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  1. Usually, faithless electors act alone, although on occasion a faithless elector has attempted to induce other electors to change their votes in concert, usually with little if any success. One exception was the 1836 election , in which all 23 Virginia electors acted together, altering the outcome of the electoral college vote but failing to ...

  2. In 48 states and the District of Columbia, a political party's slate of electors becomes part of the Electoral College when the party's nominee wins a plurality of the vote in the state. [1] ". Faithless elector" is a term used to describe a member of the Electoral College who does not vote for his or her party's nominee for president or vice ...

  3. Jul 6, 2020 · Four "faithless electors" from Colorado and Washington state who did not conform to the popular vote in the 2016 election sued, claiming that states can regulate only how electors are chosen, not ...

    • NBC News Justice Correspondent
  4. Jul 6, 2020 · As Michael Baca, the faithless elector from Colorado, put it in an NPR interview, the idea was to "reach across the aisle" to Republican electors in 2016 and try to find a candidate that some ...

    • Nina Totenberg
  5. Jul 14, 2020 · In the 18 states currently without faithless elector laws, the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact would operate in a manner identical to the system that they have been using for over 200 years.

  6. Dec 8, 2016 · No elector has ever been prosecuted for not voting as pledged. Since 1900, there have been only 16 faithless electors who defected for individual reasons, including the seven from Monday.

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  8. May 3, 2023 · Learn how electors are chosen, appointed, and bound by law or pledges in each State. Find out how the Supreme Court ruled on State laws regarding electors' votes in 2020.

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