When we are voting for our leaders, does your vote really count? When we are voting for something as important as our president our vote should truly count. The Electoral college allows each state a certain amount of electoral votes during each election, to win the presidential election a candidate needs to get 270 electoral votes. When voting for a government official such as the president, you're actually voting which candidate the electoral votes will most likely go to. The current voting system is unfit for electing our leaders, especially our president. The electoral college is made up of 538 electors from all 50 states. When you vote for president you are voting for electors who are usually nominated by a party. Each state gets to nominate a certain amount of electors depending on the amount of people in that state, in an average state for every 565,166 people equals one electoral vote. To be elected president you would need at least 270 electoral votes. If neither candidate receives the 270 votes the house of representatives votes for the president, but this rarely happens. Electors do not have to vote for their committees nominee but, some states require that an elector vote for the candidate whose popular vote won in that state. …show more content…
Electors usually previously were state elected officials such as a person in public administration or government. The only people prohibited from being an elector is a person holding an office in the government. The electors meet on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December after the election were they place their vote for president and vice president. Although electors do not have to vote for the candidate that won the state they represent it is common for an elector to vote for the candidate with the popular vote in their