The founding fathers could not, however, predict the outrage and undemocratic process the Electoral College would come to promote. Due to the fact that a state can only get so many electoral votes, it limits the actual voice of the population (The Electoral College: Don't Drop Out.). After one party has taken all of the electoral votes in a state, more votes for that party no longer matter, encouraging illegal practices like voting in more than one state in order to get actual equal representation (Lapham). States in the Electoral College are giving the same number of Electoral votes as they have seats in the legislative branch (Smith). Problems are presented by this situation because the executive branch and legislative branch are clearly two different things, and should be treated as such. Intertwining the two can often lead to major political unrest, nevermind the fact that a president has only won without the majority of the popular vote 4 times (Chang). Through the unfair treatment, encouraged illegal voting, and anti-democratic practices the Electoral College promotes, it is clear that the founding fathers of America didn’t really know what they were talking …show more content…
Through its many years of use, it has slowly stripped away many of the things Americans value, such as basic rights like voting (and actual vote that matters, not a useless pamphlet atop a load of previous ones), and others such as representation. While described as a living document, the outdated Electoral College is a clear example of how grossly mislabeled the constitution has been. Through its continued anti-democratic acts of representing states with lower populations fairly in presidential Elections, the Electoral College is just, plainly put, a bad idea in the midst of all greatness that is the Constitution of the United States of America. The founding Fathers of America clearly unwittingly implemented a major flaw in this document, and not even they could foresee the gregarious consequences that would come to result of