Monday, December 25, 2023

Commentary On Elections-Part Sixty-Three

This pertains to the choosing of Presidential electors.
The candidate for Presidential elector who wins the highest number of popular votes in a locality totally located in a federal congressional district obtains all the electoral votes assigned to that locality based on its population. The candidate for Presidential elector who wins the highest number of popular votes in the part of a locality in which its population, which happens to be the majority of the locality's population, is located in a federal congressional district, that candidate obtains two-thirds of the locality's electoral votes matching the nearest highest whole figure. The candidate for Presidential elector who wins the highest number of popular votes in the part of a locality in which its population, which happens to be the minority of the locality's population, is located in a federal congressional district, that candidate obtains one-third of the locality's electoral votes matching the nearest lowest whole figure.
Every federal congressional district, for this choosing of Presidential elector, is to be assigned a total number of electoral votes greater than the sum of one electoral vote per 100,000 in population. Electoral votes are assigned for every 100,000 in locality's population and have to match the nearest highest figure that has 100,000 as a common denominator. Plainly put if a locality has 20,000 in population, that locality is allocated one electoral vote. If a locality has 1,035,000 in population, that locality is allocated 11 electoral votes.


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