Could Bill Clinton be vice president?
Answers to new questions, including why Electoral College is here to stay
![]() PAUL J. RICHARDS / AFP/Getty Images Former President Bill Clinton campaigns on behalf of his wife on February 11, 2008 in Fairfax, Virginia. |
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Today, in part II of our response to your questions, we’ll look at the way a presidential candidate moves from the party’s convention to that moment when he or she faces the chief justice on Jan. 20, 2009, raises his or her hand, and utters, “I do solemnly swear….”
Q. "I live in Canada, but I'm still an American citizen. Can I vote in the primary, or just in the presidential election? How, for both questions?"
Yes, you can vote in primary elections and the November presidential election.
According to Prof. Daniel Tokaji at Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law, the Uniform and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act, enacted in 1986, made U.S. citizens living overseas eligible to vote in federal elections, in the state where they were last "domiciled," which generally means the last place where they lived.
According to Tokaji, there's no time limitation imposed, so even if you moved from New Jersey to New Zealand in 1965, you can still vote in a federal elections for president and members of Congress.
For more information, go to the Overseas Vote Foundation web site which can be found here.
A group called Democrats Abroad, which is recognized by the Democratic National Committee, staged its presidential primary between Feb. 5 to Feb. 12, and will send 22 delegates to the party’s convention.
The Republicans have no analogous process, so members of that party living overseas vote by absentee ballot in the primary, voting for the contest in state where they formerly resided.
Q. "Why can't the president be elected by popular vote? Why is the Electoral College still considered constitutional when it clearly undermines what a democracy stands for?"
The Electoral College is “considered constitutional” because it is constitutional.
The Constitution itself establishes the system of electors that we use. See Article II, section 1, Clause 2, of the Constitution: “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress….”
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Changing this system would require an amendment to the Constitution. It takes the agreement of three-quarters of the states to do that.
And the states with smaller populations (Vermont, Wyoming, South Dakota, etc.) are unlikely to agree to such an amendment, since the system established by the Constitution gives them a bigger voice in electing a president than they’d have if election through a popular vote were used.
Q. “If Barack Obama does not get enough delegates to become the Democratic candidate, yet has won the most popular votes, could he turn independent and run with say, Mayor Bloomberg of New York? How do independents get registered to run for president and do they need electoral votes?”
If Obama failed to win the Democratic nomination, in theory he could try to run as an independent. But it would be difficult for him to get on the ballots in all 50 states.
Some state laws make it hard for an independent candidate to get a spot on the ballot. And some states have relatively early deadlines for qualifying to get on the ballot.
In Arizona, for instance, someone trying to get on the ballot as an independent presidential candidate would need to collect 21,500 signatures by June 4, a point at which the Democratic nomination may still be unresolved.
An independent would need to have slates of electors in all or most of the 50 state in order to get any electoral votes.
Q. “How are people prevented from voting in more than one state, particularly in the states permitting registration and voting on the same day? Also, should a person move and then vote in both his former and present state how is this prevented?”
According to the National Association of Secretaries of State — the officials in most states responsible for administering elections — no national database exists of registered voters in every state and in the District of Columbia.
So it is not possible for state or local election officials to quickly check whether a voter in Arizona, for instance, has already cast a ballot in New York.
Q. “Why are bilingual ballots used to vote despite the fact that English is required for citizenship in this country?”
The Voting Rights Act, as amended in 1975, requires that American citizens who speak certain foreign languages be able to use ballots in their own language.
The Justice Department uses formulas for determining which cities and counties must offer this help, based largely on the share of the local population that speaks the foreign language.
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The requirement applies in hundreds of cities and counties, requiring Filipino language ballots in Santa Clara County, California, and Choctaw language ballots in Neshoba County, Mississippi, to cite two examples.
But the majority of cases involve ballots in Spanish.
The Voting Rights Act applies to all citizens, both those born in the United States (some of whom may not be able to speak English) and those foreigners who’ve become naturalized U.S. citizens.
This part of the Voting Rights Act does seem to be at odds with the requirement that foreigners who seek to become U.S. citizens be able to read, speak and write English.
Q. "What would happen if one of the candidates died just days before the election?"
If the presidential candidate who died were the Democrat, then the Democratic National Committee would meet to choose a replacement; if the presidential candidate were the Republican, the Republican National Committee would meet to choose a replacement.
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