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The Electoral College

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The Electoral College

pols100/U.S. Government



The Electoral College

After the two parties have held their conventions and nominated their candidates,

the real campaign begins. For about three

months, the candidates spend all their time

making their case to the American people.

This involves a lot of travel, and a lot of

time “on the stump,” which is to say giving

speeches at different locations. The

candidates must make decisions daily, and

toward the end by the hour, about which

states to visit and where to invest their

advertising dollars. To understand how a

campaign strategy is developed and how it

guides these decisions, you first have to

understand the Electoral College.



The Origin of the

Electoral College

The Electoral College is the institution

that officially elects the President of the

United States. In 1787, when the

Constitution was written, communications

between different parts of the country was

very slow. The Founding Fathers were

worried that no one man or group of men

would be sufficiently well known throughout the country to win a popular election

for president. It was decided instead that the people would elect a body called the

Electoral College, and that body of persons would choose the President. The

Founders imagined that candidates would run openly for the office of elector, and

that the voters would choose among the candidates as they would candidates for

the House or Senate. Whom do you trust to choose a President for you?

But in fact it has never worked like that. Everyone knew that the first president

was going to be George Washington, and so no one paid any attention to who the

electors were. Very quickly after that the American political party system began to

form. Ever since, each party has run “slates” of electors for its preferred candidate.



Electoral College Math

Here is how the Electoral College works: Each state receives a number of

electoral votes equal to the number of its seats in the House of

Representatives plus the number of its seats in the Senate. Since every state has

exactly two Senate seats, just add two to the number of House seats. In addition to

the fifty states, Washington D.C., a federal territory, gets 3. So:



House Seats Senate Seats Electoral Votes

Arkansas 4 2 6

California 55 2 57

South Dakota 1 2 3







To calculate the total for the Electoral College, you need to add the following:



U.S. House of Representatives 435

U.S. Senate 100

Washington D.C. 3

Total: 538

The minimum needed to win: 270







Under the rules of the Constitution, a candidate must win a majority in the

Electoral College to be elected President. Half of 538 is 269, so a candidate must

win 270 electoral votes or more. In the event that no candidate manages to win a

majority, the election will be decided by the U.S. House of Representatives. This

has happened once, very early.



Here is a graph illustrating the Electoral College outcome in the 2004 election.

Each square represents one electoral vote. Red squares are votes won by the

Republican candidate, Bush. Blue squares represent votes won by the Democrat,

John Kerry.

How Electoral Votes are Distributed after an

Election

Each state can devise its own system for distributing the electoral vote. In the first

few elections, many states let allowed the state legislature to decide with no

popular election at all. Today every state and Washington D.C. will hold an

election.



In most states the system in place is the called “Unit Rule,” or more commonly,

winner take all. Each candidate runs a slate of electors in a state equal to the

number of that state‟s electoral vote. The slate is a list of persons pledged to vote

for that candidate. So John McCain‟s slate in Arkansas will have six people who

are pledged to vote for him if he wins that state. Barack Obama will have his own

six pledged to vote for him.



Likewise, South Dakota will have a slate of three electors representing John

McCain, and another slate of three representing Barack Obama. There will be

additional slates for third party candidates. Who will these electors be? Party

officials or prominent supporters of the candidate, for the most part. When voters

go to the polls, they will not see the names of these electors. They will see only the

various tickets: McCain/Palin; Obama/Biden; etc. Once the popular vote has

been counted, meaning the actual votes cast, whichever ticket wins a plurality

gets all three of South Dakota‟s electoral votes. Another way to put this is that the

slate pledged to vote for the candidate who won the popular vote in that state is

elected to the Electoral College. You can see the outcome in New Mexico in the

image on the right.

In 2008, John McCain/Sarah Palin won 203, 054 votes, just over 53% of the

popular vote. Barack Obama/Joe Biden received 170.924, almost 45%. The

Constitution Party came in third with fewer than 2000 votes. You can see above a

list of the electors pledged to vote for each candidate. Since McCain/Palin won

more popular votes than any other ticket, all three of McCain‟s electors were

elected to the Electoral College. Here are their names:



Dennis M. Daugaard (Lt. Governor)

Larry Long (Attorney General)

Mike Rounds (Governor)



Obama/Biden also had three electors:

Gary Job

Catherine V. Piersol

Jack Billion



None of these made the Electoral College



In North Carolina, Obama/Biden beat McCain/Palin by about three tenths of one

percent of the popular vote a won only a plurality of the vote statewide. But the

Obama ticket got all 15 of that state‟s electoral votes. That is “winner take all.”



Electoral College Outcomes vs. the Popular

Vote

Electoral College results, largely because of the winner take all rule in almost all

states, will differ significantly from the popular vote totals. Consider 1992



1992 Popular Vote Percentage Electoral Percentage

Vote

D Bill Clinton/Al 44,909,806 43.01% 370 68.8%

Gore

R George 39,104,550 37.45% 168 31.2%

Bush/Dan

Quayle

I Ross 19,743,821 18.91% 0 0%

Perot/James

Stockdale







So Democrat Bill Clinton won only 43% of the popular vote. George Bush (George

W.‟s dad), won 37%. In that election, a third party candidate, Ross Perot, won

nearly 20% of the popular vote. But Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton won 370

electoral votes, for a strong majority in the Electoral College. And so Bill Clinton

became our 42nd President. The same thing happens again in 1996.



1996 Popular Vote Percentage Electoral Percentage

Vote

D Bill Clinton/Al 47,400,125 49.23% 379 70.4%

Gore

R Bob Dole/ 39,198,755 40.72% 159 29.6%

I Ross Perot/Pat 8,085,402 8.40% 0 0.0%

Choate

Ross Perot‟s support goes way down in 96, but it‟s still eight million people, and

that‟s enough to keep Bill Clinton from achieving a majority of popular support.

Both in 1992 and 1996, more people voted against Clinton than voted for him. Is

there anything wrong with that? It is not easy to see what.



It is very likely that the presence of Ross Perot in the race in 1992 cost George

Bush (41) the election. There is no way to prove that, but it seems likely that most

of the 20 million people who voted for him would have voted for Bush rather than

Clinton. Third party candidates cannot win presidential elections, but they can

sometimes decide them in favor of one party or the other.



Losing the Popular Vote but Winning the

Election

The Electoral College makes it possible for a candidate to lose a plurality of the

popular vote and still win the election. Although this is very rare, it happened in

2000.







2000 Popular Vote Percentage Electoral Percentage

Vote

George W. 50,460,110 47.87% 271 50.4%

Bush/Dick

Cheney

Al Gore/Joe 51,003,926 48.38% 266 49.4%

Lieberman

Ralph 2,883,105 2.73% 0 0.0%

Nader/Winona

La Duke







Al Gore won 48.38% of the popular vote in that year, with George W. Bush

winning 47.87%. That‟s a difference of less than one percent, but it still means

that more people voted for Gore than for Bush. But Bush put won just the right

collection of states to give him a very narrow victory in the Electoral College: 271 to

Gore‟s 266. That‟s how George W. made it to the White House. Is that unfair?

No. The rules are the rules. If you don‟t like „em, work to get „em changed.



One thing about the 2000 election that was unprecedented is that the outcome

was not known for months. The two candidates were separated by a razor thin

margin in Florida. It took a series of decisions in the Florida State Supreme Court

and the United States Supreme Court to decide how the votes there would be

counted. Here is the official outcome.

2000 Florida Popular Vote Percentage Electoral

Results Vote

George W. 2,912,790 48.85% 25

Bush/Dick

Cheney

Al Gore/Joe 2,912,253 48.84% 0

Lieberman

Ralph 97,488 1.63% 0

Nader/Winona

La Duke







Would you just look at that! Out of nearly six million votes cast, George W. Bush

wins the popular vote in Florida by 537. A flu bug in the Florida panhandle would

have made Gore President. Don’t ever let anyone tell you that your vote doesn’t

matter.



Consider also South Dakota. Here is our vote in the same election.



2000 South Dakota Popular Vote Percentage Electoral

Results Vote

George W. 190,700 60.30% 3

Bush/Dick

Cheney

Al Gore/Joe 118,804 37.56% 0

Lieberman







Bush wins by a comfortable margin in South Dakota. But how comfortable was it?

Bush won by two electoral votes. South Dakota cast three electoral votes. If 15%

of South Dakota voters had gone the other way, Gore would have gone to the

White House rather than Bush.



Both Florida and South Dakota illustrate something vital about the Electoral

College: it makes states very important.



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