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US Elections 2016: America Is Choosing Its Next President, Battleground States Start Voting

US Elections 2016: America Is Choosing Its Next President, Battleground States Start Voting
US is voting to elect either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton as the next President. (AFP)

America is now voting for its next President. The US election, held once every four years, takes place on the Tuesday following the first Monday in November, as spelled out in the US Constitution.

Here is a 10-point guide:

  1. A bitter and ugly race replete with scandals between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will be decided in the next few hours.
  2. Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, accompanied by husband Bill Clinton, and Republican Donald Trump have cast their votes.
  3. Voting has begun in battleground states like Ohio
  4. Some states historically support the Democratic candidate election after election, while others are just as resolutely Republican. Candidates thus concentrate their efforts on about a dozen states prone to shift back and forth between the parties, often determining the final result. The most important of these are the "battleground" or "swing" states with the largest number of electors, like Florida (29), Pennsylvania (20) and Ohio (18).
  5. Voters in 50 states and the city of Washington choose among the candidates for President and Vice President. The popular vote in each state determines the selection of a set of members of the electoral college, who pledge to support a given candidate. There are 538 members of the electoral college, with the number from each state based on its population size (just like our Lok Sabha).
  6. A state has one elector for each of its members of the House of Representatives, and one for each of the state's two senators (every US state has two senators, irrespective of its size).
  7. To win the US presidential election, you need 270 electoral college votes, an absolute majority of the 538 electors.
  8. Members of the electoral college officially elect the President and Vice President on December 19 in what is a mere formality. Why? Each party in each state gives their list of members of the electoral college. So in California, which is allocated 55 "seats", the Democrats and Republicans would each provide a list of 55 members. These electors are normally party officials, and in most states are legally/duty bound to vote for the winner of the election in their state.
  9. Winner-Take-All is the criteria in all states except two, Maine and Nebraska. So the candidate that gets the largest number of votes (not a majority) is declared to have won the state and gets all the electoral votes of that state. So, if Hillary Clinton wins California, as Democrats have done for a long time, she would gain 55 electoral votes, or the complete slate of electors listed by the Democratic party in California.
  10. US TV networks and, increasingly, news websites, start calling or declaring states in favour of one or the other Presidential candidate within minutes of voting ending in that state. This declaration of the winner of a state is based on previous voting patterns ( who has won that state for years) and exit polls. Where the counting is closer, as in the Battleground States, the networks wait until they have much more actual voting data before projecting a state in favour of a particular candidate.

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