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Electoral College, key mechanism of US presidential election

WASHINGTON, (Xinhua) - American voters went to the polls on Tuesday to elect a new president - chief executive of the US government and commander-in-chief of the US military.

However, Americans do not vote directly for presidential candidates. Instead, after ballots are tallied in each state, state representatives, called electors, vote based on the state tallies in an Electoral College, a system which has been operating since 1788.

According to the system, a state's number of electoral votes equals the number of senators and House representatives combined from that state. As the number of House representatives are based on the size of population of each state, the number of electors varies from state to state.

California, the largest state, has 55 electoral votes, while the sparsely populated Alaska has only three. The District of Columbia, which has no representatives in Congress, has three electoral votes.

In all but two states - Nebraska and Maine - winner of the popular vote (the total number of votes cast by people in a given state) takes the state's total allotment of electoral votes.

In Nebraska and Maine, five out of the total nine votes are distributed based on voting in congressional districts, rather than in the state as a whole. Under the Electoral College system, it is possible that a candidate who wins the popular vote may actually lose the election if he/she wins fewer electors' votes.

The Electoral College meet and officially vote for president and vice president on the first Monday following the second Wednesday in December in each presidential election year.

A majority of 270 electoral votes out of a total of 538 is needed for victory.

If no candidate receives a majority, the House of Representatives - one of two houses of Congress - must determine the winner from the three candidates who receive the most votes in the electoral college.

In 1824, John Quincy Adams did not win a majority in the vote and was elected president by the House of Representatives in this way.

The president and vice president take their oath and assume office on Jan. 20, following the election. Presidential election is held every four years and the president can be re-elected only once.

The Electoral College is established and runs on basis of the US political system, in which three separate branches - executive, legislative and judicial - check and balance each other under the Constitution, and also results from compromises and concessions of different interest groups.

In recent years, there have been calls for reform, but no material moves have been taken. The following is a summary of electoral votes held by each state and the District of Columbia for the presidential election.

State Electoral votes

Alabama		 	 9
Alaska		 	 3
Arizona			10
Arkansas		 6
California		55
Colorado		 9
Connecticut	 	 7
Delaware		 3
Dist. Of Columbia 	 3
Florida			27
Georgia			15
Hawaii			 4
Idaho			 4
Illinois		21
Indiana			11
Iowa			 7
Kansas			 6
Kentucky		 8
Louisiana	 	 9
Maine			 4
Maryland	 	10
Massachusetts		12
Michigan		17
Minnesota		10
Mississippi		 6
Missouri		11
Montana			 3
Nebraska		 5
Nevada			 5
New Hampshire 		 4
New Jersey		15
New Mexico		 5
New York		31
North Carolina		15
North Dakota		 3
Ohio			20
Oklahoma		 7
Oregon			 7
Pennsylvania 		21
Rhode Island		 4
South Carolina		 8
South Dakota		 3
Tennessee		11
Texas			34
Utah			 5
Vermont			 3
Virginia		13
Washington		11
West Virginia 		 5
Wisconsin		10
Wyoming			 3 

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