Bills have been introduced in the US Congress on several occasions to amend the US Constitution to abolish or to reduce the power of the Electoral College and to provide for the direct popular election of the US president and vice president.
Bills have been introduced in the US Congress on several occasions to amend the US Constitution to abolish or to reduce the power of the Electoral College and to provide for the direct popular election of the US president and vice president. (en)
The Bayh–Celler amendment was proposed after the 1968 presidential election in which Richard Nixon received 110 more electoral votes than Hubert Humphrey , despite a less than 1 pp margin in the popular vote. (en)
Bills have been introduced in the US Congress on several occasions to amend the US Constitution to abolish or to reduce the power of the Electoral College and to provide for the direct popular election of the US president and vice president. (en)