
A bizarre possibility in the Electoral College voting system is that a candidate may win the popular vote and still lose the election. For one thing, the weight of electoral votes do not represent the population of all states equally. For another, the "winner take all" apportionment of electoral votes in most states means that even if a candidate wins 49% of the state's votes, none of those votes are represented in the electoral count. Five times in US history, the winner of the presidential election did not get a majority of the nation's votes.
In one case, the election of 1824, there were four leading candidates (all from the same party!), Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, William H. Crawford, and Henry Clay. Jackson won more votes than the other three, but did not get enough electoral votes to secure the election. The decision was thrown into Congress, who chose John Quincy Adams. That election was enough to destroy the party, and Jackson was elected outright in 1828. Read about all five instances when the winner of the presidential election did not win the popular vote at Mental Floss.









