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Argumentative Essay On The Electoral College

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In November of 2000, former president George W. Bush received 500,000 less votes than his opponent Al Gore, but was still elected president of the United States. This caused outrage, and confusion in many parts of the country, and brought to the forefront the question and validity of the Electoral College. Even though every four years the very important process of electing a new president takes place, the concept of the Electoral College is often misunderstood and an enigma to many. While the form of Government in the United States is frequently referred to by many people as a Democracy, and mistaken for a direct or pure Democracy, it is actually a Democratic Republic. The separation of powers was of the utmost importance to the framers of the Constitution, and is why the United States is a Democratic Republic, and the reason a system of electing a president by way of the Electoral College was created. The Electoral College does not use the popular vote to directly decide who the next leader will be. It uses a system of electors who represent each individual state and the votes casts by the citizens of that state. In recent years, and particularly since 2000 there has been controversy about whether or not the Electoral College is still a valid way to elect a President. The major dispute regarding this process of election is that the winning candidate may not always be the one with the majority of the popular vote. However, after the 57 elections held in the past 223 years, the Electoral …show more content…

a republic) that the persons administering it be appointed, either directly or indirectly by the people... The House of Representatives ... is elected immediately by the great body of the people. The Senate . . . derives its appointment indirectly from the people. The President is indirectly derived from the choice of the people. Even the judges . . .will ... be the choice, though a remote choice, of the people themselves” (Main

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