Electoral College Essay

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    The Electoral College contributes to the unity of the country by requiring votes all around the country, and not just one region. Throughout history it has been a common occurrence for presidents to obtain a particular region; often being the region they reside from. In 2000, Al Gore held a slim popular vote victory of 543,895 (0.5%), but George W. Bush won the Electoral College 271-266 (Doc 5). This is the result of many votes for Gore coming from a certain region of the country, while Bush had…

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    president based off a unique system known as the electoral college. The way that this system works is interesting and is confused easily in the general public. In early November, when citizens go to the polls, they are not voting for the president directly, rather they are voting for their individual states to cast its electoral votes towards a certain presidential candidate. In the forty-eight of the fifty states where voting takes place, all the electoral votes go to the presidential candidate…

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    go to their polling place and cast their vote to determine the next president...so we thought. The electoral college is a system that allows each state’s senators to vote for the final tally. It is crucial for appointing the best candidate. America’s opinion of the electoral college is diverse.Some people think it should be abolished. The electoral college should not be abolished. The electoral college is essential for benefitting many roles in the election and electing the…

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    Essay Component The Electoral College is no doubt a major factor in the presidency. But what is the Electoral College and what does it do? Just like with everything it has its pros and cons. Created by our Founding Fathers, Americans either approve of it or want to abolish it. The Electoral College is consisted of electors, from each state, that cast their ballots for president and vice president. The election for president is consisted of a vote from Congress, and by popular vote of citizens.…

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    Since the 2000 Election, the question of whether the electoral college does more harm than help the country has been a widely debated topic. While the question never left people’s minds, people seemed to believe it would not happen again especially after Barack Obama’s two successful wins in both the popular vote and electoral college. However, the recent 2016 Election truly has people outraged and thinking of the question more every day as the current President is constantly in the news for…

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    Bush won the presidency through a small margin of electoral votes, but had lost the popular vote of the people. This election is an example of how the Electoral College diminishes the importance of the votes of the people. Most people know of the electoral college, they have read about it in their U.S. Government textbooks or have heard it mentioned in a political news broadcast, but some people are unclear on how much power the electoral college possesses; it is the electors who have the power…

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    The Electoral College is outdated and needs to be changed. In the United States our founding fathers devised a system, like none other, to elect the president. Through an indirect vote of the people. What this means is that people don’t actual vote for the president. They vote for electors that then vote for their pledged candidate. So for example, I vote for Trump in the election. I am not actually voting for Trump directly. I am actually voting for an elector that is pledged to vote for Trump…

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    Bush by 500,000 votes. The game changer in this situation was the twenty-five electoral votes Florida attained. Since Bush obtained a small majority of Florida voters over Gore, he took the twenty-five electoral votes. In turn, Democrat Al Gore went from being the popular vote victor to the election loser. Overall, although Gore won more popular votes, Bush obtained more electoral votes. Regarding the Electoral College, Plutzer mentions how “Under the current system, when a candidate wins a…

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    help me out when a presidential candidate wins the popular, and another win the electoral vote. So basically it would a best two out of three. I would say this needs to happen in order for any future election not to wind up like the Al Gore and Bush situation, or the Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton situation. So therefore having a friend around…

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    all Americans have equal part in. The constitution has set forth different parameters negating any equal influence voters should have based on most definitions of democracy. Alexander Hamilton argued and defended in Federalist 68 that the Electoral College was important for the people as a whole to have power in choosing the president, but still allowed the immediate election to be “made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the situation...” That kind of knowledge is…

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