In the US, what is stopping people from bribing members of the electoral college?
Let's say you're a mega wealthy billionaire who has suddenly realized that if he cozies up close to a presidential candidate, he could have more power and wealth than ever before. What's stopping you from figuring out who the electorates are and offering them whatever they want if they vote for your guy? What's stopping them from taking the deal?
First, in many states the electors are bound by law to support the candidate that wins the popular vote in their state. The penalties may vary, but the intent is clear: to make sure people realize it is against the law in that state.
But the second reason is that each campaign actually picks their own electors for each state ahead of time. So it's not like the state has one set that will vote either way, and who can be persuaded. All of the states that votes for Harris are sending electors their campaign hand-picked, and likewise for Trump. So each side is sending their own very partisan people, whose political success is tied to their party. Violating that will ruin their political career in that party.
This is all a very convoluted system. What we should do is make it much more simple.
Take Harris, and trump. Put them in a big venue, like a football stadium, and then fill the ground level with axes and swords, and shields, and maces (the swinging spikey ball kind).
And just let them go at it until we have a victor.
Then, that victor has to solve a series of puzzles. If they can, they win.
I would also accept a revival of the 1990s version of the tv show American Gladiators. Mostly because I love that show.
First, in many states the electors are bound by law to support the candidate that wins the popular vote in their state. The penalties may vary, but the intent is clear: to make sure people realize it is against the law in that state
Honestly this is so stupid if I understand their reasoning for existing in the first place. Unless I'm misunderstanding they were supposed to exist literally for this exact election, where the people elected an absolute atrocity of a person and "our betters" would recognize that and vote against him.
We should just do away with it if we have no interest in utilizing them for their actual purposes.
Yes, electoral college should be abolished. It's probably not gonna happen though, so this is a temporary band-aid solution that many states have implemented.
It's another one of those things where we're not going to codify it because Republicans want it as a pocket ace, and moderates control party policy and they just have a phobia of admitting anything actually needs fixed, let alone fixing it.
But the electors in a lot of states can do what they want
32 states + DC are legally required to vote for the party that nominated them as electors tho.
So some are "locked in", the rest can pretty much do what they want. I know some states are on an "interstate compact" where once they get enough states it triggers them having to vote for the national popular vote winner.
But I'm not sure what the overlap is with the ones who already have the requirement to vote for the party that appointed them or how that will shake out.
If you attempted this you would find the majority of electors report it and you get arrested. Electors are the big party supporters and so most are not going to take a bribe. Well maybe you could get the Harris electors (who know they will lose anyway) to support a moderate Republican, but you won't get any republicans to switch to this new candidate. The never Trump republicans who would thus be willing to switch their vote are not electors.