Electoral Reform Essay

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    Presidential election comes to pass the Electoral College is responsible for the formal election of both the President and Vice President of the United States. As an example of an indirect election, where people in each state at large vote in order to decide which individuals will be delegated the responsibility of casting votes for President and Vice President in accordance with the popular vote of the state which has entrusted them to provide such representation, the Electoral College works to ensure that

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    stands for. By using the Congressional District Method instead of the current electoral college, it increases the chances we have in including everyone's vote. Many people are against changing the electoral college and believe that keeping it as it is is the best method we could use because they are afraid of change; however this

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    consisted of 13 Congressmen representing all the states. With each congressman having Veto power. This made decision making a complicated process as there were loads of disagreements between the 13 congressman and very few decisions were passed. New Reform: It was then decided to facilitate the decision making that there was a need for a Commander-in-Chief/ President. Disagreement: However, the delegates were split into two sides in deciding the process for electing the new President. • One side wanted

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    In the United States, the Electoral College determines the victor of a national election. Each state has its own number of electoral votes, which is determined by state population. This system is a “winner takes all” system. Which means the candidate with 50 percent or more of the votes in an individual state gets all of that states electoral votes. The 2016 presidential election will have 538 electoral votes, this means that the election will be decided who is the first candidate to 270 votes. Some

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    Electoral College System Essay

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    The roots of the Electoral College System can be traced way back to more than 200 years. A controversial debate on the effectiveness of Electoral College continues over years. The founders established it as a resolution between president choice by a vote in congress and choice of the president by qualified citizens’ popular vote. 538 electors constituted the Electoral College and 270 majorities of electoral votes choose the president. The United States got its independence from Great Britain, and

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    During five presidential elections, the winning candidate won the electoral vote but lost the popular vote. Many call for reform of how elections should be done, a system in which the popular vote determines the winner. I call for abolishing the Electoral College for many reasons. A system that goes by majority rule is how a democracy should function. Asking people to cast votes and then having the elite override it with electoral votes is not how a true democracy should be. The Founding Fathers

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    current electoral system, including the underlying racist and sexist roots, voter inequality and other flaws

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    January 2015 per. 1 Junior Paper The American Electoral College How would you feel if your vote essentially counted for nothing in a general election, especially if that election was for President of the United States? Well it appears to be that way with the way electors are the number one most important group of voters in any presidential election. In America, a national popular vote would clearly prevent problems such as fraud in the Electoral College. In our Nation’s history, there have been

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    Query 1: In the United States, the president is elected by the Electoral College, not the popular vote as prescribed by the Article Two of the Constitution. Why would the Founding Fathers prefer the Electoral College over a direct popular vote? According to a factcheck.org article, "The Reason for the Electoral College" by Joe Miller, they were "afraid of democracy" and the idea that a majority faction could effectively rule the nation which could "violate the rights of other citizens or would harm

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    Democracy Now: Abolish the Electoral College As citizens we owe it to the people and voters who have given and sacrificed for the right to vote to make sure that every single vote is counted and equal. We need to ensure that a vote cast in one state is equal to the vote of citizens in any other state. We need to become a true democracy. “The presidency is the only office in America where the candidate who wins the most votes can still lose the election. There isn’t any elected office in the Nation

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