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Discussion » Statements » Rosie's Corner » YOU LOSE BY 3 MILLION VOTES YET YOU ARE ALLOWED TO ENTER THE OVAL OFFICE AS PREZ?

YOU LOSE BY 3 MILLION VOTES YET YOU ARE ALLOWED TO ENTER THE OVAL OFFICE AS PREZ?

WHAT KIND OF INSANE MIND THOUGHT UP THAT SCRIPT? YOU WIN AND LOSE? C'MON. GET REAL. MAKES NO SENSE.

Posted - October 2, 2019

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  • 2706
     That's the Electoral College process and was thought up by the founding fathers. When U.S. citizens go to the polls to “elect” a president, they are in fact voting for a particular slate of electors. In every state but Maine and Nebraska, the candidate who wins the most votes (that is, a plurality) in the state receives all of the state’s electoral votes. The number of electors in each state is the sum of its U.S. senators and its U.S. representatives. The electors meet in their respective states after the popular election. There, they cast a ballot for president and a second for vice president. A candidate must receive a majority of electoral votes to be elected president.

      The reason that the Constitution calls for this extra layer, rather than just providing for the direct election of the president, is that most of the nation’s founders were actually rather afraid of democracy. James Madison worried about what he called “factions,” which he defined as groups of citizens who have a common interest in some proposal that would either violate the rights of other citizens or would harm the nation as a whole.  Madison’s fear was that a faction could grow to encompass more than 50 percent of the population, at which point it could sacrifice to its ruling passion or interest, both the public good and the rights of other citizens. Madison had a solution for the tyranny of the majority, a republic.

      Alexander Hamilton wrote in “The Federalist Papers,” the Constitution is designed to ensure “that the office of President will never fall to the lot of any man who is not in an eminent degree endowed with the requisite qualifications.” The point of the Electoral College is to preserve “the sense of the people,” while at the same time ensuring that a president is chosen “by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station, and acting under circumstances favorable to deliberation, and to a judicious combination of all the reasons and inducements which were proper to govern their choice.”
      October 2, 2019 7:52 AM MDT
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