Title: Objectives
1Objectives
- Assess information on Electoral College, and draw
your own conclusions as to whether or not it
should be reformed. - Question Should the Presidency be decided by
popular vote of all citizens?
2Structure of Electoral College
- Electors per state Members of Congress per
state (Reps 2 Senators) - 538 Electoral votes (270 needed for win)
- Winner Takes All
- All electors in a state vote for whoever wins the
state - except Maine Nebraska (district system)
- How many Electors does Pennsylvania have?
3(No Transcript)
4Impacts on the Political System?
- Con Faithless Electors
- Pro/Con Winner Takes All impacts
- Candidates may focus on large swing states
ignore other states - Con? Discourages 3rd parties who rarely get EC
votes (e.g. Green Libertarian parties) - Pro? Fosters 2-Party System (stability
moderation)
51968 Election George Wallace ran as an
Independent. With 13.5 of the national popular
vote, he won 45 Electoral College votes. His
regional support base was the reason. 1992
Election Ross Perot ran as an Independent. With
18.9 of the national popular vote, he won 0
Electoral College votes.
Source presidentelect.org
6CON Candidate may win despite losing the
popular vote, due to winner takes all
- How is that possible??
- 1st Scenario
- Winning candidate wins by narrow margins in
several states, but has big losses in other
states - 2000 Bush 271 vs. Gore 266
- Gore had over 500,000 more popular votes than
Bush, but lost by 537 votes in Florida - Election results since 1964
Florida Recount
7CONS Candidate may win despite losing the
popular vote
- If no Presidential candidate wins a majority
- House of Reps chooses Pres. from top 3 (Each
state gets only one vote) - Senate chooses Vice President from top 2
- If no President by Jan. 20, then presidential
succession order Speaker of House, President
Pro Tempore, Secretary of State, other Cabinet
Secretaries
8Pros
- Promotes Federalism
- Must campaign by states
- cant win by focusing only on a few regions
- smaller states get a boost
- Fosters Intentions of Founding Fathers
- It was a Constitutional Compromise
- Fosters Two-Party System
- More stability (fewer 3rd party upsets)
9Pros? Cons?
- Con Public Opinion (more people oppose it)
- Pro? Con? Votes of All Citizens Dont Count
Equally (Smaller states overrepresented?) - E.g. 2004
- 1 WY Elector 165,101 votes
- 1 CA Elector 617,000 votes
- Con Lack of Legitimacy for officeholder if they
won election, but lost the popular vote
10Reform Proposals
- 1) District Plan Pros/Cons
- No winner takes all
- Presidential election decided by gerrymandered
district maps - Winner of Popular vote could still lose election
- No Constitutional Amendment required, but up to
each state
11Reform Proposals
- 2) Proportional Plan
- of state popular vote of Electors given
- No winner takes all
- Winner of popular vote could still lose
- More 3rd party votes increase chances of vote
being sent to House of Reps
12Reform Proposals
- 3) Direct Popular Election
- All votes count equally
- Clear winner leader with legitimacy
- Hard to amend Constitution
- Costs too much to campaign?
13Choices
- 1) Keep Electoral College as is
- 2) District Plan
- 3) Proportional Plan
- 4) Direct Popular Election
- Directions
- Discuss pros/cons of each.
- Choose your corner
- Prepare arguemtns to persuade people
- Prepare arguments for informal debate
14 Should the Electoral College be reformed? If
yes, how?Informal Debate Make a list of pros
and cons. Choose a side. Defend and Explain
your position.