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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper is an essay discussing the pros and cons of abolishing the U.S. Electoral College, the process by which the President of the United States is elected. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTelecol.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
George W. Bush? -- calls began coming through to abolish the Electoral College, the election device that could put someone into the office of the president -- or not. Many
pointed out that, though Gore had won the so-called "popular vote," in other words, given the raw count, more voters had voted for him than for his Republican counterpart, the
Electoral College victory hinged on the state of Florida. Whoever "won" it would become President. The fact that the Supreme Court actually
decided the outcome of the election isnt relevant here. What is relevant is whether or not, in light of the sticky situation that ensued, the Electoral College should be thoroughly
abolished. On the surface, the answer is clearly a "yes," -- that the nation should get rid of the Electoral College, as
it is an antiquated system. The Electoral College, in its purest form, was one of those "seemed like a good idea at
the time" type of things. The Electoral College really isnt a "college" perse -- rather, its a collection of 538 people who, guided by each states popular vote, elect the
president and vice president (Kuntz, 2000). Each state has one "elector" for each member of the House of Representatives (of which there are 435) and for each member of the
Senate (100), with the District of Columbia receiving three electoral votes (Kuntz, 2000). Though the popular election takes place on the first Tuesday in November once every four years, it
is on December 18 of that same year when the Electoral College meets and send the results to Washington where, on January 6, before a joint session of Congress, is
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