Should Electoral College Be Abolished Essay

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The Electoral College is the process used to select a candidate for presidency. A candidate must win the majority of electoral votes which is 270. You gain electoral votes by winning states and each state has a certain number of electoral votes. States can have electoral votes as high as 55 or as low as 3. This causes major flaws in the process, where even if a candidate were to get more votes, they can still lose if they don’t win the right states. In another case, a third candidate could possibly steal votes by winning states and this might lead to no candidate winning majority. If this were to happen members of the House would choose a president of the three candidates. Should the Electoral College be abolished or changed? Not abolished, but the Electoral College should be changed to where there can’t be a tie in the process; the House should not be able to choose the president in a majority vote because that throws out the whole concept of people voting.
Document #3 has showed a perfect example of one of the few flaws in the
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If this country prides itself on getting their power from the people, then the only appropriate solution would be a final decision by the public to choose the ideal candidate. Even if a draw is very unlikely it could still make a significant difference.
Although, while the Electoral College is supposed be a complex system and almost like a maze for the candidates, it presents many issues and errors that blur the full potential of the process. This document shows a lot of cons, most of the Electoral College should stay the same like how the number of votes is represented by population, but some aspects need to change to perfect this process because there is a lot of room for improvement and it can only get