
Illustration: Reya Ahmed
How the US Selects Its President: All About the Electoral College
The 2024 race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump will yet again come down to an artifact of the Constitution that befuddles just about everyone
Donald Trump once called it “a disaster for democracy.” Thomas Jefferson said it was “the most dangerous blot on our Constitution.” Even James Madison, considered the “father of the Constitution,” eventually came to think it should be overhauled. From the beginning of the Republic, the Electoral College and its arcane and indirect method of electing the US president have been among the most maligned provisions of the founding document. Polls show a solid majority of Americans would like to ditch the system and elect their leader directly — a process that would have resulted in a different presidential winner five times in the last century, most recently in 2016.
While the Electoral College maintains its central role in US politics, there is a possibility that the outcome of any presidential election — including the upcoming one on Nov. 5 — could be determined instead by the House of Representatives.