A new report shows Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton running a close race in
Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania. The report from Quinnipiac University was
considered important news, even though it described voter opinions in just three
of the 50 U.S. states. The reason? Because how people vote in those three states
could decide who becomes president. “The American presidential election is
now centered
on a shrinking number of
battleground
states to decide the winner,” said Eric Ostermeier, a
political scientist at the University of Minnesota. These battleground states
are also called “swing
states,” meaning that sometimes their voters choose a
Democratic candidate and sometimes a Republican. The media focus so much on
these states because of how Americans elect their president.
* run a close race = 접전을 벌이다/ presidential election = 대통령 선거/
center on ~ = ~에 중심을 두다, 집중시키다/ shrink = (규모・양이[을]) 줄어들다[줄어들게 하다]/ battleground
state = (美) 민주·공화 양당 초접전 경합 주(州)/ swing state = (美) (대선 때마다 민주·공화 양당 지지를 오가는)
그네뛰기하는 주(州)
Americans go to the polls to vote
for president on November 8, but the candidate with the most
votes does not automatically win. The winner is decided by the 538 members of
the Electoral
College. The Electoral College does not have any students or
teachers. Instead, it is a group of people who represent their states in the
U.S. presidential contest. Each state has the same number of members in the
Electoral College that they have representatives in
Congress. That number is decided by the state’s population. States with the
smallest number, including Alaska and Vermont, have three members of the
Electoral College. The state with the largest number, California, has 55. The
U.S. Constitution, which established the Electoral College system, does not
require members of the Electoral College to vote for the candidate who won the
popular
vote in their states. But they almost always do.
As a
result, in most states, candidates do not benefit more by
winning a larger percentage of the popular vote. So, if 99 percent of voters in
California select Hillary Clinton, she will receive all of California’s 55 votes
in the Electoral College. If only 51 percent of voters in California select
Hillary Clinton, she will still receive all of California’s 55 Electoral College
votes. In all but two states, whether they win by 1 percent or 20 percent,
candidates still get the same number of Electoral College
votes.
* go to the polls = 투표하(러 가)다/ candidate =
(선거의) 입후보자[출마자]/ the Electoral College = 대통령[부통령] 선거인단/ representative = 하원 의원/
popular vote = 일반 투표/ as a result = 결과적으로
The Electoral
College system means that Donald Trump, the likely Republican candidate, and
Hillary Clinton, the likely Democratic candidate, will not campaign in states
where they think they already know who will win. For example, Donald Trump will
probably take Alaska, Idaho, and seven other states. Republicans presidential
candidates there have won every election since 1968. Hillary Clinton will
probably carry Minnesota, New York, and the other six states that voted for
every Democratic presidential candidate since 1988. Norm Ornstein, the
government and political expert at the American Enterprise Institute, said
voting trends show only nine states with an uncertain winner in 2016: Colorado,
Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and
Wisconsin. None is more important than Ohio. That state has voted for every
winning presidential candidate since 1964. As a result, Ohio receives a lot of
attention. Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur, a Democrat, has
represented the Ohio city of Toledo since 1983. She talked about what it is like
in Ohio a few weeks before a presidential election day. “We get a barrage of television
ads, radio ads, phone calls, people knocking on our doors, and lots of people
coming to our state from other parts of the country to campaign for their
candidate,” Kaptur told VOA. David Cohen is a political science professor at the
University of Akron. He and other researchers found that the 2012 presidential
candidates visited Ohio more than any other state. But other states, including
the largest, California and New York, get “almost completely ignored,” Cohen
said.
* receive attention = 주목[관심]을 받다/ a barrage
of ~ = ~의 (질문 등의) 세례/ ignore = 무시하다
Because campaigns
treat the states so differently, some people argue to end the Electoral College.
They want the U.S. to elect its president based
on the candidate who earns the most votes across the country. “Voters currently
living and voting in a red
(Republican) or blue (Democratic) state are disenfranchised, because
their vote doesn't matter,” read a petition on the Moveon.org
website. But changing the American system to a popular vote would require
changing the U.S. Constitution. That process
is not easy. Norm Ornstein, the American Enterprise Institute expert,
points
out that changing to a popular vote would also
take away
a reason for candidates to campaign in smaller states. And he worries that all
50 states would fight to recount their votes in a close
election.
* elect = (선거로) 선출하다/ red state = (美)
공화당 지지 주(州)/ blue state = (美) 민주당 지지 주(州)/ disenfranchise = (특히 선거권 등의) 권리 박탈하다/ petition = 진정[탄원/청원](서)/ the Constitution
= 헌법/ point out ~ = 가리키다, 지적하다; 주목하다/ take away ~ = 제거하다; 치우다; 줄이다; 죽이다;
떠나가다
One such recount happened in
Florida in 2000. The media first reported that Democrat Al Gore won the race
there. Then, reporters said that Republican George W. Bush won. Later, they said
the vote was too close to call. Florida officials spent several weeks recounting
the votes. The U.S. Supreme Court made a 5-4 decision to stop the recount. In
the end, Florida’s Electoral College votes went to Bush. Those votes were enough
to give him the presidency over Democrat
Gore, though Gore won 500,000 more votes nationally than Bush. The 2000 election
was one of only four U.S. elections when the Electoral Vote did not match the
popular vote. The other times happened in the 1800s. In one contest, neither candidate
earned the required number of Electoral College votes. The House of
Representatives chose the winner. In the other two contests, one candidate was
very popular with voters in a few states. But he lost to the candidate with more
national appeal.
* recount = (투표 등의) 재계표/ presidency = 대통령 직[임기]/ contest = (주도권이나
권력) 다툼[경쟁]/ appeal = 매력
How America Elects Its President - WTS.mp3