Who invented the Electoral College?

 A transcript from the Constitutional Convention records the official report creating the Electoral College.
A transcript from the Constitutional Convention records the official report creating the Electoral College.

The delegates in Philadelphia agreed, in the summer of 1787, that the new country they were creating would not have a king but rather an elected executive. But they did not agree on how to choose that president.

Pennsylvania delegate James Wilson called the problem of picking a president "in truth, one of the most difficult of all we have to decide." Other delegates, when they later recounted the group’s effort, said "this very subject embarrassed them more than any other – that various systems were proposed, discussed, and rejected."

Phillip J VanFossen
J.F. Ackerman Professor of Social Studies Education; Director, Ackerman Center; Associate Director, Purdue Center for Economic Education, Purdue University

Phillip J. VanFossen serves as the James F. Ackerman professor of Social Studies Education and director of the James F. Ackerman Center for Democratic Citizenship in the College of Education at Purdue University in Indiana. He also serves as the associate director of the Purdue University Center for Economic Education where he teaches introductory economics courses for the Economics Department. The author of more than 90 scholarly works — including a high school economics textbook — his research interests include how economics and social studies teachers use the Internet and digital media in their teaching.