Electoral College 1
Electoral College 2
Electoral College 3
Mr. Hagood Trivia
Politics of Today
100

This is the total number of electoral votes available in a U.S. presidential election.

538

100

These types of states are heavily targeted by candidates because their political leanings are split and could go to either party (not swing but what?)

Battleground

100

How many electoral votes does Maine have?

4

100

What state am I from?

Virginia

100

Serving as a crucial check on the executive branch, these national elections take place in November—halfway through a president's four-year term.

Midterm Elections

200

To win the presidency, a candidate must secure this minimum number of electoral votes.

270

200

These are the only two states that do not use the "winner-take-all" system, opting instead to allocate votes by congressional district.

ME or NE

200

Name the two modern Presidents who were elected to office despite losing the popular vote.

Trump and Bush

200
What is my cat's name?

Garfunkel

200

Appointed to lead Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has championed this four-word health policy acronym aimed at combating chronic disease

MAHA (Make America Healthy Again)

300

Each state gets a base of two electoral votes for its Senators, plus a variable number based on this legislative body.

House of Representatives

300

Because every state gets at least three electoral votes regardless of population, a single vote in this least-populated U.S. state mathematically carries far more weight than a vote in California.

WY or VT

300

In the 2000 and 2016 elections, the winning candidates achieved victory through the Electoral College despite losing this national metric.

Popular Vote

300

What university did I attend?

Virginia Tech

300

From state-level gubernatorial debates to Capitol Hill, politicians are scrambling to create legal frameworks to regulate these tools, such as advanced chatbots.

AI

400

This 1961 constitutional amendment granted three electoral votes to Washington, D.C., despite it not being a state.

23rd Amendment

400

This historical compromise allowed Southern states to count a fraction of their enslaved populations to boost their representation and electoral power without letting them vote.

3/5 Compromise
400

This term is used to describe an elector who breaks their pledge and votes for a candidate other than the one they were chosen to support.

Faithless Electors

400

What profession(s) did I work in before teaching?

Politics and trail building

400

This type of tax, championed by the executive branch to protect domestic manufacturing, faces legal challenges over whether a president can impose them without Congress.

Tariff

500

Except for two states, most of the U.S. uses this system where the candidate who wins the state's popular vote gets all of its electors.

Winner take all system

500

This compromise at the Constitutional Convention created a bicameral legislature with a House and Senate

Great/Connecticut Compromise

500

If no candidate wins a majority of 270 electoral votes, this body is tasked with deciding the president, with each state delegation getting exactly one vote.

House of Representatives

500

Two truths and a lie, which is the lie?

- I was voted most polite in my middle school graduating class

- I hate soup

- I've been skydiving once.

I've been skydiving twice!

500

Because these powerful federal positions are lifetime appointments, a president's selection of a new one can shape the nation's laws for decades to come.

Supreme Court Justice