释义 |
electoral collegeeˌlectoral ˈcollege noun - As the rule book insists, 12 weeks will elapse before the electoral college is convened.
- But in the electoral college, Kennedy won by a comfortable 303 votes to 219 votes for Nixon.
- If the system had been built on popular votes rather than the electoral college, each would have pursued a different strategy.
- Outdated voting mechanisms, a decentralised, idiosyncratic procedure, and the archaic electoral college have received comment.
- Since the trade union votes count for 40 percent of the local electoral college, Mr Davies was declared the nominee.
- This electoral college system must be scrapped.
- This leaves 143 electoral college votes in 14 swing states undecided.
► the Electoral College- As the rule book insists, 12 weeks will elapse before the electoral college is convened.
- Even under the electoral college rules, this achievement ought to make Gore the next president.
- However, as it is for any poll, the Electoral College outlook is a snapshot in time, not a prediction.
- If the system had been built on popular votes rather than the electoral college, each would have pursued a different strategy.
- Instead, the candidates have to put together a jigsaw puzzle of states, bagging their votes in the electoral college.
- That would deliver almost half of the trade union votes - 40 percent of the electoral college.
- The most obvious example is the electoral college, the phantom body that stands between voters and the final outcome.
- The outcome, in the electoral college, is likely to be quite close.
the Electoral College a group of people chosen by the votes of the people in each US state, who come together to elect the president, or a similar group in other countries |