Does your vote count at the polls? Yes and no
By Randa Wagner
Sentinel Editor
Ahhhh. election time. The sound of radio and television ads resonate through the airwaves. Candidates that were once well-mannered public servants sling mud, hurl accusations, and dredge up moral and political errs from eons ago. Political correctness is nowhere to be found as statesmen who, ironically, consider themselves Christians, sink to new lows in the pursuit of votes.
Does the mind-blowing amount of money spent on these campaigns justify the outcome? If you’re running for any seat other than U.S. president, perhaps. Otherwise, the campaign speeches are primarily a pitch for the ‘state electors,’ not the general population.
The presidential seat is selected through the Electoral College, which was created as a compromise for the presidential election process. Some politicians at that time believed a popular election was too reckless; some objected to giving Congress the power to select the president. A compromise was to set up an Electoral College system that allowed voters to vote for electors, who would then cast their votes for candidates, a system described in Article II, section 1 of the Constitution.
How someone becomes an elector is not the same process across the board. It can differ from state to state. Generally, the two most common ways are:
- The elector is nominated by his or her state party committee (perhaps to reward many years of service to the party).
- The elector “campaigns” for a spot and the decision is made during a vote held at the state’s party convention.
There really aren’t any required qualifications to be an elector. According to the National Archives and Records (NARA) Web site, “the U.S. Constitution contains very few provisions relating to the qualifications of electors.” However, an elector cannot be a Representative or Senator, a high-ranking U.S. official in a position of “trust or profit”, or someone who has “engaged in insurrection or rebellion” against the U.S.
Usually, electors are people who are highly politically active in their party or connected somehow to the political arena, such as: activists, party leaders, elected officials of the state and even people who have ties (political and/or personal) to the Presidential candidates.
The two most common ways someone becomes an elector are:
- The elector is nominated by his or her state party committee (perhaps to reward many years of service to the party).
- The elector “campaigns” for a spot and the decision is made during a vote held at the state’s party convention.
Any intelligent, thinking person can deduce the problems that come with that selection process, as well as the fact the president is not selected by popular vote. Four times in the past, it was not “the people have spoken,” but more than 500 electors who cast their votes a month later.
In 48 states, a vote for the candidates for President and Vice-President named on the ballot is a vote for their electors and is known as the “winner-take-all system.” Most of the time, electors cast their votes for the candidate who has received the most votes in that particular state.
However, there have been times when electors have voted contrary to the people’s decision, which is entirely legal. There is no federal law that requires an elector to vote according to to their respective party. Electors who cast their votes without following the popular vote or their party are called “faithless electors.”
Several states have created laws to enforce an elector’s pledge to his or her party vote or the popular vote, and the state of North Carolina charges a fine of $10,000 to faithless electors.
That sounds like a lot of money to us common folk, but it’s a pittance to a candidate who has spent millions on their campaign and has even richer financial backers willing to spare no expense to get their candidate in office.
So, for every office except the top spot, your vote counts as it stands. As for your presidential vote, well, you’ll know on January 6, 2013.







