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1 (August 16, 1999)

handle is hein.crs/crsuntaacpe0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 
Order Code RS20300
    August  16, 1999


Election of the President and Vice President
        by   Congress: Contingent Election

                         Thomas  H. Neale
            Analyst in American  National Government
                 Government  and Finance Division


Summary


Congressional Research Service + The Library of Congress


CRS Report for Congress

             Received through the CRS Web


     The 12f Amendment to the Constitution requires that candidates for President and
Vice President receive a majority of electoral votes (currently 270 or more of a total of
538) to be elected. If no candidate receives a majority, the President is elected by the
House of Representatives, and the Vice President is elected by the Senate. This process
is referred to as contingent election. It has occurred only twice since the adoption of the
12'h Amendment in 1804: for President in 1825, and for Vice President in 1837. In the
House, the President is elected from among the three candidates who received the most
electoral votes. Each state casts a single vote for President, which is arrived at by an
internal vote conducted within each state delegation. A majority of 26 or more state
votes is required to elect. The District of Columbia, however, does not participate in
contingent election of either the President or Vice President. In 1825, the House decided
that a majority of votes of Representatives in each state was required to cast the state's
vote for a particular candidate; if none received a majority, the state's vote was counted
as divided and was forfeit for that round of voting. This and other decisions reached
in the 1825 procedure would be precedential, but not binding, in future contingent
elections. In cases where a state has only one Representative, that Member decides the
state vote. In the Senate, the Vice President is elected from among the two candidates
for Vice President who received the most electoral votes, with each Senator casting a
single vote. A majority of the whole Senate, 51 or more votes, is necessary to elect.
Contingent election would be conducted by the newly elected Congress immediately
following the joint session (held on January 6 of the year following a presidential
election) that counts electoral votes. If the House is unable to elect a President by
January 20 (when the new presidential and vice presidential terms begin), the Vice
President-elect serves as Acting President until the impasse is resolved. If the Senate is
unable to elect a Vice President by January 20, then the Speaker of the House serves as
Acting President. For additional information on the electoral college, consult CRS
Report RS20273, The Electoral College: How it Works in Contemporary Presidential
Elections. This report will be updated if events warrant.

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