Polls

More than 70% of voters in every state polled support a nationwide vote.

From Alaska to Mississippi, from California to Wyoming, and across every party, gender, age group, and region. voters consistently say they want the candidate with the most votes to win.

National support

Eight decades of consistent results.

National polling has shown majority support for a popular-vote system for over 80 years.

Gallup. June 1944

"Discontinue the electoral vote system." n=national

65% approve

Gallup. January 1977

"Constitutional amendment eliminating the Electoral College." Peak support of 81% measured after the 1968 election.

73% approve

Gallup. November 1980

"Constitutional amendment eliminating the Electoral College."

67% approve

Washington Post / Kaiser / Harvard. May–June 2007

Direct popular vote system. Independents 73% · Democrats 78% · Republicans 60%.

72% support

AOL News. June 2008

National popular vote vs. Electoral College. EC: 21% · Other: 5%.

74% NPV
State-by-state polling

Public Policy Polling, n≈800 per state, ±3.5% MoE.

Support is broad and bipartisan. Where a survey reported it, the headline number includes Republicans, Democrats, and independents.

State Year Support Republicans Democrats Independents
Alaska201070%66%78%70%
Arizona201578%76%82%75%
Arkansas200880%71%88%79%
California2008 (PPIC)70%61%76%74%
Colorado200868%56%79%70%
Connecticut200974%67%80%71%
Delaware200875%69%79%76%
D.C.201076%48%80%74%
Florida200978%68%88%76%
Georgia201574%75%78%67%
Idaho200977%75%84%75%
Iowa200975%63%82%77%
Kentucky200880%71%88%70%
Maine200977%70%85%73%
Massachusetts201072%54%86%68%
Michigan200873%68%78%73%
Minnesota200975%69%84%68%
Mississippi200877%75%79%75%
Missouri201575%78%73%73%
Montana201172%67%80%70%
Nebraska200874%70%79%75%
Nevada200872%66%80%68%
New Hampshire200869%57%80%69%
New Mexico200876%64%84%68%
New York200879%66%86%78%
North Carolina200874%~70%~76%80%
Ohio200870%65%81%61%
Oklahoma201579%71%85%87%
Oregon200876%70%82%72%
Pennsylvania200878%68%87%76%
Rhode Island200874%~50%~80%78%
South Carolina201171%64%81%68%
South Dakota201171%61%82%77%
Tennessee201574%68%81%74%
Utah200970%66%82%75%
Vermont200875%61%86%74%
Virginia200874%~60%~83%79%
Washington200977%65%88%73%
West Virginia200981%75%87%73%
Wisconsin200871%63%81%67%
Wyoming201169%66%77%72%

Source: Public Policy Polling state-level surveys, 2008–2015. Margin of error ±3.5% per state. PPIC and Fairbank Maslin Maullin used for California.

The pattern is unmistakable.

Every state polled. red, blue, purple. has shown majority support for the popular vote winner becoming President. Republican-leaning states (Arkansas 80%, Kentucky 80%, Idaho 77%, Oklahoma 79%, West Virginia 81%) post some of the highest numbers in the country.