The Electoral College Explained

Photo by A. Warner
By Staff
Oct. 30, 2024: With early voting underway in the Presidential Election, we thought it might be helpful to provide an overview of the Electoral College.
The system of "Electors" is part of the U.S. Constitution. It was put in place by the Founding Fathers, in part, "as a compromise between the election of the President by a vote in Congress and election of the President by a popular vote of qualified citizens." (source: National Archives). "The term 'electoral college' does not appear in the Constitution. Article II of the Constitution and the 12th Amendment refer to “electors,” but not to the “electoral college.” (source: National Archives).
There are a total of 538 electors in the Electoral College. Each state gets an elector for each representative it has in Congress. California has the most electoral votes (54). Texas has the second most votes (40), then Florida (30), and then New York (28). Pennsylvania and Illinois each has 19, Ohio has 17, and Georgia and North Carolina each has 16.
Here is a map of the Electoral College.
A presidential candidate must win 270 electors to win the election.
Most states have the policy that if the candidate wins the overall popular vote in the state, he or she wins all of that state's electoral votes. There are two exceptions to this rule: Maine and Nebraska. These states allocate two electoral votes for the state's winner of the popular vote and one electoral vote for the winner of the popular vote in each Congressional district (Maine has 2 Congressional districts and 4 total electoral votes; Nebraska has 3 Congressional districts and 5 total electoral votes).
In recent history, two candidates lost the popular vote but won in the Electoral College.
In 2000, George Bush narrowly lost the popular vote (50.4 million votes to Bush versus 50.9 million votes to Gore) but Bush won the Electoral College vote (271 to Bush versus 266 to Gore). George Bush became President.
In 2016, Donald Trump lost the popular vote (62.9 million votes to Trump versus 65.8 million votes to Hillary Clinton) but Trump won the Electoral College vote (304 to Trump versus 227 to Clinton). Donald Trump became President.
For your interest, below are the results of the 2020 election.
In 2020, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris won both the popular vote and the electoral college vote.
The popular vote was 81.3 million to Biden/Harris versus 74.2 million votes to Trump/Pence.
The Electoral College vote was 306 electoral college votes to Biden/Harris versus 232 electoral college votes to Trump/Pence.








