian victories were of great importance as they ushered in sustained party majorities of several Congresses and presidential party eras 84 Besides the Constitution prohibiting Congress from regulating foreign or domestic slave trade before 1808 and a duty on states to return escaped persons held to service 85 legal scholar Akhil Reed Amar argues that the college was originally advocated by slaveholders as a bulwark to prop up slavery In the Congressional apportionment provided in the text of the Constitution with its Three Fifths Compromise estimate Virginia emerged as the big winner with more than a quarter of the votes needed to win an election in the first round for Washington s first presidential election in 1788 Following the 1790 United States census the most populous state was Virginia with 39 1 slaves or 292 315 counted three fifths to yield a calculated number of 175 389 for congressional apportionment 86 The free state of Pennsylvania had 10 more free persons than Virginia but got 20 fewer electoral votes 87 Pennsylvania split eight to seven for Jefferson favoring Jefferson with a majority of 53 in a state with 0 1 slave population 88 Historian Eric Foner agrees the Constitution s Three Fifths Compromise gave protection to slavery 89 Supporters of the College have provided many counterarguments to the charges that it defended slavery Abraham Lincoln the president who helped abolish slavery won a College majority in 1860 despite winning 39 8 of citizen s votes 90 This however was a clear plurality of a popular vote divided among four main candidates Benner notes that Jefferson s first margin of victory would have been wider had the entire slave population been counted on a per capita basis 91 He also notes that some of the most vociferous critics of a national popular vote at the constitutional convention were delegates from free states including Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania who declared that such a system would lead to a great evil of cabal and corruption and Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts who called a national popular vote radically vicious 91 Delegates Oliver Ellsworth and Roger Sherman of Connecticut a state which had adopted a gradual emancipation law three years earlier also criticized a national popular vote 91 Of like view was Charles Cotesworth Pinckney a member of Adams Federalist Party presidential candidate in 1800 He hailed from South Carolina and was a slaveholder 91 In 1824 Andrew Jackson a slaveholder from Tennessee was similarly defeated by John Quincy Adams a strong critic of slavery 91 Fourteenth amendment edit Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a state s representation in the House of Representatives to be reduced if the state denies the right to vote to any male citizen aged 21 or older unless on the basis of participation in rebellion or other crime The reduction is to be proportionate to such people denied a vote This amendment refers to the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States among other elections It is the only part of the Constitution currently alluding to electors being selected by popular vote On May 8 1866 during a debate on the Fourteenth Amendment Thaddeus Stevens the leader of the Republicans in the House of Representatives delivered a speech on the amendment s intent Regarding Section 2 he said 92 The second section I consider the most important in the article It fixes the basis of representation in Congress If any State shall exclude any of her adult male citizens from the elective franchise or abridge that right she shall forfeit her right to representation in the same proportion The effect of this provision will be either to compel the States to grant universal suffrage or so shear them of their power as to keep them forever in a hopeless minority in the national Government both legislative and executive 93 Federal law 2 U S C 6 implements Section 2 s mandate Meeting of electors edit See also Electoral Count Act nbsp Cases of certificates of the electoral college votes confirming the results of the 2020 US election after they had been removed from the House Chambers by congressional staff during the January 6 United States Capitol attackArticle II Section 1 Clause 4 of the Constitution authorizes Congress to fix the day on which the electors shall vote which must be the same day throughout the United States And both Article II Section 1 Clause 3 and the Twelfth Amendment that replaced it specifies that the President of the Senate shall in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted In 1887 Congress passed the Electoral Count Act now codified in Title 3 Chapter 1 of the United States Code establishing specific procedures for the counting of the electoral votes The law was passed in response to the disputed 1876 presidential election in which several states submitted competing slates of electors Among its provisions the law established deadlines that the states must meet when selecting their electors resolving disputes and when they must cast their electoral votes 19 94 Since 1936 the date fixed by Congress for the meeting of the Electoral College is on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December next following their appointment 95 non primary source needed Article II Section 1 Clause 2 disqualifies all elected and appointed federal officials from being electors The Office of the Federal Register is charged with administering the Electoral College 96 After the vote each state sends to Congress a certified record of their electoral votes called the Certificate of Vote These certificates are opened during a joint session of Congress held on January 6 97 non primary source needed unless another date is specified by law and read aloud by the incumbent vice president acting in his capacity as president of the Senate If any person receives an absolute majority of electoral votes that person is declared the winner 98 non primary source needed If there is a tie or if no candidate for either or both offices receives an absolute majority then choice falls to Congress in a procedure known as a contingent election Modern mechanics edit nbsp After the popular election in November a state s Certificate of Ascertainment officially announces the state s electors for the Electoral College The appointed Electoral College members later meet in the state capital in December to cast their votes Summary edit Even though the aggregate national popular vote is calculated by state officials media organizations and the Federal Election Commission the people only indirectly elect the president and vice president The president and vice president of the United States are elected by the Electoral College which consists of 538 electors from the fifty states and Washington D C Electors are selected state by state as determined by the laws of each state Since the 1824 election the majority of states have chosen their presidential electors based on winner take all results in the statewide popular vote on Election Day 99 As of 2020 update Maine and Nebraska are exceptions as both use the congressional district method Maine since 1972 and in Nebraska since 1996 100 In most states the popular vote ballots list the names of the presidential and vice presidential candidates who run on a ticket The slate of electors that represent the winning ticket will vote for those two offices Electors are nominated by the party and usually they vote for the ticket to which are promised non primary source needed 101 Many states require an elector to vote for the candidate to which the elector is pledged but some faithless electors have voted for other candidates or refrained from voting A candidate must receive an absolute majority of electoral votes currently 270 to win the presidency or the vice presidency If no candidate receives a majority in the election for president or vice president the election is determined via a contingency procedure established by the Twelfth Amendment In such a situation the House chooses one of the top three presidential electoral vote winners as the president while the Senate chooses one of the top two vice presidential electoral vote winners as vice president Electors edit Apportionment edit Further information United States congressional apportionment nbsp Population per electoral vote for each state and Washington D C 2020 census A single elector could represent more than 700 000 people or under 200 000 A state s number of electors equals the number of representatives plus two electors for the senators the state has in the United States Congress 102 103 Each state is entitled to at least one representative the remaining number of representatives per state is apportioned based on their respective populations determined every ten years by the United States census In summary 153 electors are divided equally among the states and the District of Columbia 3 each and the remaining 385 are assigned by an apportionment among states 104 non primary source needed Under the Twenty third Amendment Washington D C is allocated as many electors as it would have if it were a state but no more electors than the least populous state Because the least populous state Wyoming according to the 2020 census has three electors D C cannot have more than three electors Even if D C were a state its population would entitle it to only three electors Based on its population per electoral vote D C has the third highest per capita Electoral College representation after Wyoming and Vermont 105 non primary source needed Currently there are 538 electors based on 435 representatives 100 senators from the fifty states and three electors from Washington D C The six states with the most electors are California 54 Texas 40 Florida 30 New York 28 Illinois 19 and Pennsylvania 19 The District of Columbia and the six least populous states Alaska Delaware North Dakota South Dakota Vermont and Wyoming have three electors each 106 non primary source needed Nominations edit The custom of allowing recognized political parties to select a slate of prospective electors developed early In contemporary practice each presidential vice presidential ticket has an associated slate of potential electors Then on Election Day the voters select a ticket and thereby select the associated electors 21 Candidates for elector are nominated by state chapters of nationally oriented political parties in the months prior to Election Day In some states the electors are nominated by voters in primaries the same way other presidential candidates are nominated In some states such as Oklahoma Virginia and North Carolina electors are nominated in party conventions In Pennsylvania the campaign committee of each candidate names their respective electoral college candidates an attempt to discourage faithless electors Varying by state electors may also be elected by state legislatures or appointed by the parties themselves 107 unreliable fringe source Selection process edit Article II Section 1 Clause 2 of the Constitution requires each state legislature to determine how electors for the state are to be chosen but it disqualifies any person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States from being an elector 108 Under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment any person who has sworn an oath to support the United States Constitution in order to hold either a state or federal office and later rebelled against the United States directly or by giving assistance to those doing so is disqualified from being an elector However Congress may remove this disqualification by a two thirds vote in each House All states currently choose presidential electors by popular vote As of 2020 eight states d name the electors on the ballot Mostly the short ballot is used the short ballot displays the names of the candidates for president and vice president rather than the names of prospective electors 109 Some states support voting for write in candidates those that do may require pre registration of write in candidacy with designation of electors being done at that time 110 111 Since 1996 all but two states have followed the winner takes all method of allocating electors by which every person named on the slate for the ticket winning the statewide popular vote are named as presidential electors 112 113 Maine and Nebraska are the only states not using this method 100 In those states the winner of the popular vote in each of its congressional districts is awarded one elector and the winner of the statewide vote is then awarded the state s remaining two electors 112 114 This method has been used in Maine since 1972 and in Nebraska since 1996 The Supreme Court previously upheld the power for a state to choose electors on the basis of congressional districts holding that states possess plenary power to decide how electors are appointed in McPherson v Blacker 146 U S 1 1892 The Tuesday following the first Monday in November has been fixed as the day for holding federal elections called the Election Day 115 After the election each state prepares seven Certificates of Ascertainment each listing the candidates for president and vice president their pledged electors and the total votes each candidacy received 116 non primary source needed One certificate is sent as soon after Election Day as practicable to the National Archivist in Washington The Certificates of Ascertainment are mandated to carry the state seal and the signature of the governor or mayor of D C 117 non primary source needed Meetings edit nbsp When the state s electors meet in December they cast their ballots and record their vote on a Certificate of Vote which is then sent to the U S Congress From the election of 1876 External mediaImages nbsp A 2020 Pennsylvania elector holds a ballot for Joe Biden Biden s name is handwritten on the blank line Reuters December 14 2020 nbsp A closeup of the 2020 Georgia Electoral College ballot for Kamala Harris using a format in which Harris s name is checked on the pre printed card The New Yorker December 18 2020 Video nbsp 2020 California State Electoral College meeting YouTube video Reuters December 14 2020 The Electoral College never meets as one body Electors meet in their respective state capitals electors for the District of Columbia meet within the District on the same day set by Congress as the Monday after the second Wednesday in December at which time they cast their electoral votes on separate ballots for president and vice president 118 119 120 non primary source needed Although procedures in each state vary slightly the electors generally follow a similar series of steps and the Congress has constitutional authority to regulate the procedures the states follow citation needed The meeting is opened by the election certification official often that state s secretary of state or equivalent who reads the certificate of ascertainment This document sets forth who was chosen to cast the electoral votes The attendance of the electors is taken and any vacancies are noted in writing The next step is the selection of a president or chairman of the meeting sometimes also with a vice chairman The electors sometimes choose a secretary often not an elector to take the minutes of the meeting In many states political officials give short speeches at this point in the proceedings non primary source needed When the time for balloting arrives the electors choose one or two people to act as tellers Some states provide for the placing in nomination of a candidate to receive the electoral votes the candidate for president of the political party of the electors Each elector submits a written ballot with the name of a candidate for president Ballot formats vary between the states in New Jersey for example the electors cast ballots by checking the name of the candidate on a pre printed card in North Carolina the electors write the name of the candidate on a blank card The tellers count the ballots and announce the result The next step is the casting of the vote for vice president which follows a similar pattern non primary source needed Under the Electoral Count Act updated and codified in 3 U S C 9 each state s electors must complete six certificates of vote Each Certificate of Vote or Certificate of the Vote must be signed by all of the electors and a certificate of ascertainment must be attached to each of the certificates of vote Each Certificate of Vote must include the names of those who received an electoral vote for either the office of president or of vice president The electors certify the Certificates of Vote and copies of the certificates are then sent in the following fashion 121 non primary source needed One is sent by registered mail to the President of the Senate who usually is the incumbent vice president of the United States Two are sent by registered mail to the Archivist of the United States Two are sent to the states secretary of state and One is sent to the chief judge of the United States district court where those electors met A staff member of the President of the Senate collects the certificates of vote as they arrive and prepares them for the joint session of the Congress The certificates are arranged unopened in alphabetical order and placed in two special mahogany boxes Alabama through Missouri including the District of Columbia are placed in one box and Montana through Wyoming are placed in the other box 122 Before 1950 the Secretary of State s office oversaw the certifications but since then the Office of Federal Register in the Archivist s office reviews them to make sure the documents sent to the archive and Congress match and that all formalities have been followed sometimes requiring states to correct the documents 96 Faithless electors edit Main article Faithless elector An elector votes for each office but at least one of these votes president or vice president must be cast for a person who is not a resident of the same state as that elector 123 A faithless elector is one who does not cast an electoral vote for the candidate of the party for whom that elector pledged to vote Faithless electors are comparatively rare because electors are generally chosen among those who are already personally committed to a party and party s candidate 124 Thirty three states plus the District of Columbia have laws against faithless electors 125 which were first enforced after the 2016 election where ten electors voted or attempted to vote contrary to their pledges Faithless electors have never changed the outcome of a U S election for president Altogether 23 529 electors have taken part in the Electoral College as of the 2016 election only 165 electors have cast votes for someone other than their party s nominee Of that group 71 did so because the nominee had died 63 Democratic Party electors in 1872 when presidential nominee Horace Greeley died and eight Republican Party electors in 1912 when vice presidential nominee James S Sherman died 126 While faithless electors have never changed the outcome of any presidential election there are two occasions where the vice presidential election has been influenced by faithless electors In the 1796 election 18 electors pledged to the Federalist Party ticket cast their first vote as pledged for John Adams electing him president but did not cast their second vote for his running mate Thomas Pinckney As a result Adams attained 71 electoral votes Jefferson received 68 and Pinckney received 59 meaning Jefferson rather than Pinckney became vice president 127 In the 1836 election Virginia s 23 electors who were pledged to Richard Mentor Johnson voted instead for former U S Senator William Smith which left Johnson one vote short of the majority needed to be elected In accordance with the Twelfth Amendment a contingent election was held in the Senate between the top two receivers of electoral votes Johnson and Francis Granger for vice president with Johnson being elected on the first ballot 128 Some constitutional scholars argued that state restrictions would be struck down if challenged based on Article II and the Twelfth Amendment 129 However the United States Supreme Court has consistently ruled that state restrictions are allowed under the Constitution In Ray v Blair 343 U S 214 1952 the Court ruled in favor of state laws requiring electors to pledge to vote for the winning candidate as well as removing electors who refuse to pledge As stated in the ruling electors are acting as a functionary of the state not the federal government In Chiafalo v Washington 591 U S 2020 and a related case the Court held that electors must vote in accord with their state s laws 130 131 Faithless electors also may face censure from their political party as they are usually chosen based on their perceived party loyalty 132 Joint session of Congress edit Main articles Electoral Count Act and Electoral Count Reform and Presidential Transition Improvement Act External videos nbsp A joint session of Congress confirms the 2020 electoral college results YouTube video Global News January 6 2021 The Twelfth Amendment mandates Congress assemble in joint session to count the electoral votes and declare the winners of the election 133 The session is ordinarily required to take place on January 6 in the calendar year immediately following the meetings of the presidential electors 134 Since the Twentieth Amendment the newly elected joint Congress declares the winner of the election all elections before 1936 were determined by the outgoing House The Office of the Federal Register is charged with administering the Electoral College 96 The meeting is held at 1 p m in the chamber of the U S House of Representatives 134 The sitting vice president is expected to preside but in several cases the president pro tempore of the Senate has chaired the proceedings The vice president and the speaker of the House sit at the podium with the vice president sitting to the right of the speaker of the House Senate pages bring in two mahogany boxes containing each state s certified vote and place them on tables in front of the senators and representatives Each house appoints two tellers to count the vote normally one member of each political party Relevant portions of the certificate of vote are read for each state in alphabetical order Before an amendment to the law in 2022 members of Congress could object to any state s vote count provided objection is presented in writing and is signed by at least one member of each house of Congress In 2022 the number of members required to make an objection was raised to one fifth of each House An appropriately made objection is followed by the suspension of the joint session and by separate debates and votes in each House of Congress after both Houses deliberate on the objection the joint session is resumed A state s certificate of vote can be rejected only if both Houses of Congress vote to accept the objection via a simple majority 135 meaning the votes from the State in question are not counted Individual votes can also be rejected and are also not counted If there are no objections or all objections are overruled the presiding officer simply includes a state s votes as declared in the certificate of vote in the official tally After the certificates from all states are read and the respective votes are counted the presiding officer simply announces the final state of the vote This announcement concludes the joint session and formalizes the recognition of the president elect and of the vice president elect The senators then depart from the House chamber The final tally is printed in the Senate and House journals Historical objections and rejections edit Objections to the electoral vote count are rarely raised although it has occurred a few times In 1864 all votes from Louisiana and Tennessee were rejected because of the American Civil War In 1872 all votes from Arkansas and Louisiana plus three of the eleven electoral votes from Georgia were rejected due to allegations of electoral fraud and due to submitting votes for a candidate that had died 136 After the crises of the 1876 election where in a few states it was claimed there were two competing state governments and thus competing slates of electors Congress adopted the Electoral Count Act to regularize objection procedure 137 During the vote count in 2001 after the close 2000 presidential election between Governor George W Bush of Texas and Vice President Al Gore The election had been controversial and its outcome was decided by the court case Bush v Gore Gore who as vice president was required to preside over his own Electoral College defeat by five electoral votes denied the objections all of which were raised by representatives and would have favored his candidacy after no senators would agree to jointly object Objections were raised in the vote count of the 2004 election alleging voter suppression and machine irregularities in Ohio and on that occasion one representative and one senator objected following protocols mandated by the Electoral Count Act The joint session was suspended as outlined in these protocols and the objections were quickly disposed of and rejected by both Houses of Congress Eleven objections were raised during the vote count for the 2016 election all by various Democratic representatives As no senator joined the representatives in any objection all objections were blocked by Vice President Joe Biden 138 In the 2020 election there were two objections and the proceeding was interrupted by an attack on the U S Capitol by supporters of outgoing President Donald Trump Objections to the votes from Arizona and Pennsylvania were each raised by a House member and a senator and triggered separate debate in each chamber but were soundly defeated 139 A few House members raised objections to the votes from Georgia Michigan Nevada and Wisconsin but they could not move forward because no senator joined in those objections 140 Contingencies edit Further information Contingent election Contingent presidential election by House edit If no candidate for president receives an absolute majority of the electoral votes since 1964 270 of the 538 electoral votes then the Twelfth Amendment requires the House of Representatives to go into session immediately to choose a president In this event the House of Representatives is limited to choosing from among the three candidates who received the most electoral votes for president Each state delegation votes en bloc each delegation having a single vote the District of Columbia does not get to vote A candidate must receive an absolute majority of state delegation votes i e from 1959 which is the last time a new state was admitted to the union a minimum of 26 votes in order for that candidate to become the president elect Additionally delegations from at least two thirds of all the states must be present for voting to take place The House continues balloting until it elects a president The House of Representatives has been required to choose the president only twice in 1801 under Article II Section 1 Clause 3 and in 1825 under the Twelfth Amendment Contingent vice presidential election by Senate edit If no candidate for vice president receives an absolute majority of electoral votes then the Senate must go into session to choose a vice president The Senate is limited to choosing from the two candidates who received the most electoral votes for vice president Normally this would mean two candidates one less than the number of candidates available in the House vote However the text is written in such a way that all candidates with the most and second most electoral votes are eligible for the Senate election this number could theoretically be larger than two The Senate votes in the normal manner in this case i e ballots are individually cast by each senator not by state delegations However two thirds of the senators must be present for voting to take place Additionally the Twelfth Amendment states a majority of the whole number of senators currently 51 of 100 is necessary for election 141 Further the language requiring an absolute majority of Senate votes precludes the sitting vice president from breaking any tie that might occur 142 although some academics and journalists have speculated to the contrary 143 The only time the Senate chose the vice president was in 1837 In that instance the Senate adopted an alphabetical roll call and voting aloud The rules further stated I f a majority of the number of senators shall vote for either the said Richard M Johnson or Francis Granger he shall be declared by the presiding officer of the Senate constitutionally elected Vice President of the United States the Senate chose Johnson 144 Deadlocked election edit Section 3 of the Twentieth Amendment specifies that if the House of Representatives has not chosen a president elect in time for the inauguration noon EST on January 20 then the vice president elect becomes acting president until the House selects a president Section 3 also specifies that Congress may statutorily provide for who will be acting president if there is neither a president elect nor a vice president elect in time for the inauguration Under the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 the Speaker of the House would become acting president until either the House selects a president or the Senate selects a vice president Neither of these situations has ever arisen Continuity of government and peaceful transitions of power edit See also United States presidential assassination attempts and plots and United States federal government continuity of operations In Federalist No 68 Alexander Hamilton argued that one concern that led the Constitutional Convention to create the Electoral College was to ensure peaceful transitions of power and continuity of government during transitions between presidential administrations 145 While recognizing that the question had not been presented in the case the U S Supreme Court stated in the majority opinion in Chiafalo v Washington 2020 that nothing in this opinion should be taken to permit the States to bind electors to a deceased candidate after noting that more than one third of the cumulative faithless elector votes in U S presidential elections history were cast during the 1872 presidential election when Liberal Republican Party and Democratic Party nominee Horace Greeley died after the polls were held and vote tabulations were completed by the states but before the Electoral College cast its ballots and acknowledging the petitioners concern about the potential turmoil that the death of a presidential candidate between Election Day and the Electoral College meetings could cause 146 147 In 1872 Greeley had carried the popular vote in 6 states Georgia Kentucky Maryland Missouri Tennessee and Texas and had 66 electoral votes pledged to him but after his death on November 29 1872 63 of the electors pledged to him voted faithlessly while 3 votes from Georgia that remained pledged to him were rejected at the Electoral College vote count on February 12 1873 on the grounds that he had died 148 149 However Greeley s running mate B Gratz Brown still received the 3 electoral votes from Georgia for vice president that were rejected for Greeley which brought Brown s number of electoral votes for vice president to 47 since he still received all 28 electoral votes from Maryland Tennessee and Texas and 16 other electoral votes from Georgia Kentucky and Missouri in total while the other 19 electors from the latter states voted faithlessly for vice president 150 During the presidential transition following the 1860 presidential election Abraham Lincoln had to arrive in Washington D C in disguise and on an altered train schedule after the Pinkerton National Detective Agency found evidence that suggested a secessionist plot to assassinate Lincoln would be attempted in Baltimore 151 152 During the presidential transition following the 1928 presidential election an Argentine anarchist group plotted to assassinate Herbert Hoover while Hoover was traveling through Central and South America and crossing the Andes from Chile by train but were prevented because the plotters were arrested before the attempt was made 153 154 During the presidential transition following the 1932 presidential election Giuseppe Zangara attempted to assassinate Franklin D Roosevelt by gunshot while Roosevelt was giving an impromptu speech in a car in Miami but instead killed Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak who was also a passenger in the car and wounded 5 bystanders 155 156 During the presidential transition following the 1960 presidential election Richard Paul Pavlick plotted to assassinate John F Kennedy while Kennedy was vacationing in Palm Beach Florida by detonating a dynamite laden car where Kennedy was staying but Pavlick delayed his attempt and was subsequently arrested and committed to a mental hospital 157 158 159 160 During the presidential transition following the 2008 presidential election Barack Obama was targeted in separate security incidents by an assassination plot and a death threat 161 162 after an assassination plot in Denver during the 2008 Democratic National Convention and an assassination plot in Tennessee during the election were prevented 163 164 Ratified in 1933 Section 3 of the 20th Amendment requires that if a President elect dies before Inauguration Day that the Vice President elect becomes the President 165 166 Akhil Amar has noted that the explicit text of the 20th Amendment does not specify when the candidates of the winning presidential ticket officially become the President elect and Vice President elect and that the text of Article II Section I and the 12th Amendment suggests that candidates for president and vice president are only formally elected upon the Electoral College vote count 167 Conversely a 2020 report issued by the Congressional Research Service CRS stated that the balance of scholarly opinion has concluded that the winning presidential ticket is formally elected as soon as the majority of the electoral votes they receive are cast according to the 1932 House committee report on the 20th Amendment 165 If a vacancy on a presidential ticket occurs before Election Day as in 1912 when Republican nominee for Vice President James S Sherman died less than a week before the election and was replaced by Nicholas Murray Butler at the Electoral College meetings and in 1972 when Democratic nominee for Vice President Thomas Eagleton withdrew his nomination less than three weeks after the Democratic National Convention and was replaced by Sargent Shriver the internal rules of the political parties apply for filling vacancies 168 If a vacancy on a presidential ticket occurs between Election Day and the Electoral College meetings the 2020 CRS report notes that most legal commentators have suggested that political parties would still follow their internal rules for filling the vacancies 169 However in 1872 the Democratic National Committee did not meet to name a replacement for Horace Greeley 148 and the 2020 CRS report notes that presidential electors may argue that they are permitted to vote faithlessly if a vacancy occurs between Election Day and the Electoral College meetings since they were pledged to vote for a specific candidate 169 Under the Presidential Succession Clause of Article II Section I Congress is delegated the power to by Law provide for the Case of Removal Death Resignation or Inability both of the President and Vice President declaring what Officer shall then act as President and such Officer shall act accordingly until the Disability be removed or a President shall be elected 170 e f Pursuant to the Presidential Succession Clause the 2nd United States Congress passed the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 that required a special election by the Electoral College in the case of a dual vacancy in the Presidency and Vice Presidency 174 175 Despite vacancies in the Vice Presidency from 1792 to 1886 g the special election requirement would be repealed with the rest of the Presidential Succession Act of 1792 by the 49th United States Congress in passing the Presidential Succession Act of 1886 178 179 In a special message to the 80th United States Congress calling for revisions to the Presidential Succession Act of 1886 President Harry S Truman proposed restoring special elections for dual vacancies in the Presidency and Vice Presidency and while most of Truman s proposal was included in the final version of the Presidential Succession Act of 1947 the restoration of special elections for dual vacancies was not 180 181 Along with six other recommendations related to presidential succession 182 the Continuity of Government Commission recommended restoring special elections for president in the event of a dual vacancy in the Presidency and Vice Presidency due to a catastrophic terrorist attack or nuclear strike in part because all members of the presidential line of succession live and work in Washington D C 183 Under the 12th Amendment presidential electors are still required to meet and cast their ballots for president and vice president within their respective states 184 Additionally the CRS has noted in a separate report released in 2020 that members of the presidential line of succession after vice president only become an acting president under the Presidential Succession Clause and Section 3 of the 20th Amendment rather than fully succeeding to the Presidency 185 Current electoral vote distribution edit Electoral votes EV allocations for the 2024 and 2028 presidential elections 186 Triangular markers nbsp nbsp indicate gains or losses following the 2020 census 187 EV States States 54 1 54 nbsp California40 1 40 nbsp nbsp Texas30 1 30 nbsp Florida28 1 28 nbsp New York19 2 38 nbsp Illinois nbsp Pennsylvania17 1 17 nbsp Ohio16 2 32 Georgia nbsp North Carolina15 1 15 nbsp Michigan14 1 14 New Jersey13 1 13 Virginia12 1 12 Washington11 4 44 Arizona Indiana Massachusetts Tennessee10 5 50 nbsp Colorado Maryland Minnesota Missouri Wisconsin9 2 18 Alabama South Carolina8 3 24 Kentucky Louisiana nbsp Oregon7 2 14 Connecticut Oklahoma6 6 36 Arkansas Iowa Kansas Mississippi Nevada Utah5 2 10 Nebraska New Mexico4 7 28 Hawaii Idaho Maine nbsp Montana New Hampshire Rhode Island nbsp West Virginia3 7 21 Alaska Delaware District of Columbia North Dakota South Dakota Vermont Wyoming 538 Total electors The Twenty third Amendment grants DC the same number of electors as the least populous state This has always been three Maine s four electors and Nebraska s five are distributed using the Congressional district method Chronological table editSee also Electoral vote changes between United States presidential elections Number of presidential electors by state and year Electionyear 1788 1800 1804 1900 1904 2000 2004 88 92 96 00 04 08 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80 84 88 92 96 00 04 08 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80 84 88 92 96 00 04 08 12 16 20 24 28 Total 81 135 138 176 218 221 235 261 288 294 275 290 296 303 234251 294 366 369 401 444 447 476 483 531 537 538State22 Alabama 3 5 7 7 9 9 9 9 0 8 10 10 10 11 11 11 11 12 11 11 11 11 10 9 9 9 9 9 949 Alaska 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 348 Arizona 3 3 4 4 4 5 6 7 8 10 11 1125 Arkansas 3 3 3 4 4 0 5 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 6 6 6 6 6 6 631 California 4 4 5 5 6 6 8 9 9 10 10 13 22 25 32 32 40 45 47 54 55 55 5438 Colorado 3 3 4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 8 8 9 9 105 Connecticut 7 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 D C 3 3 3 3 3 3 31 Delaware 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 327 Florida 3 3 3 0 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 7 8 10 10 14 17 21 25 27 29 304 Georgia 5 4 4 6 8 8 8 9 11 11 10 10 10 10 0 9 11 11 12 13 13 13 13 14 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 13 15 16 1650 Hawaii 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 443 Idaho 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 421 Illinois 3 3 5 5 9 9 11 11 16 16 21 21 22 24 24 27 27 29 29 28 27 27 26 26 24 22 21 20 1919 Indiana 3 3 5 9 9 12 12 13 13 13 13 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 14 13 13 13 13 13 12 12 11 11 1129 Iowa 4 4 4 8 8 11 11 13 13 13 13 13 13 11 10 10 10 9 8 8 7 7 6 634 Kansas 3 3 5 5 9 10 10 10 10 10 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 6 6 6 615 Kentucky 4 4 8 12 12 12 14 15 15 12 12 12 12 11 11 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 11 11 10 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 818 Louisiana 3 3 3 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 9 9 8 823 Maine 9 9 10 10 9 9 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 47 Maryland 8 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 10 10 8 8 8 8 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 9 10 10 10 10 10 10 106 Massachusetts 10 16 16 19 22 22 15 15 14 14 12 12 13 13 12 12 13 13 14 15 15 16 16 18 17 16 16 16 14 14 13 12 12 11 1126 Michigan 3 5 5 6 6 8 8 11 11 13 14 14 14 14 15 19 19 20 20 21 21 20 18 17 16 1532 Minnesota 4 4 4 5 5 7 9 9 11 11 12 11 11 11 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 1020 Mississippi 3 3 4 4 6 6 7 7 0 0 8 8 9 9 9 10 10 10 9 9 8 8 7 7 7 7 6 6 624 Missouri 3 3 4 4 7 7 9 9 11 11 15 15 16 17 17 18 18 18 15 15 13 13 12 12 11 11 11 10 1041 Montana 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 437 Nebraska 3 3 3 5 8 8 8 8 8 7 6 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 536 Nevada 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 6 69 New Hampshire 5 6 6 7 8 8 8 8 7 7 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 43 New Jersey 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 7 7 7 7 9 9 9 10 10 12 12 14 16 16 16 16 17 17 16 15 15 14 1447 New Mexico 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 511 New York 8 12 12 19 29 29 29 36 42 42 36 36 35 35 33 33 35 35 36 36 36 39 39 45 47 47 45 45 43 41 36 33 31 29 2812 North Carolina 12 12 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 11 11 10 10 0 9 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 12 13 14 14 14 13 13 13 14 15 15 1639 North Dakota 3 3 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 317 Ohio 3 8 8 8 16 21 21 23 23 23 23 21 21 22 22 23 23 23 23 23 24 26 25 25 25 26 25 23 21 20 18 1746 Oklahoma 7 10 11 10 8 8 8 8 8 8 7 7 733 Oregon 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 7 82 Pennsylvania 10 15 15 20 25 25 25 28 30 30 26 26 27 27 26 26 29 29 30 32 32 34 34 38 36 35 32 32 29 27 25 23 21 20 1913 Rhode Island 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 48 South Carolina 7 8 8 10 11 11 11 11 11 11 9 9 8 8 0 6 7 7 9 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 9 940 South Dakota 4 4 4 4 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 316 Tennessee 3 5 8 8 8 11 15 15 13 13 12 12 10 10 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 11 12 11 11 11 10 11 11 11 11 1128 Texas 4 4 4 0 0 8 8 13 15 15 18 18 20 23 23 24 24 25 26 29 32 34 38 4045 Utah 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 6 614 Vermont 4 4 6 8 8 8 7 7 7 6 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 310 Virginia 12 21 21 24 25 25 25 24 23 23 17 17 15 15 0 0 11 11 12 12 12 12 12 12 11 11 12 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 1342 Washington 4 4 5 5 7 8 8 9 9 9 9 10 11 11 12 1235 West Virginia 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 7 7 8 8 8 8 8 7 6 6 5 5 5 430 Wisconsin 4 5 5 8 8 10 10 11 12 12 13 13 13 12 12 12 12 12 11 11 11 10 10 1044 Wyoming 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Total 81 135 138 176 218 221 235 261 288 294 275 290 296 303 234251 294 366 369 401 444 447 476 483 531 537 538Source Presidential Elections 1789 2000 at Psephos Adam Carr s Election Archive Note In 1788 1792 1796 and 1800 each elector cast two votes for president nbsp This cartogram shows the number of electors from each state for the 2012 2016 and 2020 presidential elections Following the 2010 census New York and Ohio lost two electoral votes 8 states lost one h 6 states gained one i Florida gained two and Texas gained four Alternative methods of choosing electors editMethods of presidential elector selection by state 1789 1832 188 Year AL CT DE GA IL IN KY LA ME MD MA MS MO NH NJ NY NC OH PA RI SC TN VT VA1789 L D L A H H L A L D1792 L L L D A H H L L L A L L L D1796 L L A D D H H L L D A L L H L D1800 L L L D D L L L L D L A L H L A1804 L L L D D D A A L D A A A L D L A1808 L L L D D L A A L D A A A L D L A1812 L L L D L D D A L L L A A A L D L A1816 L L L L D L D L A A L A A A A L D L A1820 L A L L D L D L D D D A L A A L A A A A L D L A1824 A A L L D A D L D D A A D A A L A A A A L D L A1828 A A L A A A A A D D A A A A A D A A A A L D A A1832 A A A A A A A A A D A A A A A A A A A A L A A AYear AL CT DE GA IL IN KY LA ME MD MA MS MO NH NJ NY NC OH PA RI SC TN VT VAKey A Popular vote At large D Popular vote Districting L Legislative selection H Hybrid system Before the advent of the short ballot in the early 20th century as described in Selection process the most common means of electing the presidential electors was through the general ticket The general ticket is quite similar to the current system and is often confused with it In the general ticket voters cast ballots for individuals running for presidential elector while in the short ballot voters cast ballots for an entire slate of electors In the general ticket the state canvass would report the number of votes cast for each candidate for elector a complicated process in states like New York with multiple positions to fill Both the general ticket and the short ballot are often considered at large or winner takes all voting The short ballot was adopted by the various states at different times it was adopted for use by North Carolina and Ohio in 1932 Alabama was still using the general ticket as late as 1960 and was one of the last states to switch to the short ballot The question of the extent to which state constitutions may constrain the legislature s choice of a method of choosing electors has been touched on in two U S Supreme Court cases In McPherson v Blacker 146 U S 1 1892 the Court cited Article II Section 1 Clause 2 which states that a state s electors are selected in such manner as the legislature thereof may direct and wrote these words operat e as a limitation upon the state in respect of any attempt to circumscribe the legislative power In Bush v Palm Beach County Canvassing Board 531 U S 70 2000 a Florida Supreme Court decision was vacated not reversed based on McPherson On the other hand three dissenting justices in Bush v Gore 531 U S 98 2000 wrote N othing in Article II of the Federal Constitution frees the state legislature from the constraints in the State Constitution that created it 189 Extensive research on alternate methods of electoral allocation have been conducted by Collin Welke Dylan Shearer and Riley Wagie in 2019 Appointment by state legislature edit In the earliest presidential elections state legislative choice was the most common method of choosing electors A majority of the state legislatures selected presidential electors in both 1792 9 of 15 and 1800 10 of 16 and half of them did so in 1812 190 Even in the 1824 election a quarter of state legislatures 6 of 24 chose electors In that election Andrew Jackson lost in spite of having a plurality of both the popular vote and the number of electoral votes representing them 191 yet as six states did not hold a popular election for their electoral votes the full expression of the popular vote nationally cannot be known Some state legislatures simply chose electors while other states used a hybrid method in which state legislatures chose from a group of electors elected by popular vote 192 By 1828 with the rise of Jacksonian democracy only Delaware and South Carolina used legislative choice 191 Delaware ended its practice the following election 1832 while South Carolina continued using the method until it seceded from the Union in December 1860 191 South Carolina used the popular vote for the first time in the 1868 election 193 Excluding South Carolina legislative appointment was used in only four situations after 1832 In 1848 Massachusetts statute awarded the state s electoral votes to the winner of the at large popular vote but only if that candidate won an absolute majority When the vote produced no winner between the Democratic Free Soil and Whig parties the state legislature selected the electors giving all 12 electoral votes to the Whigs which had won the plurality of votes in the state 194 In 1864 Nevada having joined the Union only a few days prior to Election Day had no choice but to legislatively appoint 194 In 1868 the newly reconstructed state of Florida legislatively appointed its electors having been readmitted too late to hold elections 194 Finally in 1876 the legislature of the newly admitted state of Colorado used legislative choice due to a lack of time and money to hold a popular election 194 Legislative appointment was brandished as a possibility in the 2000 election Had the recount continued the Florida legislature was prepared to appoint the Republican slate of electors to avoid missing the federal safe harbor deadline for choosing electors 195 The Constitution gives each state legislature the power to decide how its state s electors are chosen 191 and it can be easier and cheaper for a state legislature to simply appoint a slate of electors than to create a legislative framework for holding elections to determine the electors As noted above the two situations in which legislative choice has been used since the Civil War have both been because there was not enough time or money to prepare for an election However appointment by state legislature can have negative consequences bicameral legislatures can deadlock more easily than the electorate This is precisely what happened to New York in 1789 when the legislature failed to appoint any electors 196 Electoral districts edit Another method used early in U S history was to divide the state into electoral districts By this method voters in each district would cast their ballots for the electors they supported and the winner in each district would become the elector This was similar to how states are currently separated into congressional districts However the difference stems from the fact that every state always had two more electoral districts than congressional districts As with congressional districts moreover this method is vulnerable to gerrymandering Congressional district method edit nbsp Projected results of the 2020 United States presidential election using one of the Congressional district methodsThere are two versions of the congressional district method one has been implemented in Maine and Nebraska another was used in New York in 1828 and proposed for use in Virginia Under the implemented method one electoral vote goes per the plurality of the popular votes of each congressional district for the U S House of Representatives and two per the statewide popular vote This may result in greater proportionality But it can give results similar to the winner takes all states as in 1992 when George H W Bush won all five of Nebraska s electoral votes with a clear plurality on 47 of the vote in a truly proportional system he would have received three and Bill Clinton and Ross Perot each would have received one 197 In 2013 the Virginia proposal was tabled Like the other congressional district methods this would have distributed the electoral votes based on the popular vote winner within each of Virginia s 11 congressional districts the two statewide electoral votes would be awarded based on which candidate won the most congressional districts 198 A similar method was used in New York in 1828 the two at large electors were elected by the electors selected in districts A congressional district method is more likely to arise than other alternatives to the winner takes whole state method in view of the main two parties resistance to scrap first past the post State legislation is sufficient to use this method 199 non primary source needed Advocates of the method believe the system encourages higher voter turnout or incentivizes candidates to visit and appeal to some states deemed safe overall for one party 200 Winner take all systems ignore thousands of votes in Democratic California there are Republican districts in Republican Texas there are Democratic districts Because candidates have an incentive to campaign in competitive districts with a district plan candidates have an incentive to actively campaign in over thirty states versus about seven swing states 201 202 Opponents of the system however argue candidates might only spend time in certain battleground districts instead of the entire state and cases of gerrymandering could become exacerbated as political parties attempt to draw as many safe districts as they can 203 Unlike simple congressional district comparisons the district plan popular vote bonus in the 2008 election would have given Obama 56 of the Electoral College versus the 68 he did win it would have more closely approximated the percentage of the popular vote won 53 204 However the district plan would have given Obama 49 of the Electoral College in 2012 and would have given Romney a win in the Electoral College even though Obama won the popular vote by nearly 4 51 1 47 2 over Romney 205 Implementation edit Of the 44 multi district states whose 517 electoral votes are amenable to the method only Maine 4 EV and Nebraska 5 EV apply it citation needed Maine began using the congressional district method in the election of 1972 Nebraska has used the congressional district method since the election of 1992 206 207 Michigan used the system for the 1892 presidential election 197 208 209 and several other states used various forms of the district plan before 1840 Virginia Delaware Maryland Kentucky North Carolina Massachusetts Illinois Maine Missouri and New York 210 The congressional district method allows a state the chance to split its electoral votes between multiple candidates Prior to 2008 neither Maine nor Nebraska had ever split their electoral votes 197 Nebraska split its electoral votes for the first time in 2008 giving John McCain its statewide electors and those of two congressional districts while Barack Obama won the electoral vote of Nebraska s 2nd congressional district 211 Following the 2008 split some Nebraska Republicans made efforts to discard the congressional district method and return to the winner takes all system 212 In January 2010 a bill was introduced in the Nebraska legislature to revert to a winner take all system 213 the bill died in committee in March 2011 214 Republicans had passed bills in 1995 and 1997 to do the same which were vetoed by Democratic Governor Ben Nelson 212 Recent abandoned adoption in other states edit In 2010 Republicans in Pennsylvania who controlled both houses of the legislature as well as the governorship put forward a plan to change the state s winner takes all system to a congressional district method system Pennsylvania had voted for the Democratic candidate in the five previous presidential elections so this was seen an attempt to take away Democratic electoral votes Democrat Barack Obama won Pennsylvania in 2008 with 55 of its vote The district plan would have awarded him 11 of its 21 electoral votes a 52 4 which was much closer to the popular vote percentage 215 216 The plan later lost support 217 Other Republicans including Michigan state representative Pete Lund 218 RNC Chairman Reince Priebus and Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker have floated similar ideas 219 220 Proportional vote edit In a proportional system electors would be selected in proportion to the votes cast for their candidate or party rather than being selected by the statewide plurality vote 221 Impacts and reception editGary Bugh s research of congressional debates over proposed constitutional amendments to abolish the Electoral College reveals reform opponents have often appeal to tradition and the preference for indirect elections whereas reform advocates often champion a more egalitarian one person one vote system 222 Electoral colleges have been scrapped by all other democracies around the world in favor of direct elections for an executive president 12 13 Critics argue that the Electoral College is less democratic than a national direct popular vote and is subject to manipulation because of faithless electors 9 10 that the system is antithetical to a democracy that strives for a standard of one person one vote 5 and there can be elections where one candidate wins the national popular vote but another wins the electoral vote as in the 2000 and 2016 elections 8 Individual citizens in less populated states with 5 of the Electoral College have proportionately more voting power than those in more populous states 6 and candidates can win by focusing on just a few swing states 11 223 Polling 40 edit 21st century polling data shows that a majority of Americans consistently favor having a direct popular vote for presidential elections The popularity of the Electoral College has hovered between 35 and 44 224 j Difference with popular vote edit nbsp This graphic demonstrates how the winner of the popular vote can still lose in an electoral college system similar to the U S Electoral College nbsp Bar graph of popular votes in presidential elections through 2020 Black stars mark the five cases where the winner did not have the plurality of the popular vote Black squares mark the two cases where the electoral vote resulted in a tie or the winner did not have the majority of electoral votes An H marks each of two cases where the election was decided by the House an S marks the one case where the election was finalized by the Supreme Court Opponents of the Electoral College claim such outcomes do not logically follow the normative concept of how a democratic system should function One view is the Electoral College violates the principle of political equality since presidential elections are not decided by the one person one vote principle 225 While many assume the national popular vote observed under the Electoral College system would reflect the popular vote observed under a National Popular Vote system supporters contend that s not necessarily the case as each electoral institution produces different incentives for and strategy choices by presidential campaigns 226 227 Notable elections edit See also List of United States presidential elections in which the winner lost the popular vote The elections of 1876 1888 2000 and 2016 produced an Electoral College winner who did not receive at least a plurality of the nationwide popular vote 225 In 1824 there were six states in which electors were legislatively appointed rather than popularly elected so it is uncertain what the national popular vote would have been if all presidential electors had been popularly elected When no presidential candidate received a majority of electoral votes in 1824 the election was decided by the House of Representatives and so could be considered distinct from the latter four elections in which all of the states had popular selection of electors 228 The true national popular vote was also uncertain in the 1960 election and the plurality for the winner depends on how votes for Alabama electors are allocated 229 Elections where the popular vote and electoral college results differed 1800 Jefferson won with 61 4 of the popular vote Adams had 38 6 1824 Adams won with 30 9 of the popular vote Jackson had 41 4 1836 only for vice president Johnson won with 63 5 of the popular vote Granger had 30 8 1876 Tilden D received 50 9 of the vote Hayes R received 47 9 1888 Cleveland D received 48 6 of the vote Harrison R received 47 8 2000 Gore D received 48 4 of the vote Bush R received 47 9 2016 Clinton D received 48 2 of the vote Trump R received 46 1 These popular vote tallies are partial because several of the states still used their legislature to choose electors not a popular vote In both elections a tied electoral college threw the contest over to Congress to decide Favors largest swing states edit Main article Swing state nbsp These maps show the amount of attention given to each state by the Bush and Kerry campaigns combined during the final five weeks of the 2004 election each waving hand purple map represents a visit from a presidential or vice presidential candidate each dollar sign green map represents one million dollars spent on TV advertising 230 The Electoral College encourages political campaigners to focus on a few so called swing states while ignoring the rest of the country Populous states in which pre election poll results show no clear favorite are inundated with campaign visits saturation television advertising get out the vote efforts by party organizers and debates while four out of five voters in the national election are absolutely ignored according to one assessment 231 Since most states use a winner takes all arrangement in which the candidate with the most votes in that state receives all of the state s electoral votes there is a clear incentive to focus almost exclusively on only a few key undecided states 225 Not all votes count the same edit Each state gets a minimum of three electoral votes regardless of population which has increasingly given low population states more electors per voter or more voting power 232 233 For example an electoral vote represents nearly four times as many people in California as in Wyoming 232 234 On average voters in the ten least populated states have 2 5 more electors per person compared with voters in the ten most populous states 232 In 1968 John F Banzhaf III developed the Banzhaf power index BPI which argued that a voter in the state of New York had on average 3 3 times as much voting power in presidential elections as the average voter outside New York 235 Mark Livingston used a similar method and estimated that individual voters in the largest state based on 1990 census had 3 3 times more individual power to choose a president than voters of Montana 236 better source needed However others argue that Banzhaf s method ignores the demographic makeup of the states and for treating votes like independent coin flips Critics of Banzhaf s method say empirically based models used to analyze the Electoral College have consistently found that sparsely populated states benefit from having their resident s votes count for more than the votes of those residing in the more populous states 237 Lowers turnout edit Except in closely fought swing states voter turnout does not affect the election results due to entrenched political party domination in most states The Electoral College decreases the advantage a political party or campaign might gain for encouraging voters to turn out except in those swing states 238 If the presidential election were decided by a national popular vote in contrast campaigns and parties would have a strong incentive to work to increase turnout everywhere 239 Individuals would similarly have a stronger incentive to persuade their friends and neighbors to turn out to vote The differences in turnout between swing states and non swing states under the current electoral college system suggest that replacing the Electoral College with direct election by popular vote would likely increase turnout and participation significantly 238 Obscures disenfranchisement within states edit According to this criticism the electoral college reduces elections to a mere count of electors for a particular state and as a result it obscures any voting problems within a particular state For example if a particular state blocks some groups from voting perhaps by voter suppression methods such as imposing reading tests poll taxes registration requirements or legally disfranchising specific groups like women or people of color then voting inside that state would be reduced but as the state s electoral count would be the same disenfranchisement has no effect on its overall electoral power Critics contend that such disenfranchisement is not penalized by the Electoral College A related argument is the Electoral College may have a dampening effect on voter turnout there is no incentive for states to reach out to more of its citizens to include them in elections because the state s electoral count remains fixed in any event According to this view if elections were by popular vote then states would be motivated to include more citizens in elections since the state would then have more political clout nationally Critics contend the electoral college system insulates states from negative publicity as well as possible federal penalties for disenfranchising subgroups of citizens Legal scholars Akhil Amar and Vikram Amar have argued that the original Electoral College compromise was enacted partially because it enabled Southern states to disenfranchise their slave populations 240 It permitted Southern states to disfranchise large numbers of slaves while allowing these states to maintain political clout and prevent Northern dominance within the federation by using the Three Fifths Compromise They noted that James Madison believed the question of counting slaves had presented a serious challenge but that the substitution of electors obviated this difficulty and seemed on the whole to be liable to the fewest objections 241 Akhil and Vikram Amar added The founders system also encouraged the continued disfranchisement of women In a direct national election system any state that gave women the vote would automatically have doubled its national clout Under the Electoral College however a state had no such incentive to increase the franchise as with slaves what mattered was how many women lived in a state not how many were empowered a state with low voter turnout gets precisely the same number of electoral votes as if it had a high turnout By contrast a well designed direct election system could spur states to get out the vote 240 After the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery white voters in Southern states benefited from elimination of the Three Fifths Compromise because with all former slaves counted as one person instead of 3 5 Southern states increased their share of electors in the Electoral College Southern states also enacted laws that restricted access to voting by former slaves thereby increasing the electoral weight of votes by southern whites 242 Minorities tend to be disproportionately located in noncompetitive states reducing their impact on the overall election and over representing white voters who have tended to live in the swing states that decide elections 243 244 Americans in U S territories cannot vote edit See also Voting rights in the United States Overseas and nonresident citizens Roughly four million Americans in Puerto Rico the Northern Mariana Islands the U S Virgin Islands American Samoa and Guam do not have a vote in presidential elections 25 232 Only U S states per Article II Section 1 Clause 2 and Washington D C per the Twenty third Amendment are entitled to electors Various scholars consequently conclude that the U S national electoral process is not fully democratic 245 246 Guam has held non binding straw polls for president since the 1980s to draw attention to this fact 247 248 The Democratic and Republican parties as well as other third parties have however made it possible for people in U S territories to vote in party presidential primaries 249 250 Disadvantages third parties edit See also Duverger s law and Causes of a two party system In practice the winner take all manner of allocating a state s electors generally decreases the importance of minor parties 251 Federalism and state power edit nbsp Half the U S population lives in 143 urban suburban counties out of 3 143 counties or county equivalents 2019 American Community Survey For many years early in the nation s history up until the Jacksonian Era 1830s many states appointed their electors by a vote of the state legislature and proponents argue that in the end the election of the president must still come down to the decisions of each state or the federal nature of the United States will give way to a single massive centralized government to the detriment of the States 252 In his 2007 book A More Perfect Constitution Professor Larry Sabato preferred allocating the electoral college and Senate seats in stricter proportion to population while keeping the Electoral College for the benefit of lightly populated swing states and to strengthen the role of the states in federalism 253 252 Willamette University College of Law professor Norman R Williams has argued that the Constitutional Convention delegates chose the Electoral College to choose the President largely in reaction to the experience during the Confederation period where state governors were often chosen by state legislatures and wanting the new federal government to have an executive branch that was effectively independent of the legislative branch 254 For example Alexander Hamilton argued that the Electoral College would prevent sinister bias foreign interference and domestic intrigue in presidential elections by not permitting members of Congress or any other officer of the United States to serve as electors 255 Efforts to abolish or reform editMain article Efforts to reform the United States Electoral CollegeSee also Electoral College abolition amendment Since 1800 over 700 proposals to reform or eliminate the system have been introduced in Congress Proponents of these proposals argued that the electoral college system does not provide for direct democratic election affords less populous states an advantage and allows a candidate to win the presidency without winning the most votes None of these proposals have received the approval of two thirds of Congress and three fourths of the states required to amend the Constitution 256 1969 1970 Bayh Celler amendment edit The closest the United States has come to abolishing the Electoral College occurred during the 91st Congress 1969 1971 257 The 1968 election resulted in Richard Nixon receiving 301 electoral votes 56 of electors Hubert Humphrey 191 35 5 and George Wallace 46 8 5 with 13 5 of the popular vote However Nixon had received only 511 944 more popular votes than Humphrey 43 5 to 42 9 less than 1 of the national total 258 non primary source needed Representative Emanuel Celler D New York chairman of the House Judiciary Committee responded to public concerns over the disparity between the popular vote and electoral vote by introducing House Joint Resolution 681 a proposed Constitutional amendment that would have replaced the Electoral College with a simpler plurality system based on the national popular vote With this system the pair of candidates running for president and vice president who had received the highest number of votes would win the presidency and vice presidency provided they won at least 40 of the national popular vote If no pair received 40 of the popular vote a runoff election would be held in which the choice of president and vice president would be made from the two pairs of persons who had received the highest number of votes in the first election 259 On April 29 1969 the House Judiciary Committee voted 28 to 6 to approve the proposal 260 Debate on the proposal before the full House of Representatives ended on September 11 1969 261 and was eventually passed with bipartisan support on September 18 1969 by a vote of 339 to 70 262 On September 30 1969 President Nixon gave his endorsement for adoption of the proposal encouraging the Senate to pass its version of the proposal which had been sponsored as Senate Joint Resolution 1 by Senator Birch Bayh D Indiana 263 On October 8 1969 the New York Times reported that 30 state legislatures were either certain or likely to approve a constitutional amendment embodying the direct election plan if it passes its final Congressional test in the Senate Ratification of 38 state legislatures would have been needed for adoption The paper also reported that six other states had yet to state a preference six were leaning toward opposition and eight were solidly opposed 264 On August 14 1970 the Senate Judiciary Committee sent its report advocating passage of the proposal to the full Senate The Judiciary Committee had approved the proposal by a vote of 11 to 6 The six members who opposed the plan Democratic senators James Eastland of Mississippi John Little McClellan of Arkansas and Sam Ervin of North Carolina along with Republican senators Roman Hruska of Nebraska Hiram Fong of Hawaii and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina all argued that although the present system had potential loopholes it had worked well throughout the years Senator Bayh indicated that supporters of the measure were about a dozen votes shy from the 67 needed for the proposal to pass the full Senate 265 He called upon President Nixon to attempt to persuade undecided Republican senators to support the proposal 266 However Nixon while not reneging on his previous endorsement chose not to make any further personal appeals to back the proposal 267 On September 8 1970 the Senate commenced openly debating the proposal 268 and the proposal was quickly filibustered The lead objectors to the proposal were mostly Southern senators and conservatives from small states both Democrats and Republicans who argued that abolishing the Electoral College would reduce their states political influence 267 On September 17 1970 a motion for cloture which would have ended the filibuster received 54 votes to 36 for cloture 267 failing to receive the then required two thirds majority of senators voting 269 non primary source needed A second motion for cloture on September 29 1970 also failed by 53 to 34 Thereafter the Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield of Montana moved to lay the proposal aside so the Senate could attend to other business 270 However the proposal was never considered again and died when the 91st Congress ended on January 3 1971 Carter proposal editOn March 22 1977 President Jimmy Carter wrote a letter of reform to Congress that also included his expression of abolishing the Electoral College The letter read in part My fourth recommendation is that the Congress adopt a Constitutional amendment to provide for direct popular election of the President Such an amendment which would abolish the Electoral College will ensure that the candidate chosen by the voters actually becomes President Under the Electoral College it is always possible that the winner of the popular vote will not be elected This has already happened in three elections 1824 1876 and 1888 In the last election the result could have been changed by a small shift of votes in Ohio and Hawaii despite a popular vote difference of 1 7 million I do not recommend a Constitutional amendment lightly I think the amendment process must be reserved for an issue of overriding governmental significance But the method by which we elect our President is such an issue I will not be proposing a specific direct election amendment I prefer to allow the Congress to proceed with its work without the interruption of a new proposal 271 President Carter s proposed program for the reform of the Electoral College was very liberal for a modern president during this time and in some aspects of the package it went beyond original expectations 272 Newspapers like The New York Times saw President Carter s proposal at that time as a modest surprise because of the indication of Carter that he would be interested in only eliminating the electors but retaining the electoral vote system in a modified form 272 Newspaper reaction to Carter s proposal ranged from some editorials praising the proposal to other editorials like that in the Chicago Tribune criticizing the president for proposing the end of the Electoral College 273 In a letter to The New York Times Representative Jonathan B Bingham D New York highlighted the danger of the flawed outdated mechanism of the Electoral College by underscoring how a shift of fewer than 10 000 votes in two key states would have led to President Gerald Ford winning the 1976 election despite Jimmy Carter s nationwide 1 7 million vote margin 274 Recent proposals to abolish edit Since January 3 2019 joint resolutions have been made proposing constitutional amendments that would replace the Electoral College with the popular election of the president and vice president 275 276 Unlike the Bayh Celler amendment with its 40 threshold for election these proposals do not require a candidate to achieve a certain percentage of votes to be elected 277 278 279 non primary source needed National Popular Vote Interstate Compact edit Main article National Popular Vote Interstate Compact See also Constitutionality of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact As of May 2023 sixteen states plus the District of Columbia have joined the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact 280 281 better source needed Those joining the compact will acting together if and when reflecting a majority of electors at least 270 pledge their electors to the winner of the national popular vote The compact applies Article II Section 1 Clause 2 of the Constitution which gives each state legislature the plenary power to determine how it chooses electors Some scholars have suggested that Article I Section 10 Clause 3 of the Constitution requires congressional consent before the compact could be enforceable 282 thus any attempted implementation of the compact without congressional consent could face court challenges to its constitutionality Others have suggested that the compact s legality was strengthened by Chiafalo v Washington in which the Supreme Court upheld the power of states to enforce electors pledges 283 284 The seventeen adherents of the compact have 205 electors which is 76 of the 270 required for it to take effect or be considered justiciable 280 better source needed Litigation based on the 14th amendment edit It has been argued that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution bars the winner takes all apportionment of electors by the states according to this argument the votes of the losing party are discarded entirely thereby leading to an unequal position between different voters in the same state 285 Lawsuits have been filed to this end in California Massachusetts Texas and South Carolina though all have been unsuccessful 285 See also edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp United States portalElectoral Count Act List of states and territories of the United States by population Lists of United States presidential electors 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 2020 Trump fake electors plot Voter turnout in United States presidential electionsNotes edit The constitutional convention of 1787 had rejected presidential selection by direct popular vote 2 That being the case election mechanics based on an electoral college were devised to render selection of the president independent of both state legislatures and the national legislature 3 Writing in the policy journal National Affairs Allen Guelzo argues it is worthwhile to deal directly with three popular arguments against the Electoral College The first that the Electoral College violates the principle of one man one vote In assigning electoral college votes by winner take all the states themselves violate the one person one vote principle Hillary Clinton won 61 5 of the California vote and she received all 55 of California s electoral votes as a result The disparity in Illinois was even more dramatic Clinton won that state s popular vote 3 1 million to 2 1 million and that 59 6 share granted her Illinois s 20 electoral votes 4 Although faithless electors have never changed the outcome of a state popular vote or the national total that scenario was further weakened by the 2020 court case Chiafalo v Washington 10 Arizona Idaho Louisiana North Dakota Oklahoma Rhode Island South Dakota Tennessee Section 1 of the 25th Amendment superseded the text of the Presidential Succession Clause of Article II Section I that stated In Case of the Removal of the President from Office or of his Death Resignation or Inability to discharge the Powers and Duties of the said Office the Same shall devolve on the Vice President Instead Section 1 of the 25th Amendment provides that In case of the removal of the President from office or of his death or resignation the Vice President shall become President Section 2 of the 25th Amendment authorizes the President to nominate a Vice President in the event of a vacancy subject to confirmation by both houses of Congress 171 172 In 1841 the death of William Henry Harrison as President caused debate in Congress about whether John Tyler had formally succeeded to the Presidency or whether he was an Acting President Tyler took the oath of office and Congress implicitly ratified Tyler s decision in documents published subsequent to his ascension that referred to him as the President of the United States Tyler s ascension set the precedent that the Vice President becomes the President in the event of a vacancy until the ratification of the 25th Amendment 173 For nearly one fourth of the period of time from 1792 to 1886 the Vice Presidency was vacant due to the assassinations of Abraham Lincoln and James A Garfield in 1865 and 1881 respectively the deaths of Presidents William Henry Harrison and Zachary Taylor in 1841 and 1850 respectively the deaths of Vice Presidents George Clinton Elbridge Gerry William R King Henry Wilson and Thomas A Hendricks in 1812 1814 1853 1875 and 1885 respectively and the resignation of the Vice Presidency by John C Calhoun in 1832 176 177 Iowa Louisiana Missouri Massachusetts New Jersey Michigan Illinois Pennsylvania Nevada Utah South Carolina Arizona Washington Georgia Americans favored a Constitutional Amendment to elect the president by a nationwide popular vote on average 61 and those for electoral college selection 35 In 2016 polling the gap closed to 51 direct election versus 44 electoral college By 2020 American thinking had again diverged with 58 for direct election versus 40 for the electoral college choosing a president 224 References edit Ziblatt Daniel Levitsky Steven September 5 2023 How American Democracy Fell So Far Behind The Atlantic Retrieved September 20 2023 Beeman 2010 pp 129 130 Beeman 2010 p 135 Guelzo Allen April 2 2018 In Defense of the Electoral College National Affairs Retrieved November 5 2020 a b Lounsbury Jud November 17 2016 One Person One Vote Depends on Where You Live The Progressive Madison Wisconsin Progressive Inc Retrieved August 14 2020 a b Speel Robert November 15 2016 These 3 Common Arguments For Preserving the Electoral College Are All Wrong Time Retrieved January 5 2019 Rural states get a slight boost from the 2 electoral votes awarded to states due to their 2 Senate seats Neale Thomas H October 6 2017 Electoral College Reform Contemporary Issues for Congress PDF Washington D C Congressional Research Service Retrieved October 24 2020 a b Mahler Jonathan Eder Steve November 10 2016 The Electoral College Is Hated by Many So Why Does It Endure The New York Times Retrieved January 5 2019 a b West Darrell M 2020 It s Time to Abolish the Electoral College PDF a b Should We Abolish the Electoral College Stanford Magazine September 2016 Retrieved September 3 2020 a b Tropp Rachel February 21 2017 The Case Against the Electoral College Harvard Political Review Archived from the original on August 5 2020 Retrieved January 5 2019 a b Ziblatt Steven Levitsky Daniel September 5 2023 How American Democracy Fell So Far Behind The Atlantic Retrieved September 20 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Collin Richard Oliver Martin Pamela L January 1 2012 An Introduction to World Politics Conflict and Consensus on a Small Planet Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442218031 Statutes at Large 28th Congress 2nd Session p 721 Neale Thomas H January 17 2021 The Electoral College A 2020 Presidential Election Timeline Congressional Research Service Archived from the original on November 9 2020 Retrieved November 19 2020 a b c What is the Electoral College National Archives December 23 2019 Retrieved September 27 2020 Distribution of Electoral Votes National Archives March 6 2020 Retrieved September 27 2020 Faithless Elector State Laws Fair Vote July 7 2020 Retrieved July 7 2020 There are 33 states plus the District of Columbia that require electors to vote for a pledged candidate Most of those states 16 plus DC nonetheless do not provide for any penalty or any mechanism to prevent the deviant vote from counting as cast a b Counting Electoral Votes An Overview of Procedures at the Joint Session Including Objections by Members of Congress Report Congressional Research Service November 15 2016 Retrieved August 2 2020 dead link Vision 2020 What happens if the US election is contested AP NEWS September 16 2020 Retrieved September 18 2020 a b c Neale Thomas H May 15 2017 The Electoral College How It Works in Contemporary Presidential Elections PDF CRS Report for Congress Washington D C Congressional Research Service p 13 Retrieved July 29 2018 Elhauge Einer R Essays on Article II Presidential Electors The Heritage Guide to The Constitution The Heritage Foundation Retrieved August 6 2018 Ross Tara 2017 The Indispensable Electoral College How the Founders Plan Saves Our Country from Mob Rule Washington D C Regenary Gateway p 26 ISBN 978 1 62157 707 2 United States Government Printing Office Presidential Electors for D C Twenty third Amendment PDF a b Murriel Maria November 1 2016 Millions of Americans can t vote for president because of where they live PRI s The World Retrieved September 5 2019 King Ledyard May 7 2019 Puerto Rico At the center of a political storm but can its residents vote for president USA Today Archived from the original on July 31 2020 Retrieved September 6 2019 a b Levitsky Steven Ziblatt Daniel 2023 Chapter 5 Tyranny of the Minority why American democracy reached the breaking point New York Crown ISBN 978 0 593 44307 1 Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 May 29 Avalon Project Retrieved April 13 2011 Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 June 2 Avalon Project Retrieved April 13 2011 Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 September 4 Avalon Project Retrieved April 13 2011 James Wilson popular sovereignty and the Electoral College National Constitution Center November 28 2016 Retrieved April 9 2019 The Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 by James Madison PDF Ashland University Retrieved July 30 2020 Records of the Federal Convention p 57 Farrand s Records Volume 2 A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 Library of Congress Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 September 6 Avalon Project Retrieved April 13 2011 Madison James 1966 Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 The Norton Library p 294 ASIN B003G6AKX2 Patrick John J Pious Richard M Ritchie Donald A 2001 The Oxford Guide to the United States Government Oxford University Press USA p 208 ISBN 978 0 19 514273 0 The Federalist 39 Avalon Project Retrieved April 13 2011 a b c Hamilton The Federalist Papers No 68 The Avalon Project Yale Law School viewed November 10 2016 The Twelfth Amendment changed this to the top three candidates The Federalist Papers Alexander Hamilton James Madison John Jay The New American Library 1961 U S Electoral College Frequently Asked Questions archives gov September 19 2019 Chang Stanley 2007 Updating the Electoral College The National Popular Vote Legislation PDF Harvard Journal on Legislation Cambridge MA President and Fellows of Harvard College 44 205 at 208 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2022 Retrieved May 28 2020 a b Hamilton Alexander The Federalist Papers No 68 The Avalon Project 2008 From the Lillian Goldman Law Library Retrieved 22 Jan 2022 Hamilton Alexander Draft of a Resolution for the Legislature of New York for the Amendment of the Constitution of the United States 29 January 1802 National Archives Founders Online viewed March 2 2019 Describing how the Electoral College was designed to work Alexander Hamilton wrote A small number of persons selected by their fellow citizens from the general mass will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated investigations decisions regarding the selection of a president Hamilton Federalist 68 Hamilton strongly believed this was to be done district by district and when states began doing otherwise he proposed a constitutional amendment to mandate the district system Hamilton Draft of a Constitutional Amendment Madison concurred The district mode was mostly if not exclusively in view when the Constitution was framed and adopted Madison to Hay 1823 Archived May 25 2017 at the Wayback Machine William C Kimberling Essays in Elections The Electoral College 1992 Ray v Blair LII Legal Information Institute VanFossen Phillip J November 4 2020 Who invented the Electoral College The Conversation WashU Expert Electoral College ruling contradicts Founders original intent The Source Washington University in St Louis The Source July 6 2020 Article 2 Section 1 Clauses 2 and 3 Selection of Electors 1796 1832 McPherson v Blacker press pubs uchicago edu Electoral College history com A E Networks Retrieved August 6 2018 Davis Kenneth C 2003 Don t Know Much About History Everything You Need to Know About American History but Never Learned 1st ed New York HarperCollins p 620 ISBN 978 0 06 008381 6 Today in History February 17 Library of Congress Washington D C a b Federalist No 68 The Avalon Project Justice Robert Jackson Ray v Blair dissent 1952 Chiafalo v Washington 591 U S 2020 Justia Law A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 memory loc gov a b Article 2 Section 1 Clauses 2 and 3 Joseph Story Commentaries on the Constitution 3 1449 52 1454 60 1462 67 press pubs uchicago edu a b Founders Online Draft of a Resolution for the Legislature of New York for the founders archives gov a b James Madison to George Hay 23 August 1823 May 25 2017 Archived from the original on May 25 2017 a b Senate United States Congress November 3 1961 Hearings U S Government Printing Office via Google Books Resolves of the General Court of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Passed at Their Session which Commenced on Wednesday the Thirty First of May and Ended on the Seventeenth of June One Thousand Eight Hundred and Twenty Published Agreeably to Resolve of 16th January 1812 Boston Russell amp Gardner for B Russell 1820 repr Boston Book Company January 1 1820 via Google Books a b How the Electoral College Became Winner Take All FairVote August 21 2012 Retrieved February 13 2024 a b Founders Online James Madison to George Hay 23 August 1823 Archived from the original on May 25 2017 Founders Online Draft of a Resolution for the Legislature of New York for the founders archives gov Founders Online From James Madison to George Hay 23 August 1823 founders archives gov Founders Online From Thomas Jefferson to George Hay 17 August 1823 founders archives gov 1788 Election For the First Term 1789 1793 U S Electoral College U S National Archives Archived from the original on June 1 2006 Retrieved April 19 2017 United States presidential election of 1789 Encyclopedia Britannica September 19 2013 Retrieved April 19 2017 a b Presidential Elections 1789 1996 Congressional Quarterly Inc 1997 ISBN 978 1 5680 2065 5 pp 9 10 Presidential Elections 1789 1996 Congressional Quarterly Inc 1997 ISBN 978 1 5680 2065 5 pp 10 11 Batan v McMaster No 19 1297 4th Cir 2020 p 5 PDF Presidential Elections 1789 1996 Congressional Quarterly Inc 1997 ISBN 978 1 5680 2065 5 p 11 Gore D Angelo December 23 2016 Presidents Winning Without Popular Vote FactCheck org Apportionment by State PDF House of Representatives History Art amp Archives viewed January 27 2019 Unlike composition in the College from 1803 to 1846 the U S Senate sustained parity between free soil and slave holding states Later a run of free soil states including Iowa Wisconsin California Minnesota Oregon and Kansas were admitted before the outbreak of the Civil War U S Constitution Transcript held at the U S National Archives viewed online on February 5 2019 Brian D Humes Elaine K Swift Richard M Valelly Kenneth Finegold and Evelyn C Fink Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives Measuring the Impact of the Three Fifths Clause in David W Brady and Mathew D McCubbins eds Party Process and Political Change in Congress New Perspectives on the History of Congress 2002 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4571 0 p 453 and Table 15 1 Impact of the Three Fifths Clause on Slave and Nonslave Representation 1790 1861 p 454 Leonard L Richards Slave Power The Free North and Southern Domination 1780 1860 2001 referenced in a review at Humanities and Social Sciences Net Online viewed February 2 2019 Brian D Humes et al Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives Measuring the Impact of the Three Fifths Clause in David W Brady and Mathew D McCubbins eds Party Process and Political Change in Congress New Perspectives on the History of Congress 2002 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4571 0 pp 464 65 Table 16 6 Impact of the Three fifths Clause on the Electoral College 1792 1860 The continuing uninterrupted northern free soil majority margin in the Electoral College would have been significantly smaller had slaves been counter factually counted as whole persons but still the South would have been a minority in the Electoral College over these sixty eight years Brian D Humes et al Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives Measuring the Impact of the Three Fifths Clause in David W Brady and Mathew D McCubbins eds Party Process and Political Change in Congress New Perspectives on the History of Congress 2002 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4571 0 pp 454 55 Brian D Humes Elaine K Swift Richard M Valley Kenneth Finegold and Evelyn C Fink Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives Measuring the Impact of the Three Fifths Clause Chapter 15 in David W Brady and Mathew D McCubbins eds Party Process and Political Change in Congress New Perspectives on the History of Congress 2002 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4571 0 p 453 and Table 15 1 Impact of the Three Fifths Clause on Slave and Nonslave Representation 1790 1861 p 454 Wills Garry 2005 Negro President Jefferson and the Slave Power Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 1 3 ISBN 978 0618485376 Wilentz Sean April 4 2019 Opinion The Electoral College Was Not a Pro Slavery Ploy The New York Times Retrieved May 20 2020 Brian D Humes et al Representation of the Antebellum South in the House of Representatives Measuring the Impact of the Three Fifths Clause in David W Brady and Mathew D McCubbins eds Party Process and Political Change in Congress New Perspectives on the History of Congress 2002 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 4571 0 p 464 Constitution of the United States A Transcription online February 9 2019 See Article I Section 9 and in Article IV Section 2 First Census of the United States Chapter III in A Century of Population Growth from the first Census volume 900 United States Census Office 1909 In the 1790 Virginia s population was 747 610 Pennsylvania was 433 633 p 8 Virginia had 59 1 percent white and 1 7 percent free black counted whole and 39 1 percent or 292 315 counted three fifths or a 175 389 number for congressional apportionment Pennsylvania had 97 5 percent white and 1 6 percent free black and 0 9 percent slave or 7 372 persons p 82 Amar Akhil November 10 2016 The Troubling Reason the Electoral College Exists Time Tally of Electoral Votes for the 1800 Presidential Election February 11 1801 National Archives The Center for Legislative Archives viewed January 27 2019 Foner Eric 2010 The Fiery Trial Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery W W Norton amp Company p 16 ISBN 978 0393080827 Guelzo Adam Hulme James November 15 2016 In Defense of the Electoral College The Washington Post a b c d e Benner Dave November 15 2016 Cherry Picking James Madison Abbeville Institute The Fourteenth Amendment from America Book 9 archived from the original on 2011 10 27 The selected papers of Thaddeus Stevens v 2 Stevens Thaddeus 1792 1868 Palmer Beverly Wilson 1936 Ochoa Holly Byers 1951 Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Digital Research Library 2011 pp 135 36 Dovere Edward Isaac September 9 2020 The Deadline That Could Hand Trump the Election The Atlantic Retrieved November 9 2020 3 U S C 7 a b c Zak Dan November 16 2016 The electoral college isn t a real place But someone has to answer all the angry phone calls these days Washington Post Retrieved November 21 2016 3 U S C 15 What is the Electoral College U S Electoral College Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved August 2 2018 McCarthy Devin How the Electoral College Became Winner Take All Fairvote Archived from the original on March 10 2014 Retrieved November 22 2014 a b The Electoral College Maine and Nebraska FairVote Archived from the original on October 12 2011 Retrieved November 16 2011 The Electoral College National Conference of State Legislatures November 11 2020 Retrieved November 15 2020 The present allotment of electors by state is shown in the Electoral vote distribution section The number of electors allocated to each state is based on Article II Section 1 Clause 2 of the Constitution subject to being reduced pursuant to Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment Table C2 Apportionment Population and Number of Seats in U S House of Representatives by State 1910 to 2020 U S 2020 Census Table 1 Apportionment Population and Number of Representatives by State U S 2020 Census Distribution of Electoral Votes U S National Archives How is the president elected Here is a basic guide to the electoral college system Raw Story October 25 2016 Sabrina Eaton October 29 2004 Brown learns he can t serve as Kerry elector steps down PDF Cleveland Plain Dealer reprint at Edison Research Archived from the original PDF on July 10 2011 Retrieved January 3 2008 Darrell J Kozlowski 2010 Federalism Infobase Publishing pp 33 34 ISBN 978 1 60413 218 2 Write in Votes electoral vote com Retrieved August 3 2020 Planning to write in Paul Ryan or Bernie Sanders It won t count in most states The Washington Post November 3 2015 a b Maine amp Nebraska FairVote Takoma Park Maryland Archived from the original on August 2 2018 Retrieved August 1 2018 About the Electors U S Electoral College Washington D C National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved August 2 2018 Split Electoral Votes in Maine and Nebraska 270 to Win Retrieved August 1 2018 3 U S C 1 A uniform national date for presidential elections was not set until 1845 although the Congress always had constitutional authority to do so Kimberling William C 1992 The Electoral College p 7 Electoral College Instructions to State Officials PDF National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved January 22 2014 District of Columbia Certificate of Ascertainment archived from the original on 2006 03 05 Twelfth Amendment FindLaw Retrieved August 26 2010 Twenty third Amendment FindLaw Retrieved August 26 2010 U S C 7 US Code Section 7 Meeting and vote of electors FindLaw Retrieved August 26 2010 U S Electoral College For State Officials National Archives and Records Administration Archived from the original on October 25 2012 Retrieved November 7 2012 Associated Press January 9 2009 Congress meets to count electoral votes NBC News Retrieved April 5 2012 Kuroda Tadahisa 1994 The Origins of the Twelfth Amendment The Electoral College in the Early Republic 1787 1804 Greenwood p 168 ISBN 978 0 313 29151 7 Johnson Linda S November 2 2020 Electors seldom go rogue in casting a state s votes for president Retrieved November 9 2020 Faithless Elector State Laws Fair Vote Retrieved July 25 2020 Penrose Drew March 19 2020 Faithless Electors Fair Vote Archived from the original on February 9 2021 Retrieved March 19 2020 Chernow Ron Alexander Hamilton New York Penguin 2004 p 514 Bomboy Scott December 19 2016 The one election where Faithless Electors made a difference Constitution Daily Philadelphia Pennsylvania National Constitution Center Retrieved March 17 2020 Barrow Bill November 19 2016 Q amp A Electors almost always follow the vote in their state The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 20 2016 Retrieved November 19 2016 Williams Pete July 6 2020 Supreme Court rules faithless electors can t go rogue at Electoral College NBC News Retrieved July 6 2020 Howe Amy July 6 2020 Opinion analysis Court upholds faithless elector laws SCOTUSblog Retrieved July 6 2020 Guzman Natasha October 22 2016 How Are Electors Selected For The Electoral College This Historic Election Process Decides The Winner Bustle Retrieved July 6 2020 The President of the Senate shall in the presence of the Senate and House of Representatives open all the certificates and the votes shall then be counted Constitution of the United States Amendments 11 27 National Archives and Records Administration a b 3 U S C 15 Counting electoral votes in Congress EXPLAINER How Congress will count Electoral College votes AP NEWS December 15 2020 Retrieved December 19 2020 David A McKnight 1878 The Electoral System of the United States A Critical and Historical Exposition of Its Fundamental Principles in the Constitution and the Acts and Proceedings of Congress Enforcing It Wm S Hein Publishing p 313 ISBN 978 0 8377 2446 1 Blakemore Erin January 5 2021 The 1876 election was the most divisive in U S history Here s how Congress responded National Geographic Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Williams Brenna 11 times electoral vote count was interrupted CNN Retrieved June 28 2022 The House just rejected an objection to Pennsylvania s electoral vote CNN January 6 2021 Retrieved January 7 2021 Objections To Four Swing States Electors Fall Flat After Senators Refuse To Participate Hawley Forces Debate On Pennsylvania forbes com January 7 2020 RL30804 The Electoral College An Overview and Analysis of Reform Proposals L Paige Whitaker and Thomas H Neale January 16 2001 Ncseonline org Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Retrieved August 26 2010 Longley Lawrence D Peirce Neal R 1999 The Electoral College Primer 2000 Yale University Press New Haven CT 13 Election evolves into perfect electoral storm USA Today December 12 2000 Archived from the original on May 15 2006 Retrieved June 8 2016 Senate Journal from 1837 Memory loc gov Retrieved August 26 2010 Rossiter 2003 p 410 Chiafalo v Washington No 19 465 591 U S slip op at 16 17 2020 Shelly Jacob D July 10 2020 Supreme Court Clarifies Rules for Electoral College States May Restrict Faithless Electors Report Congressional Research Service p 3 Retrieved July 10 2023 a b Neale 2020b p 4 Senate Journal 42 3 pp 334 337 Senate Journal 42 3 p 346 Donald David Herbert 1996 Lincoln New York New York Simon and Schuster pp 273 279 ISBN 978 0 684 82535 9 Holzer Harold 2008 Lincoln President elect Abraham Lincoln and the Great Secession Winter 1860 1861 Simon amp Schuster p 378 ISBN 978 0 7432 8947 4 Jeansonne Glen 2012 The Life of Herbert Hoover Fighting Quaker 1928 1933 New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 44 45 ISBN 978 1 137 34673 5 Retrieved May 20 2016 The Museum Exhibit Galleries Gallery 5 The Logical Candidate The President Elect West Branch Iowa Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved February 24 2016 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 31 32 Picchi Blaise 1998 The Five Weeks of Giuseppe Zangara The Man Who Would Assassinate FDR Chicago Academy Chicago Publishers pp 19 20 ISBN 9780897334433 OCLC 38468505 Oliver Willard Marion Nancy E 2010 Killing the President Assassinations Attempts and Rumored Attempts on U S Commanders in Chief Assassinations Attempts and Rumored Attempts on U S Commanders in Chief ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313364754 Hunsicker A 2007 The Fine Art of Executive Protection Handbook for the Executive Protection Officer Universal Publishers ISBN 9781581129847 Russo Gus Molton Stephen 2010 Brothers in Arms The Kennedys the Castros and the Politics of Murder Bloomsbury Publishing USA ISBN 978 1 60819 247 2 Greene Bob October 24 2010 The man who did not kill JFK CNN Dirty Bomb parts found in Slain man s home February 10 2009 Jeff Zeleny Jim Rutenberg December 5 2009 Threats Against Obama Spiked Early The New York Times Piazza Jo Meek James Gordon Kennedy Helen August 27 2008 Feds Trio of would be Obama assassins not much of threat New York Daily News Retrieved September 1 2008 Date Jack October 27 2008 Feds thwart alleged Obama assassination plot ABC News Retrieved October 28 2008 a b Neale 2020b pp 5 6 Rossiter 2003 p 564 Amar Akhil Reed 1995 Presidents Vice Presidents and Death Closing the Constitution s Succession Gap PDF Arkansas Law Review University of Arkansas School of Law 48 215 221 Retrieved July 3 2023 Neale 2020b pp 2 3 a b Neale 2020b pp 3 4 Rossiter 2003 p 551 Neale 2020a pp 6 7 Rossiter 2003 p 567 Neale 2020a pp 3 4 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 25 26 Neale 2020a p 3 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 66 67 Neale 2020a pp 25 26 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 26 30 Neale 2020a p 4 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 32 33 64 65 Neale 2020a pp 4 6 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 45 49 Continuity of Government Commission 2009 pp 39 47 Rossiter 2003 p 560 Neale 2020a pp 1 7 2020 Census Apportionment Results Washington D C U S Census Bureau April 26 2021 Retrieved April 26 2021 Each state s number of electoral votes is equal to its total congressional representation its number of Representatives plus its two Senators Winners and losers from first release of 2020 census data Associated Press April 26 2021 Moore John L ed 1985 Congressional Quarterly s Guide to U S Elections 2nd ed Washington D C Congressional Quarterly Inc pp 254 56 Bush v Gore Justice Stevens dissenting quote in second paragraph Moore John L ed 1985 Congressional Quarterly s Guide to U S Elections 2nd ed Washington D C Congressional Quarterly Inc p 255 a b c d Kolodny Robin 1996 The Several Elections of 1824 Congress amp the Presidency 23 2 139 64 doi 10 1080 07343469609507834 Election 101 PDF Princeton Press Princeton University Press Archived from the original PDF on December 2 2014 Retrieved November 22 2014 Black Eric October 14 2012 Our Electoral College system is weird and not in a good way MinnPost Retrieved November 22 2014 a b c d Moore John L ed 1985 Congressional Quarterly s Guide to U S Elections 2nd ed Washington D C Congressional Quarterly Inc p 266 Legislative Action The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer November 30 2000 Pbs org Archived from the original on January 24 2001 Retrieved August 26 2010 Moore John L ed 1985 Congressional Quarterly s Guide to U S Elections 2nd ed Washington D C Congressional Quarterly Inc p 254 a b c Fiddling with the Rules Franklin amp Marshall College March 9 2005 Archived from the original on September 3 2006 Retrieved August 26 2010 Henderson Nia Malika Haines Errin January 25 2013 Republicans in Virginia other states seeking electoral college changes washingtonpost com Retrieved January 24 2013 Election Reform PDF Dos state pa us Archived from the original PDF on May 1 2008 Retrieved August 26 2010 McNulty Timothy December 23 2012 Pennsylvania looks to alter state s electoral vote system Pittsburgh Post Gazette Sabato Larry A more perfect Constitution permanent dead link viewed November 22 2014 archived from the original dead link on 2016 01 02 Levy Robert A Should we reform the Electoral College Cato Institute viewed November 22 2014 The Electoral College Reform Options Fairvote org Archived from the original on February 21 2015 Retrieved August 14 2014 Congressional Research Services Electoral College p 15 viewed November 22 2014 Gaming the Electoral College Alternate Allocation Methods www 270towin com Archived from the original on January 16 2022 Retrieved July 31 2022 Methods of Choosing Presidential Electors Uselectionatlas org Retrieved August 26 2010 Schwartz Maralee April 7 1991 Nebraska s Vote Change The Washington Post Skelley Geoffrey November 20 2014 What Goes Arou, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.