Benefits Of The Electoral College

837 Words2 Pages

Every election day, millions of citizens go to the polls to cast their vote for the next President and Vice President of the United States. This election is called the general election to show the popular vote, but does this election actually elect a candidate to be President? No, this election does not officially elect a President. A group of 538 delegates, called the Electoral College, gathers together to formally elect the President of the United States.
During the Constitutional convention in 1787, the delegates debated a long time about how the President should be elected. Some delegates wanted the Congress to elect the President, while some delegates wanted the citizens to elect a candidate through popular vote. After many more suggestions …show more content…

Happening on multiple occasions, the Electoral College has elected a President that did not win the popular vote. Called a “faithless electors”, this happens when an elector doesn’t follow the guidelines provided by the general election (Williams 2). The election of a “minority” President has created controversy whether the Electoral College should be abolished or not. People in favor of the Electoral College state that it requires popular support throughout the states to be elected President, and it protects the smaller states’ interests for the candidates. Those in favor also say that the Electoral College supports and stabilizes a two-party system and maintains the United States’ system of representation (Williams 3). While some people are in favor of the Electoral College, there are people that protest against it. These people say that the Electoral College can lessen the voter turnout, put votes with “faithless electors”, and the Electoral College might not show what the citizens want based on popular vote. Carolyn Jefferson-Jenkins, from League of Women Voters, is a protester of the Electoral College and said, “The Electoral College, a curious vestige of the eighteenth century, violates the principle of one person, one vote. The time has come to abolish it.” Jefferson-Jenkins goes on to state that the Electoral College is becoming outdated with the technology advancements of

Open Document