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Is it called Electoral votes or Presidental votes? All I know is that I don't have that right, that simple democratic right, to vote for the president. Is it any wonder why less than half the population doesn't vote?

2007-02-07 06:45:34 · 12 answers · asked by ranarenepr 2 in Politics & Government Politics

12 answers

We are a representative republic, not a democracy. That is an often missed fact about our political process.

2007-02-07 06:51:11 · answer #1 · answered by Amer-I-Can 4 · 1 0

For this to happen, you would have to have a constitutional amendment ratified by at least 3/4 of all of the states or at least 37/38 states would have to vote this in.

Our elections were designed this way for a reason. To keep the large populations centers, which typically are more liberal, from controlling the country.

In your "proposed" election, the people in New York, Mass, and California would have the say over what happens in this country. You have Hillary Clinton, Al Sharpton, John Kerry, Edward Kennedy, etc. representing you. That's as about as bad as your leaders get.

2007-02-07 06:53:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You do have the right, except your vote votes an electorate the right to vote for the president. If they didn't do it like that, then only NY and Cali would get any attention in the US because that's where all the people live. I think the system is fair and balanced and needs no correction.

2007-02-07 06:48:41 · answer #3 · answered by Pfo 7 · 1 0

Your vote is counted to determine how many of your state's electoral votes go toward electing the President.

So yes, you do vote directly for the President. But everyone else's votes count too.

Learn the electoral process.

2007-02-07 06:48:50 · answer #4 · answered by Bush Invented the Google 6 · 1 0

The electoral gadget is an major idea in how our u . s . a . grow to be setup and grow to be pronounced contained in the Federalist Papers. the guy states and not in any respect properly-known vote is what elects the President of the U. S.. to that end, the time period u . s . a .. purely about each major element of our u . s . a . is rooted in states' rights. someone's human being vote is major contained in the electoral gadget because it makes a call which electors contained in the guy state will forged a vote for President. again, our gadget is setup depending upon states rights and not in any respect generic properly-known vote. this provides creadance & potential to each and each state and stops a handful of very populous states from controlling the completed u . s . a .. it really is an extremely major idea. we ought to continuously embody the gadget our founders gave us and do not forget that it protects all individuals and protects the rights of human being states.

2016-12-03 20:49:53 · answer #5 · answered by barnas 4 · 0 0

At least in my school, back in 1975, we had to take a constitution test to pass on to the next grade(8th) . And it was then, that we LEARNED about Electoral Votes . What happened in others schools ?

2007-02-07 06:50:13 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

We can't. Congress would have to pass a Constitutional Amendment, and the smaller states would not vote for it. They would lose what little weight they have in the election now if it was changed to a popular vote.

2007-02-07 06:49:43 · answer #7 · answered by Mutt 7 · 0 0

I believe the Electoral College is in the Constitution so it would take a Constitutional Amendment.

2007-02-07 06:49:18 · answer #8 · answered by smoothie 5 · 0 0

It will happen someday. But, whats the difference really, Bush won them both this last time but not the first so it can't be all that important, just the main vote.

2007-02-07 06:54:05 · answer #9 · answered by Brianne 7 · 0 0

excuse me? there is a reason why presidential candidates look for the public support. Out votes do count!

2007-02-07 07:06:25 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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