Santa Fe New Mexican

Justices: States can bind presidenti­al electors’ votes

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — In a decision flavored with references to Hamilton and Veep, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimousl­y Monday that states can require presidenti­al electors to back their states’ popular vote winner in the Electoral College.

The ruling, in cases in Washington state and Colorado just under four months before the 2020 election, leaves in place laws in 32 states and the District of Columbia that bind electors to vote for the popular-vote winner, as electors almost always do anyway.

So-called faithless electors have not been critical to the outcome of a presidenti­al election, but that could change in a race decided by just a few electoral votes. It takes 270 electoral votes to win the presidency.

A state may instruct “electors that they have no ground for reversing the vote of millions of its citizens,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote in her majority opinion that walked through American political and constituti­onal history with an occasional nod to pop culture.

Such an order by a state “accords with the Constituti­on

— as well as with the trust of a Nation that here, We the People rule,” Kagan wrote.

President Donald Trump has been both a critic and fan of the Electoral College.

In 2012, he tweeted, “The electoral college is a disaster for a democracy.” But in November 2016 after he won the presidency despite losing the popular vote to Hillary Clinton, he tweeted, “The Electoral College is actually genius in that it brings all states, including the smaller ones, into play.”

Monday’s ruling was not about the legitimacy of the Electoral College or an ongoing effort to effectivel­y eliminate it by having states commit to support the national popular vote winner. That proposal, sure to be challenged in the courts, wouldn’t take effect unless states constituti­ng a majority of electoral votes endorsed it.

The court acted on another issue, whether electors are free agents regardless of what voters in their states decide. The justices scheduled arguments for last spring so they could resolve the issue before this year’s presidenti­al election rather than amid a potential political crisis after the country votes.

Kagan recounted how the

Constituti­on’s original rules for presidenti­al electors sowed confusion because there was no distinctio­n between votes for president and vice president. She noted that the results of the 1796 election gave President John Adams his political rival, Thomas Jefferson, as vice president, a situation Kagan called “fodder for a new season of Veep.”

Things got worse four years later when Jefferson and Aaron Burr finished in an Electoral College tie, sending the election to the House of Representa­tives. It took 36 ballots and the influence of Alexander Hamilton to elect

Jefferson, Kagan wrote.

“Alexander Hamilton secured his place on the Broadway stage — but possibly in the cemetery too — by lobbying Federalist­s in the House to tip the election to Jefferson, whom he loathed but viewed as less of an existentia­l threat to the Republic,” she said.

Those two elections led to the adoption of the Twelfth Amendment, which produced the Electoral College rules in use today, with separate ballots for president and vice president. “By then, everyone had had enough of the Electoral College’s original voting rules,” Kagan wrote.

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