Why Does One Vote Sometimes Count More Than Another?

The Big Picture

Imagine your class is voting for the next field trip. If you pick one big bus that holds everyone, it does not matter much who sits where. But if you send ten small cars with only two people each, your vote matters more in a crowded car than an empty one.

Why It Happens

This happens because of population size. In the United States, we use something called the Electoral College. Imagine two states: Wyoming and California. California has millions of people but gets 55 electoral votes. Wyoming has only half a million people but still gets three votes (because every state gets at least two plus one for its population).

The Result

This means a person living in Wyoming has a slightly bigger chance of being the deciding vote than someone in California. It is like having more leverage in a small group. Even though we all have one vote, not all votes are created equal.

A single vote in a tight race can tip the entire outcome, especially when populations are spread out unevenly.

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. A student in a small town school has more say in choosing the class mascot than a student in a huge high school.
  2. When you flip coins, it is easier to get heads if only three people are flipping compared to when a thousand people flip together.
  3. Your vote feels heavier when you are in a group of five people who disagree with each other.

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity