Electoral college (Audience: Americans) You voted for those who think you should enter the polling place on the first Tuesday in November and think that you should be president. As most people do, you vote in the mailbox and your vote is calculated with other people. You do this because you think this might be a definitive vote in the presidential election. Okay, you are very wrong. What you might not notice is that electoral colleges actually elect presidents, not individual voters.
This article explains why the electoral college must be abolished and whether the electoral college has survived the past 240 years as a harmless remnant in the remnants of the past. It denies its history how election universities face racial discrimination and anti-democracy, and how they are inconsistent with the reality of contemporary American life. How many Americans are afraid
Election college opposition to the protest action of cards has a historical precedent. Throughout the history of the United States, 157 electoral voters cast a protest against the party's candidates in protest. For example, due to doubts about his personality and fraudulent claims, some voters voted against Richard Nixon in elections in 1968 and 1972. They did not eventually change election results, but when Nixon resigned in the 1974 mass fraud program, they have proven historically correct, and they are still an important precedent.
First of all, what is electoral college? When the US Constitution was adopted as a compromise between presidential election and referendum, an election college was established. Currently, there are 538 electoral delegates who must obtain 270 majority votes to win candidates. If candidates do not receive a majority, elections will be decided by the House of Representatives. The number of delegates in each state is the number of Representatives of the House of Representatives and Senators. In addition, there are three representatives in Washington, DC. Each state candidate usually has its own electorate elected by that candidate, but the state law is different. When you vote for candidates, you actually vote for their voters, and they gather in December and choose the president. As mentioned earlier, most states are winners and the significance of having all candidates reach a majority prevails over all state voters.