Eric Burin
Eric Burin
@ericburin.bsky.social
Historian. Picking the President (https://thedigitalpress.org/Picking-the-President-2/); Protesting on Bended Knee (https://thedigitalpress.org/protesting/); Slavery and the Peculiar Solution: A History of the American Colonization Society,
Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition is available as a free digital download (thedigitalpress.org/Picking-the-...) & as a low-cost paperback (www.amazon.com/Picking-Pres...).
Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition
Eric Burin, ed. Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition. 2025. Download | PurchaseMedia Kit During the latter half of 2024, with the United States a…
thedigitalpress.org
February 17, 2025 at 12:11 PM
Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition is available as a free digital download (thedigitalpress.org/Picking-the-...) & as a low-cost paperback (www.amazon.com/Picking-Pres...).
Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition
Eric Burin, ed. Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition. 2025. Download | PurchaseMedia Kit During the latter half of 2024, with the United States a…
thedigitalpress.org
February 16, 2025 at 11:16 AM
Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition is available as a free digital download (thedigitalpress.org/Picking-the-...) & as a low-cost paperback (www.amazon.com/Picking-Pres...).
Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition
Eric Burin, ed. Picking the President: Understanding the Electoral College. Revised and Expanded Edition. 2025. Download | PurchaseMedia Kit During the latter half of 2024, with the United States a…
thedigitalpress.org
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
Combined, Section One and Section Two provide an expansive view of the United States’ presidential election system from its inception onward.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
PAUL SCHUMAKER holds up for consideration 2 prospective constitutional amendments: one to amend the Constitution’s amendment process and the other to institute a presidential election system which would use approval voting for a preliminary election and ranked-choice voting for the general election.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
RANDALL M. MILLER posits that “reformers” and “the people” can constructively live “within” the extant presidential election system by championing the adoption of democracy-enhancing measures which in time may foster “popular support to scrap” the current system altogether.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
GEORGE C. EDWARDS III elaborates on this theme, explaining that “states do not embody coherent, unified interests” and that the way the system currently operates, presidential candidates “ignore most small states; in fact, they ignore most of the country.”
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
JACK N. RAKOVE makes four “big points” about the system, the last one being that to change it, individuals must “grasp” that no one votes based on “the size (meaning populace) of their state,” but rather that the “real interests” which “determine our votes are scattered across all states.”
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
ROBERT M. ALEXANDER focuses on the Electoral Count Reform Act of 2022, which was enacted “to prevent another January 6th.”
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
GARY BUGH reviews the 1960s’ and 1970s’ congressional debates on the subject with an eye toward discerning how U.S. lawmakers conceptualized representation.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
Section Two features essays which illuminate modern efforts to reform or abolish the United States’ presidential election system.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON provides a wide-ranging history of the nation’s presidential election system from its creation to the eve of the 2024 contest.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
KATHLEEN BARTOLONI-TUAZON platforms the person who from the beginning literally and figuratively towered over the entire issue, George Washington.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
MICHAEL T. ROGERS assesses additional criticisms which were leveled against the system during the ratification contest.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
MARK STEPHEN JENDRYSIK examines Thomas Jefferson’s skeptical response to the Constitution’s presidential election system, a disfavor which partly stemmed from his fear that it would be susceptible to foreign interference.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
WILDRED U. CODRINGTON III shifts the attention to contingent elections (i.e., instances in which the electoral vote is inconclusive), observing that the provisions for them are “tragically minoritarian.”
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
ROSEMARIE ZAGARRI casts the system which the delegates devised as a reflection of “the fundamental tension Americans faced at the time…; that is, the tension between the people as the basis of representative government and the states as the basis of union.”
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
JANE E. CALVERT showcases another delegate who influenced the formation of the presidential election system, John Dickinson, the prolific “Penman of the Founding” who “may have hoped for a time when electors would be unnecessary.”
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
MICHAEL H. TAYLOR spotlights a central figure in that story, James Wilson, who at the Constitutional Convention was the first to propose a popular vote to elect the president and (one day later) was the first to propose an elector system for that purpose.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM
JOHN P. KAMINSKI surveys how the issue went from being “continually rehashed” at the Constitutional Convention, to generating “relatively little sustained discussion” during the ratification contest in 1787-88, and finally to becoming the subject of Amendment XII of the U.S. Constitution in 1804.
February 15, 2025 at 12:21 PM