Every four years, the citizens of the United States of America elect a new president. Not everyone knows exactly how the president is elected. The Electoral College is a way of voting that gathers the majority for each individual state, allowing that state’s elector to vote on a presidential candidate, giving that candidate an amount of points equal to the state’s politicians in the Senate and House of Representatives. Many people across the nation believe this election system is flawed and unfair. Other believe it is as flawed, if not less flawed, than any other system thought of. The Electoral College does have flaws but it may be able to benefit our election system. People who oppose the Electoral College believe it is flawed. Many of …show more content…
This may be why it has many supporters. The Electoral College was made along with the Constitution. Most people agree that “the Constitution was designed so that the interests of the nation trumped the interests of the individual states” (Bowman and DiLasco). The Electoral College was made to help the nation as a whole. It stops the population from electing a candidate who doesn’t have the national interest at heart. The Electoral College was the best way to give the decision of who should be president to the people, but not letting the public’s power get out of control. Any changes to the Electoral College make the system even more complicated and hurt more than help. When vetoing the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger said, “the bill subverted the democratic will of California voters by disregarding their presidential preference” (Bowman and DiLasco). The NPVIC gives the electoral votes to the winner of the popular vote. This ignores a state’s preference of presidential candidate. Other changes that politicians tried to pass made the Electoral College less productive or more complicated. The Electoral College may have flaws but there is no perfect voting