Electoral College Essay

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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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    they lost their voice. The question remains. Does the Electoral College stand for the rights of the American Citizens or does it mute their voices? By looking into how the Electoral College is structured, the comparison between the popular vote and the electoral vote, and the value of a citizen’s vote, one can see how the electoral college is in fact an important piece in our government. Structure and Function The idea of this “Electoral College” arose in the summer of 1787. There were multiple proposals

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    An Amendment to Replace the Electoral College with a Direct Popular Vote Five of the fifty-eight total United States Presidential elections in history have ended in discrepancies between the popular vote and the electoral vote; on average, the president elected into office was not actually favored by the majority of Americans almost ten percent of the time. We need to acknowledge the fact that this, along with the Electoral College system as a whole, undermines our foundation in democracy. Additionally

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    Merriam-Webster’s dictionary defines college as a noun meaning “a body of clergy living together and supported by a foundation.” This word, though, is used to represent two of the most important institutions in American society: our Universities and the Electoral College. Why, then, does the lightest amount of research reveal this word is steeped in hatred and bigotry? Why does something that denotes two pillars of American life embody our deepest and darkest regret as a country? Irony aside, it

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    the majority popular vote would be elected president. This is not always true, because of the Electoral College, which is a “winner-take-all” system. Ever since the election of 1824, when Andrew Jackson ran against John Quincy Adams who did not win the popular vote and was elected into office because of the Electoral College, many other candidates have been cheated out of winning. The Electoral College should not stand any longer because in many elections it has prevented the candidate that the

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    The Electoral College is the system the United States have used to elect the President for the past two hundred years. In this essay, the reader will see that although it did the best way to represent the will of the American people, and in this essay a better alternative will be proposed to the reader. The Electoral college was created in September sixth, nineteen-eighty-seven, and was described as (founder definition) and was meant to allow a stronger South, who by using the three-fifths compromise

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    Electoral College Cons

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    After researching and learning about the Electoral College I have noticed some pros and cons of it. Manly I have found pros to why we need the Electoral College, but there are still cons to it. One of the biggest pros is that it promotes a two-party system. Once we try to get a third or fourth party into mix it just makes it harder to maintain and chose a side. Looking at the con side though, some will say that the Electoral College makes it hard for these independent parties’ voices to get heard

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    The Electoral College The Electoral College, friend or foe? The answer behind this question is in the minds of those that understand it. Whether it be a "friend" or a "foe" there will always be opposing sides and a controversial verse. Since the political circumstance of today, the Electoral College seems to be the topic in every conversation and the thesis to every essay. The uncontrollable desire to know the truth behind the mystery is stirring in the minds of the people in

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    Should we abolish the Electoral College? Voting for a president makes us feel like we actually have a part in our government, but what if that wasn't true. Abolishing the Electoral college is necessary for our government to be fair. How is it possible that a candidate can win with the majority of the people disliking him? At the beginning of our government, we strived for equality, that is why small states were given the same representation as large states. The difference in populations is colossal

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    directly elect their leaders. However, the United States remains the only democratic country in the world that does not allow the people to directly elect their President. Instead, the United States opts for the undemocratic institution of the Electoral College, in which electors from each state are chosen and these electors are the actual people that cast the votes that decide the presidential election. The Founders set up a system in Article II Section I of the Constitution that guarantees, “each

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