Electoral College

757 Words2 Pages

Imagine if there was a group of people that all brought in money to buy pizza, but only the person that brought in the most money got to eat the pizza. This is sort of how our electoral college works. Everybody votes but only the votes that get the majority actually count and mean something while the votes for the other person running are basically thrown away. The electoral college should be abolished because it takes away the basic rule of our country that majority vote wins and it makes people feel like their votes mean less because the candidates are only focused on a very minimal amount of states that they need to get to win and finally it gives big cities all of the power.The electoral college was formed in 1788. It was made to give the smaller states equal power. Multiple canidates that have run for president have lost because of this system. Our country was formed on the majority rules a 2/3 vote basis. For example court cases and laws being passed both need these or the person will be found not guilty and the law will not pass. The Electoral College is one of the only things that don’t follow this rule and it needs to change. It needs to change because it does not necessarily mean that the more popular president will get the job. For example Al Gore got the popular vote, but George Bush won the election. If it was majority rules then Al Gore would have become president and the country may be a lot different than it is today. Al Gore deserved to win but since Bush won the more meaningful states he got the job even though America wanted Gore. If the electoral followed the rules like every other political process all of these problems could have been avoided. The country is a lot different now than it was when the founding ... ... middle of paper ... ... could be approached is that the canidate with the most votes wins. Either one of these solutions would be worth it if there was a majority vote instead of the Electoral College. Honestly, 99 percent of the time there would be a majority winner, so it really isn't even a factor in why the Electoral College should be kept. The Electoral College was a bad idea from the start. If the country had been run off of a majority or 2/3s decision the US may have been a lot different today. It is much more fair to let the people decide than let the boundaries of states decide who will be in the power of the country for the next four or eight years. Majority rules would make sure that the person who got into office is the president that the people wanted and voted for. Nobody wants to pay for a pizza party and not eat, so why would a person want to vote and have it be worthless.

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