Required Resources
Read/review the following resources for this activity:
- Textbook: Chapters 7, 8
- Lesson
- APA style manual
- Citation and Writing Assistance: Writing Papers At CU (Links to an external site.)
- Library Overview (Links to an external site.)
- How to Search for Articles – the Everything Tab (Links to an external site.)
Instructions
The Electoral College was created to protect US citizens against mob rule. Mob rule is the control of a lawful government system by a mass of people through violence and intimidation. However, some Americans question the legitimacy of this process. Pick one election where the outcome of the popular vote and the electoral college vote differed to create an argument in favor of or opposed to the use of the electoral college. List at least three valid points to support your argument. Present you argument in a PowerPoint presentation.
As you complete your presentation, be sure to:
- Use speaker’s notes to expand upon the bullet point main ideas on your slides, making references to research and theory with citation.
- Proof your work
- Use visuals (pictures, video, narration, graphs, etc.) to compliment the text in your presentation and to reinforce your content.
- Do not just write a paper and copy chunks of it into each slide. Treat this as if you were going to give this presentation live.
Presentation Requirements (APA format)
- Length: 8-10 substantive slides (excluding cover and references slides)
- Font should not be smaller than size 16-point
- Parenthetical in-text citations included and formatted in APA style
- References slide (a minimum of 2 outside scholarly sources plus the textbook and/or the weekly lesson for each course outcome)
Solution:
It is times like this, when the country is heading to a presidential election that the Electoral College becomes the subject of great discussion. Research shows that it is the most misunderstood constitutional institution (Villegas, 2017). Proponents continue to defend it citing that it upholds federalism. On the contrary, opponents cite that it overlooks the popular vote, which is the will of the people (Whitman, 2019). Misunderstanding of the system creates a misinformed debate.
The Electoral College was enacted by Article II Section I of the Constitution.
It comprises of 538 voting members (Ross, 2017). This number was arrived at by summing up the number of members in the Congress. That is, 100 senators, 435 representatives, and 3 electors from the District of Columbia (Ross, 2017). To become the president, one is required to attain 270 of the electoral votes. The number of electors per state is based on population size. After each census, the electoral votes are reviewed to align with the new population data…..Please click the icon below to purchase full answer at only $10