Electoral College

Overview

The Electoral College is the system the United States uses to elect its president every four years. Rather than a single national vote, 538 electors allocated across the states and Washington, DC, decide the election. A candidate must win a majority—270 electoral votes—to become president.

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  • The Electoral College, explained

    The US presidential election hinges on the Electoral College, not the popular vote—a system created in 1787 as a compromise. Candidates must win 270 of 538 electoral votes, allocated by each state’s congressional representation.

  • Faithless electors have never changed the outcome of a US presidential election

    Occasionally, Electoral College members vote against their state's popular choice—known as "faithless electors." Though these rare defections have drawn attention and prompted new state laws, none have ever altered the final result of a presidential race.