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  1. Jan 18, 2017 · "The certificate of the electoral vote of the state of Colorado seems to be regular in form and authentic…" Members of the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate convened in a joint session of Congress on Friday, January 6, 2017 to count and certify the votes of the electoral college for the next President of the United States.

  2. As each state receives electoral votes equal to its congressional delegation (House + Senate), the map will change for the 2024 presidential election. This series of maps is based on the most recent projections for the 2020 reapportionment. It looks at how each of the past five presidential elections would have turned out if the projected 2024 ...

  3. Nov 17, 2021 · File:2017_US_Electoral_College_objections_map.svg

    • Electoral College in The Constitution
    • Electoral Votes Won by Presidential Candidates in 2012
    • Electors
    • Selecting Electors
    • Winner-Take-All vs. Proportional Representation
    • Declaring A Winner
    • 2016 Us Presidential Elections

    Designated by the U.S. Constitution, the Electoral College is a compromise between Congress electing the president and a popular vote, as it falls somewhere in between the two. The reason for the somewhat complicated system we use dates back to the creation of the Constitution. Article II, Section I of the Constitution creates the basis for the ele...

    The Twelfth Amendment, ratified in 1804, revised Article II, Section I of the Constitution. Electors originally cast two votes for president, and the candidate who received the second highest number of electoral votes would become Vice President. Under the Twelfth Amendment, Electors cast one vote for the presidential candidate, and one vote for th...

    Electors are delegates from each state who pledge their vote in the Electoral College based on the popular votes in each district. The number of electoral votes each state has depends on its number of representatives in the House and Senate. Since each state has two Senators and at least one Representative, this means each state (and Washington DC)...

    Electors are chosen by their political parties to represent districts in each state. Political parties normally choose loyal members of their party to act as electors. The electoral votes are administered by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), an independent nonpartisan group. Though electors are pledged to vote for a particula...

    Most states follow a winner-take-all model of distributing electoral votes, meaning the majority winner receives all of the state’s electoral votes. Only two states, Maine and Nebraska, split some of their electoral votes according to the votes of each district. In each of these states, two of their electoral votes go to the overall winner, while t...

    After the electoral votes are decided, the Electoral College cast their votes for president, based on the votes of the public. On the designated date, usually in December following the election, the Electors from each state meet in the state capital to officially declare their votes. Usually, by this time, the public is already aware of the winner ...

    While three candidates are at present in the race to White House, the contest is really between Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump. Hillary’s rival and fellow Democrat is way behind her and is virtually out of the contests as it is an impossible task for him to muster the delegates required to win the Democratic nomination for the...

  4. May 15, 2017 · A Tie or Failure to Win a Majority in the Electoral College: Contingent Election by Congress. The Twelfth Amendment, as noted earlier in this report, requires that candidates receive a majority of electoral votes, that is, at least 270 of the current total of 538, in order to be elected President or Vice President.

  5. 2 days ago · The current 270toWin look at the state of the electoral map for the presidential election. This view is somewhat a composite of the polls ( current polling map) as well as the experts ( consensus pundit electoral map ). Note that all of these maps will likely converge as the election nears.

  6. Map. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/2008626928/>. Includes insets of Alaska, Hawaii, and the District of Columbia. Available also through the Library of Congress Web site as a raster image.