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Benefits Of The Electoral College

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The Electoral College is a group of people whose vote represents the state of the United States; they formally vote during the presidential election in accordance with the vote cast by the public to elect the next President of the United States. With the definition provided and the role the electoral college plays in the presidential election, it does not correlate with the rule of democracy. Democracy allows the public to directly vote for an elected official to represent them in the government and carry out the will of the people. But with the Electoral College, the voters are voting for the presidential electors and not the candidate they want to become their next President. According to History.com, the Electoral College works in this …show more content…

The year 2000 presidential election was one of or the beginning of when we began to request the reform the electoral college. Times have changed since 1789 when the electoral college was created. We have better ways of sharing information now. Individual/citizens voting choices should matter more than electoral votes. It would not take a constitutional amendment to require all states to cast electoral votes that more accurately reflect popular votes. I would think any voter would want his or her voice heard and his or her vote counted. The 2016 presidential outcome is a contradiction as the Founding Fathers thought the Electoral College would prevent disorderly, agrarian populists from gaining control of the government and promoting their provincial interests. It was a safer way for them to be sure our government was sensible, upstanding and national. Surprisingly, the Electoral College has enabled the opposite outcome, “trumping” the popular vote to elect the least qualified candidate for president. That’s what happened in the 2000 Bush versus Gore election, and the recent 2016 Trump versus Clinton which sparked the effort to switch to popular voting for presidential elections. Though many have seen this they still believe the Electoral College is still the right thing for this country democracy. According to McCollester, “Because it is difficult to know the ramifications of such change, one must first consider how the Electoral College came about and how it actually functions today. Once these two points are understood, the need for the Electoral College will become evident because of its ability to maintain the system of checks and balances in American government, preserve the two-party system, and require a national president. These three aspects of America's political structure are protected by the Electoral College and each is essential for the continued stability of

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