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  • The collective ability of a population to vote for how they want their society to be

  • run, is basically the definition of a “democracy”.

  • But the United States isn’t a democracy, not really.

  • It’s actually a federal presidential constitutional republic, where individual votes actually

  • hold different amounts of power based on where theyre located, and in some cases, may

  • not be worth anything at all.

  • So, does your vote actually matter?

  • Well, it depends.

  • First of all, the biggest question is: what are you voting for?

  • In the presidential election you might think youre voting for president, but you aren’t.

  • Instead, election day is more like a big opinion poll of the American people which is then

  • sometimes used by an entirely different group of people to choose the president.

  • And those voters are the ones that matter.

  • The basic way the electoral college works is that every state gets a certain number

  • of electors based on that state’s number of representatives in Congress, which is generally

  • pegged to its population.

  • Within all but two states, whichever candidate wins the popular vote receives all the state’s

  • electoral votes.

  • But although some states have laws that say electors are required to vote the way the

  • public tells them to, there is no federal law that requires it.

  • An elector who votes against the popular vote is calledfaithless”, and in the history

  • of United States elections, faithless electors have voted against the public choice 157 times.

  • Since the electoral college is technically based on population, which varies year-to-year,

  • each electoral vote holds different amounts of power.

  • In a state like California with nearly 40 million residents and 55 electoral votes,

  • each electoral vote can be said to represent roughly 725,000 voters.

  • However, in Wyoming, with a total population of 586,000 and 3 electoral votes, each vote

  • represents nearly 200,000 voters.

  • That means one voter in Wyoming is worth three-and-a-half times a California voter.

  • This system is problematic, as it can lead to elections where most of the country votes

  • for one candidate, but the other one wins by electoral votes, a situation that has occurred

  • FOUR times in the last 57 elections.

  • That basically means that, on average, every 56 years, we can expect the loser to become

  • president, which last happened in the year 2000.

  • But don’t get too discouraged, because your vote does count in other ways.

  •  Every single state has dozens of important propositions and state government proposals,

  • congressional and local elections, and other public matters.

  • The 2016 election has seen issues like marijuana legalization and the death penalty, where

  • the only vote that matters is that of state residents.

  • The US election process is imperfect, and in some ways, arguably undemocratic.

  •  But if you don’t like the current system and want to change it, the local level is

  • the only place to get started.

  • Fix the voting problem, by voting!

  • Of course for a lot of people, this isn’t as easy as it sounds.

  • Polling places are known to have long lines, forcing people to wait hours just to cast

  • a vote that, as it turns out, may not even count.

  • So why can’t Americans just vote online?

  • Check out this video from DNews.

  • Thanks for watching seeker daily!

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The collective ability of a population to vote for how they want their society to be

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