Toby
Member
Registered: Jul 2000
Location:
Posts: 3034 |
quote: Originally posted by homer
[...] I think you said the same thing I did. 
No, I didn't.
quote: Gore DID win the election.
No, he didn't. He won the popular vote. This is a very important distinction. The U.S. Presidential election is not like the election for the local city council. The popular vote is irrelevant on a national level. It only means something within the bounds of a given state. Beyond the bounds of that state it means nothing.
quote: The election is when all of the people of this country cast a vote for the president.
No, it's not, in the case of U.S. Presidential elections.
quote: He won that. He won the election.
No, again, he won the popular vote. Not the same thing. The U.S. Presidential election is not determined by the sum total of U.S. citizens who vote for a slate of electors in the various states.
quote: AFTER the election, the Electoral College meets to submit their choice for predident. Bush won that.
Yes, and this is, Constitutionally, the only 'election' that counts.
quote: Gore won the election. Bush won the electoral college.
No, Gore won the popular vote. Bush won the majority of the electors, hence the election and the Presidency.
quote: I do realize that the election is not what directly decides the presidency.
This is true in a sense, but not for the reasons you state. When people vote, they are casting a vote for a set number of electors in their state who have agreed to vote for a certain candidate in the Presidential election. That is all. Unless they have a 'faithless elector', they will get the exact same amount of say in the outcome of the Presidency as they currently have in the U.S. Congress. No more, no less.
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