The Mechanics of the Presidential Election
and the Electoral College
Greetings! With the Democratic Convention completed and the Republican Convention taking place, I thought it would be a perfect time to visit about the mechanics of the presidential election. First off, the winner of the election needs 270 or more electoral votes to become president, right? Well, what happens if neither candidate gets to 270? Let’s discuss.
It drives me nuts when the major news networks publish nationwide polls. In the one I heard this morning, one presidential candidate had 49%, the other 42%. Excuse me. What does that have to do with anything? The reason I say that is because the popular vote is tabulated in each state. The candidate with the most votes (the majority), gets all the electoral votes. Winner takes all so to speak. So, for example, California has 55 electoral votes. Whatever presidential candidate has a majority of the votes gets all 55 electoral votes.
The number of the electoral votes each state is awarded is simple. It’s the number of legislative districts plus 2 for the two senators from each state. So, California has 53 districts with 53 congressmen/women representing each district plus 2 U.S. senators. South Dakota has one legislative district plus 2 senators equaling only 3 electoral votes for us.
So, the total number of electoral votes comes out to 538. (I know there are 3 extra electoral votes than the number of House and Senate seats. I believe those 3 are territories? Please, someone email me right or wrong.) A simple majority of 538 is 270 votes.
Back to the question: if neither candidate gets 270 or more votes? It goes to the U.S. House of Representatives to pick the president, but not the vice president. If no candidate receives a majority of electoral votes, the House of Representatives elects the president from the top 3 candidates who received the most electoral votes. Each state gets one vote, meaning 26 House votes wins the election.
The Senate elects the vice president from the 2 vice presidential candidates with the most electoral votes. The Senate gets two votes per state, so 51 votes wins it.
The House of Representatives elected Thomas Jefferson in 1800 because of an electoral college tie. He was the third president. He served from 1801 to 1809 and was Vice President two terms before that. The 1824 electoral college was so split among several candidates that no one received 270 votes to be elected, and the House elected John Quincy Adams as President.
The Senate could pick a vice president from the opposite party. For example, if Joe Biden were to be elected by the House, and Mike Pence get elected Vice President by the Senate; or vice versa, Trump is elected by the House and Kamala Harris is elected by the Senate. Now, wouldn’t that be something?!
Five times in our country’s history the president was elected without winning the popular vote, but got more than 270 electoral votes. Those were in 1824, 1876, 1888, 2000 and 2016. Two thousand and 2016, the two we remember, Al Gore and Hillary Clinton won the popular vote, but President Bush and President Trump won the electoral vote with more than 270.
Another item that seems to have fog in it is the order of progression to the presidency. Here it is in order: Vice President, Speaker of the House, Senate President Pro Tempore, Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, Secretary of Defense, then Attorney General. Anyone know who the Senate President Pro Tempore is? No, not Senator Mitch McConnell. He’s the Senate Majority Leader. It is Senator Chuck Grassley, a Republican from Iowa.
To the citizens of South Dakota and to the men and women in uniform, in honor of all who served, in respectful memory of all who fell, and in great appreciation to those who serve today, Thank You, for giving me the opportunity to represent you.
Tim R. Goodwin, District 30 Representative

