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National Popular Vote Interstate Compact

National Popular Vote Interstate Compact
NPVIC cartogram base.svg
MD green.svg
NJ green.svg
IL green.svg
HI green.svg
WA green.svg
MA green.svg
DC green.svg
VT green.svg
CA green.svg
RI green.svg
NY green.svg
AZ yellow.svg
CT yellow.svg
FL yellow.svg
GA yellow.svg
IN yellow.svg
KS yellow.svg
ME yellow.svg
MN yellow.svg
MO yellow.svg
NH yellow.svg
NM yellow.svg
PA yellow.svg
SC yellow.svg
TX yellow.svg
VA yellow.svg
NPVIC top.svg
  • Status as of January 2017:
  •   Enacted into law (165 electoral votes; 30.7% of EC)
  •   Pending in current legislative session (193 EVs; 35.9%)
  •   Not enacted and no bill pending (180 EVs; 33.5%)

Each square in the lower cartogram
represents one electoral vote.


Drafted February 2006
Effective Not in effect
Condition Adoption by several of the states and including the District of Columbia whose collective electoral vote total represents an absolute majority of votes (at least 270) in the Electoral College. Note: The agreement would be in effect only among the assenting constituent political entities.
Signatories
at

Each square in the lower cartogram
represents one electoral vote.

The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (NPVIC) is an agreement among a group of U.S. states and the District of Columbia to award all their respective electoral votes to whichever presidential candidate wins the overall popular vote in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. The compact is designed to ensure that the candidate who wins the most popular votes is elected president, and it will come into effect only when it will guarantee that outcome. As of January 2017, it has been adopted by ten states and the District of Columbia. Together, they have 165 electoral votes, which is 30.7% of the total Electoral College and 61.1% of the votes needed to give the compact legal force.

Proposed in the form of an interstate compact, the agreement would go into effect among the participating states in the compact only after they collectively represent an absolute majority of votes (currently at least 270) in the Electoral College. In the next presidential election after adoption by the requisite number of states, the participating states would award all of their electoral votes to presidential electors associated with the candidate who wins the overall popular vote in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. As a result, the winner of the national popular vote would always win the presidency by always securing a majority of votes in the Electoral College. Until the compact's conditions are met, all states award electoral votes in their current manner.

The compact would modify the way participating states implement Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution, which requires each state legislature to define a method to appoint its electors to vote in the Electoral College. The Constitution does not mandate any particular legislative scheme for selecting electors, and instead vests state legislatures with the exclusive power to choose how to allocate its own electors. States have chosen various methods of allocation over the years, with regular changes in the nation's early decades. Today, all but two states (Maine and Nebraska) award all their electoral votes to the candidate with the most votes statewide.


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