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  • Ah, Election Day, when Americans everywhere cast their ballot for the next President of

  • the United States.

  • Except, not reallyAmericans don't directly vote for president.

  • So, what's happening on election day then? It's a bit complicated because of something

  • called the Electoral College.

  • To keep things simple for now, think of the Electoral College as a collection of the 538

  • votes that determine who the President of the United States will be.

  • Why 538?

  • Because that's the number of Senators 100 plus the number of Representatives, 438 in

  • Congress. Why are there 438 Representatives in Congress?

  • Stop asking so many question right now we're trying to keep this simple:

  • These 538 votes in the Electoral College aren't given to the citizens directly, but are instead

  • divided among the states.

  • So how does the Electoral College give out the votes?

  • Each state, no matter how populous or not, gets three votes to start. The remaining votes

  • are given out roughly in proportion to the population of the state. The more people the

  • state has, the more votes it gets.

  • Here is a map of the United States showing the voting power each states has by making

  • one hexagon equal to one electoral college vote for president.

  • Because electoral votes mostlythough not completelyscale with population it's

  • also a map of where people live with a bonus given to the smaller states to make them a

  • bit bigger than they would otherwise be.

  • In early November, when citizens go to the polls they aren't voting for president directly

  • but they're really telling their state how they want *it* to use its electoral votes.

  • 48 of the 50 states give all their electoral college votes to the candidate who wins a

  • majority in their state.

  • Take Florida, for example, which has 29 electoral college votes. If a candidate wins a majority,

  • no matter how small that majority, he gets all the votes.

  • So the path to the Whitehouse is clear: win enough majorities in enough states to get

  • more than half of the Electoral college votes and you get to sit at the big desk.

  • That wasn't so complicated, you say.

  • Well, there were a few details left out:

  • The Electoral College loves states, but what about the 11 million Americans who don't live

  • in a state?

  • What happens to their vote, and where are these people hiding?

  • There are about 600,000 in the District of Columbia an area set aside specifically *not*

  • to be a state so that the capital of the country would be free of local politics.

  • For most of the United States' history people living in the district didn't get to vote

  • for president. Then in 1964 the constitution was amended to give D.C. the same number of

  • votes as the least populous state, Wyoming.

  • So the electoral college likes DC. But you know who it doesn't like? The Territories.

  • The often forgotten Puerto Rico, Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands and Northern Mariana Islands,

  • get no votes from the electoral college because they aren't states and they don't have a special

  • constitutional amendment to recognize them.

  • Which is a bit odd considering they're part of the United States and everyone who lives

  • there is a citizen so -- for most practical purposes -- they're just like D.C.

  • And 4.4 Million people live in the territories -- that might not sound like a lot, but it's

  • than the populations of Wyoming, Vermont, North Dakota, South Dakota, Alaska & Delaware.

  • Combined.

  • But still, no votes from the Electoral College do they get.

  • The whole situation with territories is extra strange when you consider the final group

  • of Americans who don't live in States, the 6.3 million Americans who live abroad.

  • If you're a United States citizen who moves to a foreign country, you can usually send

  • a postal vote to the last state that you resided in.

  • But, if you move *within the United States* to one of its territories, you lose your right

  • to vote for president for as long as you live theremaking these the only spots on the

  • whole earth where Americans are not allowed to vote for president.

  • Actually, they're the only spots in the whole Universe because American astronauts are allowed

  • to vote for space.

  • The last bit of electoral college complication is the weirdest and has to do with the votes

  • themselves.

  • The state of Florida -- and all the others -- doesn't really give votes to a candidate,

  • that's just a simplified way to think about it, because the reality of the situation is...

  • odd.

  • What citizens are voting for on election day is a group of electors appointed by the political

  • parties who chose the president on the citizens' behalf.

  • The number of votes that a state gets from the Electoral College is actually the number

  • electors the state is allowed to send to a collegiate meeting to vote on who the president

  • will be.

  • What makes it odd is that while these electors promise they will vote for president as their

  • state's citizens want them to, *they aren't required to do so*.

  • Electors are free to vote the way they want . While this has never swung an election,

  • 87 times in the past electors have voted against the wishes of the very people who elected

  • them.

  • Why set up this crazy system where a small group of people essentially unknown to the

  • general public are the ones who really decide on the president?

  • Because in the 1700s -- when the electoral collage was designed -- the quickest way to

  • send a piece of information was to write it on a piece of paper, hand it to a guy on a

  • horse, wish him 'godspeed, good sir' and hope he didn't get killed by indians or die of

  • dysentery along the way.

  • Because information moved so slowly and because the young country was so big, the idea was

  • to send all the electors to Washington where they could have the most up-to-date information

  • to make decisions for the people back home who wouldn't know the latest news.

  • Though now, when we carry information on beams of light in fiber optic cables rather than

  • on the backs of herd animals this particular aspect of the electoral college might seem

  • a little out of date.

  • None the less, while most people think that the election for president takes place in

  • early november it doesn't -- that's the election that determines who the electors will be.

  • The 538 electors who are chosen then meet in early december and they cast the real votes

  • that determine who is the next president of the United States.

Ah, Election Day, when Americans everywhere cast their ballot for the next President of

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選舉團如何運作 (How the Electoral College Works)

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    稲葉白兎 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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