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THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE: The American Presidential Selection System

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THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE. II. Why the System is in Place. A. The need for popular input. ... is in this way that the Electoral College system is in line with the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE: The American Presidential Selection System


1
THE ELECTORAL COLLEGEThe American Presidential
Selection System
  • I. How it Operates
  • A. Main Constitutional provision Article II,
    Section 1, Clause 2 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
  • B. Once the states appoint a slate of Electors,
    the Electors cast their ballots for President.
    This is done every 4 years, according to a
    timetable set by Congress.
  • C. The candidate with a majority of Electoral
    votes cast shall be President. If there is no
    candidate with a majority, the House of
    Representatives shall choose the President from
    among the three top vote-getters.

2
THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE
  • II. Why the System is in Place
  • A. The need for popular input. As every state is
    a democracy, the manner of choosing the electors
    is a matter of state-level democratic politics.
    This means that the citizens of each state are
    permitted a voice on Presidential candidates, if
    not directly at the ballot box then at lease
    indirectly through their state legislatures.
  • B. The need to temper popularity with wisdom.
    The Electors are, by Constitutional design, free
    to vote for whomever they wish (i.e., they are
    not necessarily bound to the most popular
    candidates in their respective states). This
    allows the Electors, as a most respected and
    independent body, the opportunity to select the
    person they believe is most qualified for the
    position. (NOTE In modern times the state
    legislatures, and hence in turn the office of
    Elector, are under the control of the political
    parties, so the independence of the Electors has
    been practically eliminated).

3
THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE
  • II. Why the System is in Place (cont.)
  • C. The compound ratio formula for allocating
    Electoral votes to each state (one vote for each
    member of the states congressional delegation)
    helps to assure the selection of a candidate that
    will have dual ties of loyalty. These ties of
    loyalty are to BOTH
  • 1) the people as a mass (House portion of the
    formula) and
  • 2) and the states as distinct and unique
    political units (Senate portion of the formula).
  • D. It is in this way that the Electoral College
    system is in line with the whole logic and theory
    of American Constitutional design, particularly
    as this logic and theory similarly structures the
    legislative branch. No candidate can win the
    Presidency without a critical mass of popularity
    similarly, no candidate can win without appealing
    to a critical mass of the diverse regions of the
    country.
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