Hillary: Abolish Electoral College

By    |   Wednesday, 13 September 2017 11:07 PM EDT ET

(CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360")

Hillary Clinton said Wednesday that the Electoral College should be abolished after Republican Donald Trump won the electoral vote, while she garnered the popular vote.

"I said that in 2000 after what happened with Al Gore," Clinton told Anderson Cooper on CNN.

In that election, Democrat Gore, who was vice president to Bill Clinton, won 266 electoral votes compared to 271 taken by Republican George W. Bush — and the Supreme Court ultimately decided the outcome of the election.

However, Gore won the popular vote by 547,398 votes over Bush.

In the November election, Clinton beat Trump in the popular vote by nearly 2.9 million votes, but only won 227 electoral votes.

Trump won 304 electoral votes.

"I was elected to the Senate that same year," Clinton said, "and if you look at our recent history, we've had several candidates, nominees, who have won the popular vote and lost the Electoral College.

"It says that an anachronism that was designed for another time no longer works, if we've moved toward one person-one vote.

"That's how we select winners.

"I think it needs to be eliminated," Clinton added. "I'd like to see us move beyond it, yes."

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Hillary Clinton said Wednesday that the Electoral College should be abolished after Republican Donald Trump won the electoral vote, while she garnered the popular vote.
electoral college, campaign, popular vote, one person one vote
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2017-07-13
Wednesday, 13 September 2017 11:07 PM
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