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1 (July 21, 1999)

handle is hein.crs/crsmthaazsv0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 
Order Code RS20273
       July 21, 1999


The Electoral College: How it Works in
  Contemporary Presidential Elections

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


Summary


Congressional Research Service oe The Library of Congress


CRS Report for Congress

             Received through the CRS Web


    When Americans vote for a President and Vice President, they are actually voting
for presidential electors, known collectively as the electoral college. It is these electors,
chosen by the people, who elect the chief executive. The Constitution assigns each state
a number of electors equal to the combined total of the state's Senate and House of
Representatives delegations; at present, the number of electors per state ranges from
three to 54, for a total of 538. Aside from Members of Congress, and persons holding
offices of Trust or Profit under the Constitution, anyone may serve as an elector. In
each presidential election year, a group (ticket or slate) of candidates for elector is
nominated by political parties and other groupings in each state, usually at a state party
convention, or by the party state committee. It is these elector-candidates, rather than
the presidential and vice presidential nominees, for whom the people vote in the
November election, which is held on Tuesday after the first Monday in November
(November 7, 2000). In most states, voters cast a single vote for the slate of electors
pledged to the party presidential and vice presidential candidates of their choice. The
slate winning the most popular votes is elected; this is known as the winner-take-all, or
general ticket, system. Maine and Nebraska use the district system, under which two
electors are chosen on a statewide, at-large basis, and one is elected in each
congressional district. Electors assemble in their respective states on Monday after the
second Wednesday in December (December 18, 2000). The are pledged and expected,
but not required, to vote for the candidates they represent. Separate ballots are cast for
President and Vice President, after which the electoral college ceases to exist for another
four years. The electoral vote results are counted and certified by a joint session of
Congress, held on January 6 of the year succeeding the election. A majority of electoral
votes (currently 270 of 538) is required to win. If no candidate receives a majority, then
the President is elected by the House of Representatives, and the Vice President is
elected by the Senate, a process known as contingent election.

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