Thursday, November 28, 2019

I believe that the United States should nto disban Essays

I believe that the United States should nto disband the Electoral College because it is a safeguard for America to stop any politician to corrupt America and to keep it from collapsing. The electoral college was made in the 1800's as a safeguard to stop an uneducated politician to not become president. The electoral college was created in the Virginia and New Jersey compromise. This was a compromise between the small states and the big states creating the Senate in which each state no matter how big or small got 2 senators and the House of Repersenitives in which you get a certain amount of congressmen depending on your population. This also decrease the chances of fraud. This is because the politician is able to change their vote if they feel like the candidate is not capable of doing their job they are able to choose the candidate that they believe that they could. Even though this has never happened there will bound to be a time when an elector would feel that the politician would not be capable of the job and they would choose another politician. The Electoral college also helps small states and swing states feel important since they are able to make a difference in an election and the politicians would actually go there. If the electoral college was disbanded it would make campaigning in Florida, Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan, Texas useless. April 15-16 at 22 at Claremont only middle school. Topic: The United States ought to replace the Electoral College with a direct national vote. Electoral College: Most states add up all Congressman Winner takes all except Nevada and Nebraska and Maine. Electoral College was put because of Virginia and New Jersey compromise. To compromise HOR is depended on population and Senate is that every single state has 2 senators. 0.0004% is the total amount of fraud of a chance. Swing States Florida Wisconsin Ohio Michigan Texas First to get some electoral votes is Bull Moose Party. It was Republican Vs Bull Moose Party Vs Democrat. Some fraud votes are by dead people and by the votes getting lost. However the chances of that are 0.0045 Title Contention 1 Believe Analysis Describe Contention Warrant Evidence Summery of warrant Author last name When was it published Full name of Author, when it was published, Title of warrant, and website, full link Bold parts you need to read **Timee warrant** Impacts: Talks about future and how it is affected Aff- Affirmative Electoral College Case Contention 1: The electoral college gives more power to swing states Analysis: If the electoral college continues it would give too much power to the swing states which would only allow the presidential candidate to go to the swing states. http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/11/7/12315574/electoral-college-explained-presidential-elections-2016 Andrew Prokop Vox December 16 2016 Warrant: The electoral college gives too much power to the swing states because the power is all shifted to the small states and the swing states. This is because the Framers did not want the big states to have too much power because then the presidential candidate would only have to go to the swing states. This also stops the presidential candidate from caring on only the topics that the swing states care about. Hillary Clinton won more votes than Donald Trump in last month's presidential election. But due to the magic of the Electoral College, Donald Trump will be the next president of the United States. Yes, the November 8 "presidential election" was in actuality the venerable ritual in which the residents of Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and a few other states got the privilege of choosing the president of the United States of America. Or, to be more precise, it was the venerable ritual in which all the states chose their representatives in the Electoral College. It's those people who are going to technically pick the president this Monday. It's a patchwork Frankenstein's monster of a system, which in the best of times merely ensures millions of Americans' votes are irrelevant to the outcome because they don't live in competitive states, and in the worst of times could be vulnerable to a major crisis. Amazingly enough, though, nothing in the Constitution gives American voters the right to choose their president. That power is reserved for those 538 actual people who will meet in their respective states this Monday the electors. It's up to

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