Commentary On Elections-Part Twenty-Two & Part Twenty-Three
Commentary On Elections-Part Twenty-Two
The same people who should cast votes for presidential electors should also not cast votes for vice-presidential electors.
All electors are officially now chosen by the winning Presidential candidate. That should not be the case. Not only should there be two separate sets of electors who individually either choose a candidate for President or for Vice-President, a Presidential elector should be chosen differently than a Vice-Presidential elector.
Commentary On Elections-Part Twenty-Three
All Vice-Presidential electors should be chosen by electoral votes assigned per precinct in a federal congressional district. The Vice-President is supposed to be the President Of The U.S. Senate, a area-based institution of this democratic republic. Cross-verification is very important so that the U.S. Senate does not become too powerful but at the same time be powerful enough to fulfill its responsibilities.
The candidate for VPOTUS elector who receives the highest number of votes in a precinct is awarded the electoral vote for that precinct. The candidate who receives the majority of these electoral votes serves as the Vice-Presidential elector for that congressional district. If no candidate for VPOTUS elector receives a majority of these electoral votes, then the candidate who obtains the highest number of direct popular votes throughout the congressional district becomes its Vice-Presidential elector.
Cross-verification is also imperative to prevent polarization. No institution of this democratic republic should become too population-based or too area-based. Since that position is area-based, the choosing of this position
has to be population-based. It is in that mode as precincts and congressional districts have approximately the same population respectively.
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