Do you know why,
long before
California gets to
count their votes,
(the election is
called)?
Did you know that it
takes
362 Californian
voters
to equal 1
(one)
voter
in say,
Wyoming
in the
Electoral
College?
Wyoming
Governor Matt Mead
of Wyoming
Political party Republican!
Congress of Wyoming
Republican party!
California
Governor Jerry Brown
of California
Political party Democratic!
Congress of
California
Democratic party!
in the Electoral
College?
Now take that same
math
and
apply it to every state east
of the Mississippi river.
O.K. my friends
How to end the
person or people
now in control of
your Lives
(country)
and the only way.
Take your weapon
(Vote)
and
cast out the enemy
(Governors and
Congress)
that have a
stranglehold
on the property
(You're Country)
Dump or improve
the
antiquated
rules and regulations
(Electoral College).
Electoral
College Summary
Votes cast by the people of the United States -- known as
the "popular vote" -- are used to choose the president and vice
president "indirectly" through the Electoral
College.
Popular votes cast in
the presidential election are actually
being cast for a number of electors. Each state gets a number
of electors equal to the
state's number of representatives in the
House and Senate.
It is possible for a candidate to lose the popular vote
and still be elected president by the Electoral College. Four
presidents have been elected in this
manner: John
Quincy Adams in 1824, Rutherford
B. Hayes in 1876, Benjamin
Harrison in 1888 and George W.
Bush in 2000.
2017
tramp over our real president!
How The US Electoral
College System Works
Who Really Elects
the President of the United States?
Updated February 15,
2017.
The Electoral
College is not really a college at all. Instead, it is the important and often
controversial process by which the United States selects the President of the
United States every four years. The founding fathers created the Electoral
College system as a compromise between having the president elected by Congress
and having the president elected by the popular vote of qualified citizens.
Every fourth
November, after almost two years of campaign hype and money, over 90 million
Americans vote for the presidential candidates. Then, in the middle of
December, the president and vice president of the United States are really
elected by the votes of only 538 citizens—the "electors" of the
Electoral College System.
How the Electoral
College Elects the President
When you vote for a
presidential candidate, you are really voting to instruct the electors from
your state to cast their votes for the same candidate. For example, if you vote
for the Republican candidate, you are really voting for an elector who will be
"pledged" to vote for the Republican candidate.






