

A Peculiar Way to Pick a President
Oct 22, 2020
Jesse Wegman, a member of The New York Times’s editorial board, delves into the controversial Electoral College, a system that appears nowhere in the Constitution. He discusses its winner-take-all approach, which can ignore millions of votes, and traces its origins and evolution over the decades. Wegman highlights the electoral dilemmas seen in the 2000 and 2016 elections, where presidents were elected without winning the popular vote. He also explores potential reforms like the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact that could reshape U.S. democracy.
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2016 Election
- In 2016, Donald Trump lost the popular vote by almost 3 million votes but won the presidency.
- This was due to a small margin of votes in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin.
Founding Fathers’ Vision
- The Founding Fathers created the Electoral College because they didn't trust the public to choose a president wisely.
- They envisioned electors as elite decision-makers.
Three-Fifths Compromise
- The Three-Fifths Compromise gave slaveholding states more electors, highlighting the Electoral College's undemocratic nature.
- This amplified the voices of slaveholders while disenfranchising enslaved people.