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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(6 pp) When I first learned of elections in Civics
101, one thing I remember thinking to myself was
that I would never want to be president of the
United States. Here it is a thousand years later,
and I still have not changed by mind. Yet, if you
should run into someone of relatively sound mind
and body, who wants to give it a whirl, here is
what they, or you, should know.
Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBprscnd.doc
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if you should run into someone of relatively sound mind and body, who wants to give it a whirl, here is what they, or you, should know. Bibliography lists 10
sources. BBprscnd.doc SO YA WANNA BE PRESIDENT OF THE OL US OF A? Written by B.
Bryan Babcock for the Paperstore, Inc., April 2001 Introduction When I first learned of elections in Civics 101, one thing I remember thinking to myself was that I would
never want to be president of the United States. Here it is a thousand years later, and I still have not changed by mind. Yet, if you should
run into someone of relatively sound mind and body, who wants to give it a whirl, here is what they, or you, should know. The Electoral College Although there are
many steps before a candidate is actually knocking on the doors of the Electoral College, it is good to start there since it is both a parallel and a unique
part of our democratic system. This is also the moment to acknowledge that political parties do exist for the purpose of electing their candidate to the presidency, and certainly
one would need to be an ascending political star to capture the candidacy of a particular party. The Constitution apportions electoral votes to the states, and requires a majority of
electoral votes to win. Each state has a minimum of three electoral votes; states with larger populations have more electoral votes as determined by the number of votes they
hold in the House of Representatives. According to Uhlmann (2001), "the Electoral College, in short, is organized on precisely the same principle as the United States Congress, and for
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