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Are we SURE that Al Gore won the popular vote?

2007-01-31 06:54:04 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Elections

6 answers

No there hasn't been any changes. Nor has there been any attempt to change the anitquated system of presidential election.

I can't understand why the D's haven't attempted to change the system. It's totally ludricous that Gore won by a large margin and W ended up being president. The D's really need to get on this; we know the Republicans are very much into rule by the minority and they certainly aren't going to change the system.

I believe the reason there has been no attempt to reform the system is that it takes 2/3 of Congress and 3/4 of the states to amend the constitution. Perhaps the D's no there is no way they can get the 2/3 of Congress (or maybe it's the 3/4 of the states requirement that make this an impossible task).

2007-01-31 07:41:47 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, not anything of a formal nature anyway. The number of electors permitted to each state is determined by that state's population. As such, there may have been some variance.

More to the point, I am assuming you are wondering why it wasn't reformed based on the fact that Gore won the popular vote and subsequently lost in the electoral college. Essentially, it wasn't reformed because this was not the first time that this has occurred.

In the 1960, when Kennedy ran against Nixon, Nixon lost the popular vote by .2%. Experts at the time believed that, based on apparent voter fraud in Texas and Illinois, that in a recount, Nixon would win. Nixon, believing that such an exercise was not in the country's best interest, opted not to pursue a recount..

Based on that, I have often wondered if the diehard Gore supporters would be consistent and declare Kennedy's presidency, as they have repeatedly said about Bush's, was invalid.

2007-01-31 07:24:58 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There has not been any official reform however the number of electoral votes a state gets depends on its population, so some states in which the population has risen they will get more electoral votes. However the population is based on the national census done every 10 years so the next 2008 election is based on the 2000 census in 2012 states some states will have a different number of electoral votes.

2007-01-31 07:07:27 · answer #3 · answered by ReedRothchild 3 · 0 0

there's a vote by using the human beings on election day or till now. Absentee ballots from militia are counted if marked on election day. there is 21 days to finalize. that's stated as the "regularly occurring vote". Electoral balloting occurs in January after the election. There are 535 finished electoral votes. human beings pledge to forged the electoral vote in accordance to agreed upon parameter/ they actually vote for President and vp. . All states and Washington DC get 2 electoral votes.. some states get greater electoral votes in step with inhabitants measured in final census. So stated as "swing states" have a great style of votes, California like fifty 5 and Florida like 27. on the grounds that they have a great style of votes they are able to very much impact the election. In maximum states, a individual who has pledged to vote, votes a hundred% of the votes to the "appropriate candidate". subsequently all 27 Florida votes will bypass to the candidate with the utmost regularly occurring votes. It does no longer artwork the comparable in each and every state. In a pair of states that's diverse. yet in those particular states the excellent style of votes is small. Theoretically a candidate could have greater regularly occurring votes yet lose the election because of the all or no longer something vote in maximum states because of the electoral college.

2016-11-23 17:59:30 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It doesn't need to be reformed it works just like it's supposed to.

2007-01-31 07:39:36 · answer #5 · answered by Dr. NG 7 · 0 0

in hindsight, we are pretty sure we all voted for al gore.

2007-01-31 08:33:38 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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